Answer:
It shows Donne in a non-serious playful mood. The poet's satirical vein finds full play, and the poem fully justifies Leishman's praise of Donne as, the monarch of wit. As usual, the emotional situation is defined in the very beginning. The poet is dejected and down-hearted because his beloved has rejected him.
_Askmeanything2♡
Answer:
No because for as I have been alive, when I think of America, I think of our original anthem. At a school event, or a sports game, we play that anthem to honor our country. To change the anthem would to be like changing the flag. It is changing who we are and what our country stands for.
Explanation:
Can you give brainliest? jkjk....
unless? :>
Answer:
C?
Explanation:
if D is however then its C, if not im not sure
<span>'This living hand, now warm and capable' is an oddity amongst John Keats's poetry – indeed, amongst Romantic poetry in general. ... (Fittingly, Keats wrote 'This living hand' on a manuscript page of one of his unfinished poems.) The most likely date for the poem's composition is towards the end of 1819.</span><span>
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