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The life of life, or everything (parts) of life from begining to end

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Style of Robert frosts poetry?

Robert frosts poems are modernist


In Robert frosts poem mending wall what does the narrator have on his side of the wall?

An apple orchard.


What is the modern english translation of A time methinks too short To make a world without end bargain in No no my lord your grace is perjured much Full of dear guiltiness and therefore this?

It's already in modern English. But it's hard to understand because you have left out all of the punctuation, cut the sentence off in the middle and given no context for it. This is part of a speech given by the Princess of France at the very end of Love's Labour's Lost. The Princess has received news that her father has died and that she must immediately leave Navarre and return to France. The King of Navarre says: "Now, at the latest minute of the hour, grant us your loves." She replies: "A time, methinks, too short To make a world-without-end bargain in." You know that "methinks" means "I think", right? The time she is talking about is the "latest minute of the hour" the King mentioned in the previous line. And the "world-without-end bargain" in the days before quickie divorces were so common, was of course marriage. She continues: "No, no, my lord, your grace is perjured much, Full of dear guiltiness; and therefore this: If for my love, as there is no such cause, You will do aught, this shall you do for me: Your oath I will not trust; but go with speed To some forlorn and naked hermitage, Remote from all the pleasures of the world; There stay until the twelve celestial signs Have brought about the annual reckoning. If this austere insociable life Change not your offer made in heat of blood; If frosts and fasts, hard lodging and thin weeds Nip not the gaudy blossoms of your love, But that it bear this trial and last love; Then, at the expiration of the year, Come challenge me, challenge me by these deserts, And, by this virgin palm now kissing thine I will be thine; and till that instant shut My woeful self up in a mourning house, Raining the tears of lamentation For the remembrance of my father's death. If this thou do deny, let our hands part, Neither entitled in the other's heart." The King is "perjured" because he swore at the beginning of the play to lay off women and did not keep his vow. The Princess does not want him to swear his love rashly to her and end up similarly perjured. She therefore sets him a task to prove his fidelity. If he refuses, she says, "let our hands part, neither entitled in the other's heart." He accepts.


What is Titania's speech to Oberon?

Because Oberon puts a spell on Titania to fall in love with the next creature she sees, which happened to be Botton as a donkey. As shes distracted with Botton, Oberon takes the child as his own.