English, asked by anittusaloysious1982, 1 month ago

Thus at the flaming forge of life
Our fortunes must be wrought:
Thus on its sounding anvil shaped
Each burning deed and thought.
explain these lines
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Answers

Answered by nikhilkumarsaha27
0

Answer:

A forge is the place where the blacksmith makes a very hot fire. He then uses the fire to soften metal so he can bend and hammer it into a new shape. Therefore, in the poem, the flaming forge is his fire, which has flames just like a fire in a fireplace does. It is the place where he does his life's work.

Answered by taebts05
7

Answer:

A forge is the place where the blacksmith makes a very hot fire. He then uses the fire to soften metal so he can bend and hammer it into a new shape. Therefore, in the poem, the flaming forge is his fire, which has flames just like a fire in a fireplace does. It is the place where he does his life's work.

hope it helps you...

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