If you read the poem carefully the poet is talking about a river and about the various things it has to pass through like thorpses,bridges,towns.
The crucible what explaination does cheever give for parris' mad look?
The brook herself is the speaker in the poem The Brook by Alfred Lord Tennyson. She describes the various scenes she sees and the touching philosophies and emotions she experiences on her way to eternity. It is a fine example of personification of a river.
That parris argued with the farmers who are upset because the cows of people who are jailled are wandering around town
The verb "to define" means to give the meaning or extent. A definition is a description or explanation for a thing, action, or concept.
Cheever says that Parris has been arguing with the local farmers who are upset that the cows belonging to people in jail are wandering the area since there is no one to care for them.
Tennyson personifies the brook in his poem to give it a sense of life and movement. By portraying the brook as a living entity with its own thoughts and feelings, Tennyson creates a more vivid and dynamic image for his readers, making the brook a central character in the poem. This personification also allows Tennyson to explore themes related to the passage of time and the flow of nature.
Alfred Lord Tennyson's Charge of the Light Brigade is dactylic.Half a league, half a league, half a league, onward....
The poem "The Brook" by Alfred Lord Tennyson reflects the persistent and eternal nature of the brook as it flows continuously through different landscapes. The conclusion drawn from the poem is that life is a continuous journey, ever-changing yet constant, echoing the flow of the brook.
Brook is poem written by Alfred Lord Tennyson. In this poem, the brook refers itself to a living being.This is called personification.The word 'I' explains it. The brook suddenly emerges from a place frequently visited by coots and herons.It falls down a velley making a quarelling noise.The poet uses numerical references like 'thirty hills', 'twenty thorpes' & ' half hundred bridges'.The brook joins the brimming river at Philip's farm. The line'For men may come and men may go, but I go on forever' explains the brook is immortal as it goes on forever.Also this line is a refrain(A sentence that is repeated again and again in a poem). The poet uses human comparions using words like-'chatter', 'bicker', 'trebles' etc. The brook makes a chattering noise as it passes over stony ways and in little sharps and trebles it bubbles into eddying bays.The brook's bank passes through many curves and fields along weeds and other plants.The river keeps chattering in order to meet the brimming river.It carries many thigs like blossoms, lusty trouts, grayling, foamy flakes, forget me nots etc.. The brooks gently crosses the lawn and grassy plots and slides by hazel covers.It moves by the sweet forget me nots thet grow for happy lovers (The flowers are so lovely that people give it to their lovers so that they don't forget each other). The river does many actions. It slips, slides, glooms, glances. The swallows ( a kind of bird) skim through the top of the brook and the water makes the sunbeam dance by acting as nets against it's sandy shallows. While passing through throny bushes,the brooks murmers(human comparison-the brook complains) about passing the scary throny poisonous bushes.But when it surfaces the shingly bars (pebbles), it loiters(human comparison- it stays there for some time) round the cresses. And finally the brook winds around the curver to flow into the brimming river. Still it remaind immortal after passing through thorns and venmous bushes. This poem uses many poetic devices like allitration(eg.fairy forland , golden gravel etc..). The poem also uses refrains(For men may come and men may go, but I go on forever). Personification is also used as explained before.
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"By the brook" - repetition of the "b" sound "Saw the brook" - repetition of the "s" sound "Singing away" - repetition of the "s" sound "By the brook" - repetition of the "b" sound "Brook song" - repetition of the "b" sound
The Congo by Vachel Lindsay The Charge of the Light Brigade by Lord Alfred Tennyson I Am The Wind by Kelly Grace The Ballad of the Oysterman by Oliver Wendell Holmes http://xroads.virginia.edu/~HYPER/Lindsa… http://poetry.eserver.org/light-brigade.… http://www.buzzle.com/articles/the-wind.… http://www.poetry-archive.com/h/ballad_o…
the brook and that's it i know......
you need to give me an explanation for you being late from school
you need to give me an explanation for you being late from school
Which theory sound like an explanation that Bismarck might give
Please provide the quotation you would like an explanation of.