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MICHAEL NADEA AD The Rubaiyat
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Time bringeth swift to end The rout men keep; Death's wolf is nigh to rend These silly sheep. See, how in pride they go With lifted head, Tell Fate with a sudden blow Smiteth them dead. ~ Thou who lovest, life a crow, Winter’s chill and winter’s snow, Ever exile from the vale’s Roses red, and nightingales: Take this moment to thy heart! When the moment shall depart, Long thou ‘It seek it as It flies With a hundred lamp s and eyes ~ The heavenly rider passed: The dust rose in the air; He sped; but the dusthe cast Yet hangeth there. Straight forward thy vision be, And gaze not left or right; His dust is here, and he In the Infinite.
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Literary Terms Connection Imagery, Jalal Al-Din Rumi examples imagery in his poem by stating … “Thou who lovest, life a crow, Winter’s chill and winter’s snow,” It puts a cold winter day and snowfall into your mind while your reading, also when he states life a crow, you imagine a crow soaring through the cold winter air.
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Literary Terms Connection Tone, Jala Al-Din Rumi shows a forceful tone. His tone throughout the poem changes because there are 3 different sections of the poem, during the poems his forceful tone stays throughout. “Take this moment to thy heart! When the moment shall depart,”
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Literary Terms Connection Third Person Narrative, Jalal Al-Din Rumi speaks throughout his poem in third person narrative, an example from the poem is, “He sped; but the dusthe cast Yet hangeth there.”
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Literary Terms Connection Hyperbole Jalal Al-Din Rumi shows a hyperbole by stating “Tell Fate with a sudden blow,” As in you cant tell fate anything because it isn't a living thing, there for Jalal exaggerated the fact of fate.
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Analysis The Rubaiyat is three separate poems in a huge poem, but connect in a way that shows death and what people should do and react to it.
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