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(9)
In the poem,there is a conflict of cultures
between the ancient native life and
European imperialism.the cultures
symbolically represented by piano and drums
respectively.African culture is depicted as
simple and natural. Though,it is
characterized by mysteries which are
understandable. It is unlike the European
culture identified with
modernity,sophisticated but complicated.
African culture is portrayed as attractive for
its innocence and simplicity.on the other
hand, with phrases like"waiting","solo-
speaking" and "tear-furrowed". the
impression is given that European culture
has several shortcomings.However,we are
told that it is "coaxing"as the music from
the piano moves in different tonal
directions,which suggest some form of
attraction.for the poet,it is a culture difficult
to understand
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no5
Mama is the most nurturing character in
the play, and she constantly reminds
Walter that all she has ever wanted is to
make her children happy and provide for
them. She cares deeply for Walter and
shows this care by giving him the remaining
insurance money. She cares
deeply for Ruth as well, consoling her
when Walter ignores her. Mama respects
Beneatha’s assessment of George
Murchison as being arrogant and self-
centered, telling her daughter not to waste
time with such a “fool.” Mama
loves Travis, her grandchild, and hopes
their new house will have a big yard in
which he can play. She is also very fond,
though in a different way, of her plant,
which she tries to nurture throughout the
play.
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NO.11
Nature figures prominently in Frost’s poetry,
and
his poems usually include a moment of
interaction or encounter between a human
speaker and a natural subject or
phenomenon.
These encounters culminate in profound
realizations or revelations, which have
significant
consequences for the speakers. Actively
engaging with nature—whether through
manual
labor or exploration—has a variety of results,
including self-knowledge, deeper
understanding
of the human condition, and increased
insight
into the metaphysical world. Frost’s earlier
work
focuses on the act of discovery and
demonstrates how being engaged with
nature
leads to growth and knowledge. For
instance, a
day of harvesting fruit leads to a new
understanding of life’s final sleep, or death,
in
“After Apple-Picking” (1915). Mid-career,
however, Frost used encounters in nature to
comment on the human condition. In his
later
works, experiencing nature provided access
to
the universal, the supernatural, and the
divine,
even as the poems themselves became
increasingly focused on aging and mortality.


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