<em>What is the poet saying when he writes that “old age shall this generation waste”?</em>
<em>The correct answer is, The poet is saying that people don’t live long; life is brief.</em>
- <em>This is the correct answer because in, Ode on a Grecian Urn, John Keats, 1819, he refers to the vase as something eternal, as something that will contemplate our nearer end. The writer contrasts the eternal endurance of the vase with our brief lives. “You shall remain in the middle of other woe” again this contrast explains that the beautiful vase will last forever while watching our grief and distress, this is our brief lives. “Beauty is truth, truth beauty,” The vase in the poem represents beauty, the truth of life, and the truth of life is not something that perishes like flowers in a vase, it is the vase in itself the truth what contains the perishable.</em>
Answer: 1. to tell readers to acknowledge that they have an abundance of bread, that it is a trivial commodity.
2.endure oppression willingly as long as they receive some slight amount of power or freedom
Explanation:
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Next time, do a quick google search, my friend. o: