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PUNCHI Posted 17 years ago

Would you paraphrase the following poem line by line?

Song of the Powers-by David Mason


Mine, said the stone/

mine is the hour/

I crush the scissors/

such is my power/

Stronger than wishes/

my power, alone/



Mine, said the paper/

mine are the words/

that smother the stone/

with imagined birds/

reams of them, flown/

from the mind of the shaper/



Mine, said the scissors/

mine all the knives/

gashing through paper’s/

ethereal lives/

nothing’s so proper/

as tattering wishes/



As stone crushes scissors/

as paper snuffs stone/

and scissors cut paper/

all end alone/

So heap up your paper/

and scissor your wishes/

and uproot the stone/

from the top of the hill/

They all end alone/

as you will, you will/
  

Top answer

Punchi, there is nothing to paraphrase; the language couldn't be simpler or more direct. If you can't figure this one out, you had better stay away from poetry for a few more years. org/wiki/Rock-paper-scissors ]ROCK-PAPER-SCISSORS[/url].

  • Punchi, there is nothing to paraphrase; the language couldn't be simpler or more direct.
  • If you can't figure this one out, you had better stay away from poetry for a few more years.
  • org/wiki/Rock-paper-scissors ]ROCK-PAPER-SCISSORS[/url].
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1 Answers
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Punchi, there is nothing to paraphrase; the language couldn't be simpler or more direct. If you can't figure this one out, you had better stay away from poetry for a few more years. This poem is simply a flight of fancy on the children's game of [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rock-paper-scissors]ROC

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