Who is Philip in the poem the brook?
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The speaker of the poem, the brook itself, explains that it started out in a body of water where birds called coot and heron often gather. ... Finally, the brook glides past a farm that belongs to a man named Philip. The brook is on its way to be absorbed by the river, which is already huge and overflowing.
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Explanation:
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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