Explanations: Then cease, bright nymph! to mouth thy ravished hair. Which adds new glory to the shining shere!


Explanations:
Then cease, bright nymph! to mouth thy ravished hair.
Which adds new glory to the shining shere!
Answer: These remarkable and conspicuous lines have been taken from the poem “The Rape of the Lock” by Alexander Pope, the great 18h century poet. Here the poet makes a request or advice to Belinda not to pine for her lost lock.

Pope addresses Belinda as the bright nymph' and says that the wonderful lock of hair has now become a part of the constellation. It has become a bright star in the sky increasing its glory and brightness. Human beings are born to die. Every creature on earth will die. The dazzling light of Belinda's eyes will kill the fashionable young men as long as she lives. But time will come when she herself will die. Her lovely tresses will turn to dust once. But the lock of hair that she has lost will endure the wears tears of time and existence. It has been immortalized in the lines of the poem and it will be shining eternally in the sky as a bright star in the name of Belinda.

The lines bear a placating tone to cool down the enraged soul of

একটি মন্তব্য পোস্ট করুন

0 মন্তব্যসমূহ

টপিক