To youth and age travels on with cheer line figure of speech
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The given line shows the Oxymoron figure of speech.
- In the poem, Henry Van Dyke talks on the experience of enjoying life to the fullest.
- The adage "you only live once" is frequently used.
- However, there are instances when people are caught up in the struggle to succeed more and overlook what is truly important: living.
- The poet encourages us to have a joyful heart, live fully, worry-free, and in the present.
- He wants everyone to have a heart that accepts youth and old age equally and to not become annoyed by situations that are out of their control.
- He wants everyone to embrace life's journey with joy because nobody is exempt from it.
- The words Youth and age represent the use of oxymoron.
- A figure of speech known as an oxymoron combines terms that have opposite meanings, such as "ordered chaos," "deafening stillness," or "ancient news."
- Although oxymoron first appears irrational, they typically make sense when taken in context.
- Here, youth and age are two contradictory terms used together and hence represent the use of oxymoron.
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