Live life well!! Don't be afraid of the adversities in Life .Face them bravely and look at them squarely in the eye you got to live your life in the present.. forget about the past..past is gone.. no need to cherish about it..or mourn it.. live your today because your today makes your tomorrow.
A Psalm of Life is Longfellow's attack on the standard Christian position that our life on earth is unimportant, that the only thing that matters is what follows our death.
Longfellow says that life is the only thing which matters, that it is futile to worry about what happens after we die (because we won't be there).
The last two lines mean only that one should accept the difficulties and effort of life not for what might come out of them, but for what they are (Learn to labour); and that one should have ambition not because one expects to be rewarded, but because having ambition is something which is good in itself (and to wait).
American author Henry Wadsworth Longfellow wrote "A Psalm of Life" after completing lectures on German writer Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. The poem was published in 1839.
The Authors of Psalm 84 are the Sons of Korah
The authorship of Psalm 119 is attributed to King David. It is the longest chapter in the Book of Psalms and is a reflection on the importance of God's word in the life of a believer.
Philosopher
God
One example of hyperbole in the Psalm of Life could be when the poet claims that "Life is real! Life is earnest!" This statement is an exaggerated way of emphasizing the seriousness and importance of life.
death/afterlife
The rhyme scheme in "A Psalm of Life" by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow is ABABCC. The rhyme scheme in "Auspex" by Henry Gifford is AABBCCDD.
"Auspex" has six-line stanzas while "A Psalm of Life" has four-line stanzas.
If you mean the 'twin' Psalms, then they are Psalm 111 and 112, which many believe were written by the same author and should be one.
The words are from a hymn that is based on Psalm 23.
Psalm 27 is traditionally attributed to King David. There is a sense of optimism about this psalm, consistent with his later life, when the Bible says he had defeated all his enemies. The author had been through some difficult times but always felt comforted by his faith in God.But whoever did write Psalm 27, verses 4 and 5 indicate that David could not have been the author, because it talks of the Temple (or 'house', 'pavilion') of the Lord, which the Bible says that this was not built in the lifetime of King David. Scholars actually date Psalm 27 to the Second-Temple period after the Return from the Babylonian Exile.