This commenter does not completely understand the poem. The king equals Jesus. Instead of Jesus, a fly shows up. The point here is that what her community believes about death appears to be false. While the fly may be a marvelous creature, is this the way we normally see the image of Jesus, or of God? No, this is not a desecnding dove. The poem is saying, among other things, that we romanticize death to protect ourselves, but when we died. we understand what a physical transition this is. Death will define itself, not cater to our illusions.
This was helpful,thank you!
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Great!!! 🎉 I would like to hear you reading the poem. ❤
Thank you very much, that was great❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Thanks for watching:)
Thank you for this it really helped
np...I'm glad it helped!
👏👏
I'm glad it was helpful!
This video was so helpful thanks so much, I was confused but now I'm not :)
Glad it was helpful:)
Amazing explication
Thanks so much!
Wonderful maam i like it it's so useful
Amazingly analysis you
I m speechless
Thanks so much! I'm glad you enjoyed it:)
very helpful
thank you
Glad it was helpful!
This commenter does not completely understand the poem. The king equals Jesus. Instead of Jesus, a fly shows up. The point here is that what her community believes about death appears to be false. While the fly may be a marvelous creature, is this the way we normally see the image of Jesus, or of God? No, this is not a desecnding dove. The poem is saying, among other things, that we romanticize death to protect ourselves, but when we died. we understand what a physical transition this is. Death will define itself, not cater to our illusions.
I want to know it was in what age , please?
I think you are asking for the literary period. It was written during the Transcendentalists period.