Admiring From AfarBy Vidhi T. Poem About Admiring Someone From Afar Stories2 Shares3813 Favorited42 Votes842 Rating Were you touched by this poem? Share Your Story Here. All stories are moderated before being published. Check Your Spellingor your story will not be published!
In contemporary logic there is a pretty general recognition of the rule that when we write down an expression for the purpose of talking about that very expression, we must show what we are doing by enclosing that expression within quotes; if this rule is not strictly observed, actual fallacie...
It is a beautiful love poem based on a gentleman wooing his mistress, hoping to convince her to sleep with him. The unnamed mistress refuses, and his response is to tell her that if he had enough time, he could spend entire centuries admiring her beauty and innocence. But he doesn’t....
wrapping your arm around someone; the constant movements of the mouth and the eyes; the skin, its tanned color, freckles, hair; the strange fellow-feeling one gets when one touches someone else's naked flesh; the spiraling, flowing motion of the breath as one breathes; the loveliness of th...
This in turn reveals the stirring selflessness of their desire, another admiring aspect of the message the poet is trying to articulate. I also appreciate her connection between helping these people and the larger peace this will foster in the long run, an idea that advocates for unity ...
Admiring the courage of Shaw and his men, the speaker is driven to reflect that their spirit of heroic self-sacrifice is in short supply in a modern United States riven by segregation, commercialism, and insincerity, "slid[ing] by on grease." Read the full text of “For the Union Dead...
he uses exaggerations. He tells her that he could spend centuries admiring his beauty and innocence. But he does know that human life is short and that he doesn’t have enough time to do that. Therefore, they should just enjoy the time they have with one another. Here are a few lines...
That movement of rhymes works right alongside the speaker's energies as he turns from melancholy thoughts of death to the powerful, shadowy energy of the great Greek statues he's admiring. “On Seeing the Elgin Marbles” Speaker The speaker of this poem is almost certainly John Keats himself....
His father, however, was devoted to his son enough to take on the extra weight of the boy riding on his back as he plowed the land. This reveals a devoted father and an admiring son, different as they may be. In this stanza, the first and third end words make aslant rhyme, “wake...
The Dillusions of wanting to have someone Is the same as the blue moon in the sky But still here I am admiring this moon although, it doesn't bright as much as it was than before. Kieshenieroe KHR Friday, October 4, 2024 poem poems moon fishing Download image of this poem. Rep...