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The crisis in scholar gypsy explain

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Answered by Anonymous
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The crisis in scholar gypsy

At the The crisis in scholar gypsysame time that he admires the scholar-gipsy, he cannot fully turn his back on the modern world. It is the same contradiction that plagues the speaker of "A Summer Night." Thus, the poem overall represents Arnold's inner conflict, his desire to live a transcendent life but inability to totally eschew society.

Answered by rakzhana01
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Answer:

The Scholar Gipsy" (1853) is a poem by Matthew Arnold, based on a 17th-century Oxford story found in Joseph Glanvill's The Vanity of Dogmatizing (1661, etc.). It has often been called one of the best and most popular of Arnold's poems,and is also familiar to music-lovers through Ralph Vaughan Williams' choral work An Oxford Elegy, which sets lines from this poem and from its companion-piece, "Thyrsis".

Author -Matthew Arnold

Genre(s) -Elegy, topographical poem

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