English, 04.08.2019 12:00, lovenahofer
The land of biscay by a. e. housman (excerpt) looking from the land of biscay over ocean to the sky on the far-beholding foreland paced at even grief and i. there, as warm the west was burning and the east uncoloured cold, down the waterway of sunset drove to shore a ship of gold. gold of mast and gold of cordage, gold of sail to sight was she, and she glassed her ensign golden in the waters of the sea. oh, said i, my friend and lover, take we now that ship and sail outward in the ebb of hues and steer upon the sunset trail; leave the night to fall behind us and the clouding counties leave: for you and me is yonder, in a haven west of eve. under hill she neared the harbour till the gazer could behold on the golden deck the steersman standing at the helm of gold, man and ship and sky and water burning in a single flame; and the mariner of ocean, he was calling as he came: from the highway of the sunset he was shouting on the sea, "landsman of the land of biscay, have you for grief and me? "the narrator is full . the poem ends on tone, which is common to many of housman’s poems.1. (loneliness) 1. contemplative2. (love) 2.argumentative3.(friendliness)&nbs p; 3.patriotic4. (grief) 4.pessimistic
Answers: 1
English, 21.06.2019 14:00, franstirlacci
How might a listener feel about his or her griefs after hearing the wife's lament
Answers: 2
English, 21.06.2019 18:20, jasondesatnick
Based on thoreau's transcendental beliefs, why might he have written an essay opposing the war? to explain the individual's responsibilities within a corrupt society to begin his own political career to call attention to the ways in which the government was essentially good to express his lack of interest in societal issues
Answers: 2
The land of biscay by a. e. housman (excerpt) looking from the land of biscay over ocean to the sky...
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