English, asked by patkarmangala12345, 10 months ago

What is the central I dear of the poem? it is the poem of 7th standered the poem is Past, Present, Future​

Answers

Answered by sanya2004srivastav
1

Answer:

Explanation:

A. In this poem the poet wants to tell us that we are mortals and remain in the world for a short time. We must not try to immortalize ourselves by acts of constructing huge statues and monuments. These things are also timely, and the mighty time destroys everything.

“Ozymandias” is a sonnet, a fourteen-line poem metered in iambic pentameter. The rhyme scheme is somewhat unusual for a sonnet of this era; it does not fit a conventional Petrarchan pattern, but instead interlinks the octave (a term for the first eight lines of a sonnet) with the sestet (a term for the last six lines), by gradually replacing old rhymes with new ones in the form ABABACDCEDEFEF.

A Parable Of Immortality - Poem by Henry Van Dyke. I am standing upon the seashore. A ship at my side spreads her white sails to the morning breeze. and starts for the blue ocean. She is an object of beauty and strength, and I stand and watch until at last she hangs. like a speck of white cloud.

Answered by MohammadAkif
0

Explanation:

Time might be one of the most confusing topics in the world to think about. The differences between the past and the present, the constant unknown that is the future, and the way memory distorts our view of times gone by makes for an interesting, if highly abstract view of reality. As it happens, nothing suits abstraction quite like art does, and poetry is one of the best ways to examine a concept that is utterly impossible to explain through simple definitions. Instead, a skilled poet might turn to imagery and metaphor to try and describe an abstract concept with deep meaning to them.

For Emily Brontë, time was evidently one such topic. Her work, Past, Present, Future, approaches this topic with images and metaphors that are easily relatable and almost childlike in their simplicity. Despite this, they are thought-provoking, meaningful, and convey far more than the simple words that form them. For many poets, this can be a difficult balance to achieve, but Emily Brontë is able to strike it nicely here.

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