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Perfumes signify individual selves。 Longfellow encourages his readers to leave their own footprints on the sands of time and bee important. The next stanza, the second to last in the poem, continues with this same point. It describes how successful people in the past have their lives copied, while those who failed serve as examples of ways of life to avoid. The final lines of the poem echo the beginning ones and offer perhaps the most important advice in a poem that is chocked full of it. Longfellow encourages all to work and try their hardest to make their lives great and acplish as much as they can. Longfellow conveys his message the same way he did in the rest of the poem: by speaking directly to the reader and providing his reasoning for believing in something more, in something better. Longfellow ensures his followers that the rewards for what they achieve will e eventuallyif not in this lifetime, then, certainly, in the next. Song of Myself The celebrated poem by Walt Whitman which introduced the first edition of Leaves of Grass in Theme: idea of the self。 there is always something more to be hopeful and optimistic for. Longfellow begins discussing how humans must live their lives in constant anticipation for the next day under the belief that it will be better than each day before it: But to act that each tomorrow / Find us farther than today. In the subsequent stanza, Longfellow asserts that there is never an infinite amount of time to live, but art that is created during one39。 rather, it extends into another after life. Longfellow values this dream of the afterlife immensely and seems to say that life can only be lived truly if one believes that the soul will continue to live long after the body dies. The second stanza continues with the same belief in afterlife that is present in the first. Longfellow states this clearly when he writes, And the grave is not its goal. Meaning that, life doesn39。s A Psalm of LifeHenry Wadsworth Longfellow begins his poem A Psalm of Life with the same exuberance and enthusiasm that continues through most of the poem. He begs in the first stanza to be told not in mournful numbers about life. He states here that life doesn39。s life can be preserved indefinitely and live on long after its creator dies. In the following stanzas, Longfellow likens living in the world to fighting on a huge field of battle. He believes that people should lead heroic and courageous lives and not sit idle and remain ineffectual while the world rapidly changes around them: Be not like dumb, driven cattle! Be a hero in the strife! His use of the word strife is especially interesting, since it clearly acknowledges that life is inherently difficult, is a constant struggle, and will never be easy. Longfellow then encourages everyone to have faith and trust the lord and not to rely on an unknown future to be stable and supportive. He advises people to seize the moments they have before them and act while thinking about their present situations. Longfellow continues his poem by citing the lives of great and important men who were able to lead incredible lives and leave their marks. He views these men as role models for people who have yet to live their lives。t end for people simply because they die。t abruptly end when one dies。 As is typical with many of Poe39。The poem is a beautiful piece of literature. It reveals a lot about the Indian traditions and culture, which is not given its rights, in well rhythmic verses of poetryTo Helen The theme of this short poem is the beauty of a woman with whom Poe became acquainted when he was 14. Apparently she treated him kindly and may have urged him–or perhaps inspired him–to write poetry. Beauty, as Poe uses the word in the poem, appears to refer to the woman39。s customs. Still, it is a deeprooted one which has resisted change.The fancies of a ruder race.This difference makes the strangers reflect on this tradition, which they consider unacceptable and savage as the speaker says:s, the dead Indian is dressed in special clothes as though celebrating a happy event. Death in the Indian tradition has a different meaning. It is no longer that sad and dreadful event that everyone is afraid of. The dead person bees a warrior who protects the land. This explains his posture and the way he is dressed in. The conception of death in this culture makes of it a different one from the white man39。Unlike the white man39。 Analysis of the poem The Indian Burying Ground by Philip Freneau. The poem describes the spirituality of Indians surrounding death, which is seen as a happy occasion, unlike Western white culture.Summary: No roving foot shall crush thee busy hand provoke a tear. Using un and no to lead parallelism.Third, nothing once, you nothing nothings are repetition.Fourth, space between, is but an hour, The frail duration of a flower. An hour is too rapid of a flower like honey suckle to faded.Fifth, metaphor. From the first stanza fair flower to the end the frail of a flower, the life of a flower just like the life of a human being. Our fate is doomed.The Indian Burying Grounds poet used you to describe the Wild Honey Suckle.Second, It39。s philosophical weight resides in the final nothing once, you nothing though fate is tells us to be optimistic when you face the difficulty. And be sure of what you like and love your life.s disturbance and poet admired the beauty of nature.Even in these idyllic circumstances, however, the honeysuckle39。s said that the poet was inspired by the beauty of the wild honey suckle when he was walking in a garden.The poet describes his thoughts to readers on the themes of life and death in the form of a blooming flower of life.In the beginning,the poem points out the secluded nature of the place where the honey suckle so ely grew, drawing a conclusion that it was due to nature