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  • Essay / Blind's Mark - 830

    You see a familiar face in front of you; you then make accidental eye contact. As you try to turn your head away from the person, you can't understand why you feel a sudden fascination with them. Then, after a while, this fascination turns into a desire to be with them, to find the courage you lack to talk to them. Lack of confidence will not prevent your fulfillment because this particular desire is stronger than the others. However, the universe has a way of turning everything into a paradox; as soon as you meet the person you are obsessed with, either in a silent stupor or with obvious content, you are not satisfied with that person; it's regret, everyone experiences it at several times during their life. Even though it was a disappointment, it is how you handled the difficult situation that will indirectly teach you a life lesson that not everything will work out in your favor. Sir Phillip Sidney has successfully described the imbecile and sudden dissatisfaction they may encounter and their hatred of desires and everything around them; The hidden essence of Thou Blind's Man Mark is that desire is vain, remorse is inevitable. Pronouncing the same consonant at the beginning of each word in a row is quite a challenge for some people. In the following lines, three and six, of the poem, “…cradle of causeless care” and “At the cost of a mutilated mind,” the consonants “c” and “m” respectively take precedence. This repetition alludes to the confusion in the mind when you start a new routine; in this case, routine not only means something that happens regularly in the long term, but also a temporary custom. When a new part of memory is added to the mind, a... middle of paper ... ingenious and clever abilities. Unlike alliteration and paradox, this anastrophe shows no form of remorse, as the elite will continue to get richer and increase their power, while everyone below them becomes weaker. Yes, as many have said before me, it's about his hatred for unwanted desires and the burdens they will place on you in the end, but that's just the tip of the iceberg. As Sir Phillip Sidney attempts to explain his poem about his own love life, or lack thereof, it is not just about him, he is warning us of our future mistakes. It is a sign of remorse that we will all feel after some kind of sadness or failure. We are only humans; mistakes are almost as regular as going to the bathroom, in fact they are expected, because we are not perfect. Likewise, these missteps are not our downfall, your life goes on whether you like it or not..