(the poetry of earth is never dead. )
meaning in English of this proverb.
Answers
Answer:
On the Grasshopper and Cricket' written by 'John Keats' is a nature poem that conveys the idea that the poetry of earth is never dead. ... It is a symbolic poem in which the grasshopper is a symbol of hot summer and the cricket is of very cold winter. Every poet has been attracted towards the beauty of nature.
Answer:
The poetry of the earth is never dead.” Song 2:8-17 renders a beautiful poem as timeless as the “poetry of the earth.” Imaginative readers can see, hear, taste, smell, and touch earth’s beauty. The passage speaks about the voice of spring where all of creation celebrates and is celebrated as it displays a beautiful symphony just by being what they have been created for. NRSV call this pericope “Springtime Rhapsody.” Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750), the most celebrated German musician of the 18th century composed a most sublime music inspired by the Song, particularly by this poem where in the first recitative, a tenor acting as narrator warns the daughters of Zion of the approaching bridegroom, leaping upon the hills like a young stag. “Cantata BWV 140, Wachet auf, ruft uns die Stimme: Wake up: the Voice Calls Us” is a classic still enjoyed and appreciated today with over 1.3 million views at Youtube. I for one, when listening to Bach, experiences a most sublime feeling of being one with God, nature, and humanity. Thus, in this paper, I explore the literary meaning and function of Song 2:8-17 through a literary, socio-rhetorical analysis of the passage