where does beautiful come from according to the poet? ( english flamingo 'a thing of beauty')
Answers
Q.14:- List the things of beauty mentioned in the poem?
A.14:- The poet sees shades and colors of beauty in the sun, the moon, the trees, the innocence of the sheep, the blossoming of the daffodils, the rivers and streams, mass of ferns, blooming musk-roses and in every aspect of this green world we live in.
Q.1:- What kind of joy does a beautiful thing provide?
A.1:- A thing of beauty provides eternal and everlasting joy to us because it leaves an everlasting imprint in our mind.
Q.2:- Explain "Its loveliness increases".
A.2:- Joy multiplies with every beautiful thought. Likewise the Loveliness of a beautiful thing increases manifold each time we visualize it on our mind screen.
Q.3:- Explain "sleep, full of sweet dreams".
A.3:- The joy of beauty gives us a kin to the joy of a blissful sleet full of pleasant dreams.
Q.4:- What does 'quiet breathing' imply?
A.4:- The reference implies to the sense of peace and serenity that one experiences on seeing beautiful things. Beautiful sights act like nutrition for a healthy mind and thus refresh and relax us driving away aggression and restlessness.
Q.5:- Explain 'wreathing a flowery band to bind us to the earth'.
A.5:- Keats, as a worshipper of beauty, felt that life on earth would not be worth living without its treat of beauty. In this expression he expresses a similar feeling as he feels that every morning we weave a beautiful string of flowers or memories which help us to support overshoes on earth.
Q.6:- Explain 'unhealthy and o'er-darkened ways'.
A.6:- The trials and tribulations one encounters in this journey of life.
Q.7:- What does the reference 'simple sleep' symbolize?
A.7:- Lamb and sheep are envisioned as the embodiments of innocent and serene beauty. Jesus Christ, as an apostle of peace was a shepherd. Sheep is a symbol of divine beauty.
Q.8:- Explain 'With the green world they live in'.
A.8:- Nature's beauty is at its best in the lush green surrounding of meadows and pastures which provide the life support to all plants animals.
Q.9- What does 'Clear rills' refer to?
A.9:- `Clear rills' refers to the rivers and streams which are the natural source of water, the elixir of life.
Q.10:- What does 'grandeur of the dooms' imply?
A.10:- Growth and decay march hand in hand in nature and thus are the two vital aspects of life The poet sees beauty in the magnificent decay and death of these beautiful creations of nature.
Q.11:- Who are the 'mighty dead'?
A.11:- The `mighty dead' refers to those great man and warriors who glorified death by embracing it most gracefully and magnificently.
Q.12:- What `lovely tales have we heard or read'?
A.12:- A glorified and magnificent death gets recorded in the leaves of history, leaving an indelible imprint on it. It remains an everlasting source of motivation to all those who read or hear about such great men who achieved glory in death.
Q.13:- Explain 'Pouring unto us from the heaven's brink'.
A.13:- Beauty is the greatest gift of God to man which has been showered upon us from the heaven above. This beauty is eternal and everlasting, in whose glory men on earth bask and derive their perennial source of joy and happiness.
Q.14:- List the things of beauty mentioned in the poem?
A.14:- The poet sees shades and colors of beauty in the sun, the moon, the trees, the innocence of the sheep, the blossoming of the daffodils, the rivers and streams, mass of ferns, blooming musk-roses and in every aspect of this green world we live in.
Q.15:- Why is 'grandeur' associated with the 'mighty dead'?
A.15:- A magnificent death of a warrior, or a selfless sacrifice, has its own grandeur. Thus, the poet associates grandeur with the mighty dead because he saw spiritual and intellectual beauty in their grand and magnificent death. A brave and grand death makes one immortal.
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