The theme of love and loss in poetry "How do you use chemical and physical methods to explain such important biological phenomena as first love?" Albert Einstein. The theme of love always influenced poets, writers, and lucky people. Love is everything it breaks. It is worth fighting and taking risks. The problem is that your risk will be even bigger if you do not take all the risks. Some love-inspired poets are John Clare, Christina Rossetti, Elizabeth Browning and Edith Nesbitt who wrote classic love poems.
The lost theme in the poem provides a sample of the author's poetry. Each one expresses the lost theme in some form. Collection Introduction The purpose of this series is to provide a sample of the author's poetry. Each poem draws the theme "lost" in a sense. - William Wordsworth's sonnet "The world is too much for us", the lecturer expresses his frustration over the state of the world he is looking at. In the whole poem, the speaker emphasized his dissatisfaction with the disconnection between the world and nature. Typical Italian sonnets, the first eight lines of poetry make sure the speakers are experiencing this dissatisfaction
Poetry is a type of literature that can be characterized by rhythm. Poetry can be short or long. There is no limit to the theme that the poet can use for poetry. Poetry is about animals, nature, common themes, love. The two poems discussed in this paper have a common theme of love. When poetry talks about love to a woman, another poem explains general love. - Seamus Heaney's poem has an iterative theme that he talks about the past, more importantly it talks about important moments when he achieves his adulthood realization. In "naturalistic death", Heaney explained his childhood moment, and when he was just a simple child, nature said that it was not as clean as it looked I learned.
A new attitude toward poetry has gradually evolved in poetry. After all, the classical theme was "Ubler Love" - a lover dies instead of joining his lover - in his poetry anthology, Kitsabu was a Hahiri Theologian IbnD. 910) Description of al-zahrah (Flower Book). This theme is at the heart of the Ghazal poetry of the century. Originally it was completely secular, but later became the main concept of mysterious love poetry. (In Iraq and Egypt, the first example of this adoption took place in the era of Ibenda.) In the poems of Persian, Turkish and Urdu, I would like to die on the way to my beloved. The desire to become commonplace became commonplace, and most of the romantic stories written in these languages became tragic. The influence of Ibn Dā'ūd also spread to the West Islamic world. Poetry is scattered and translated many times in Western languages.