what does the brook do in stanza 7 from the poem the song of the brook
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In Tennyson's “The Brook,” the poem's refrain, “For men may come and men may go, / But I go on for ever” is repeated four times, as the speaker of the poem—the brook—emphasizes the central theme of the poem: that human life is fleeting, while the brook, as part of the larger tapestry of nature, will endure forever.
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The brook carries fishes, foams and flowers with it to join the brimming river. And then the refrain comes meaning the eternal state of the river to that of transient one of humans. The brook secretly moves though the grassy plots and lawns and moves swiftly by the bushy hazel trees.
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