i didnt underatand ya question, thats how dense i am about poetry!!! best of luck with it tho
2006-10-13 07:25:08
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answer #1
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answered by nippauk2001 2
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in case you are able to deign to bend the verse of Keats And thereby courtroom the prefer of a mob Condemning virtues they gained't comprehend then you extremely exalt a prepare that defeats The greater suitable sturdy, and choose rather to rob The vault of venerated Time's immortal music! is this the very undertaking which you had planned? is this the main suitable action that completes Your conquest? If that's that, then i could sob — you have sullied what's organic, and you call for That others chuckle with you and confident you long To toss what Time has examined interior the bin. To mock what's terrific in existence is easily incorrect even with the actuality that i'm advantageous you will discover another spin.
2016-10-02 06:34:25
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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It is based on a character by Sir Walter Scott, a very famous author who wrote Ivanhoe. Meg is a gipsy who is a social outcast. She has virtually no possessions and the natural things around her replace the things which we take for granted in life. The nearest she gets to reading is wandering around the churchyard looking at the tombstones. She has very little to eat -- things like berries -- and she earns a very meagre living by weaving rush baskets. She has no real human company and has the hills as her friends. When other people are tucked beside a fire, she is staring at the moon. (This may be a suggestion that she was somewhat mad -- the word lunatic comes from the Latin luna meaning moon.) Despite all this she is happy (she sings at her work) and she has a curious dignity, standing as tall as if she were a queen --Queen Margaret -- (Meg is short for Margaret, as you may know) and wearing a cloak which is red, like a royal robe. When she dies, it is without anybody noticing -- she just vanishes from the scene.
Hope this helps!
2006-10-13 08:08:18
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answer #3
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answered by Doethineb 7
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Tis twilight in the ole' chicken barn
and the frost heavy on the eyes
No, quick, be gone!
2006-10-13 07:37:35
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answer #4
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answered by Plaidman 2
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It's about the vanished gypsy way of life.
2006-10-13 07:31:34
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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