Thomas Uses Regret To Inspire His Reader. How Does He Use It and Why Do You Think He Does?

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Thomas uses regret to inspire his reader. How does he use it and why do you think he does?

Experience regret as a greater degree explains to us when we could have seen it as coming to
blame ourselves and not doing it again. Thomas uses regret to inspire his reader as it is like not to
regretting now and make things happen as soon as possible.

Thomas used some angry tones in his poem to force his reader’s mind that they are not going to
have something they really want after the end of life. When he talks about regrets, readers are
inspired by not doing that thing again and might change the thing they used to do. I think, it feels
like a battle when Thomas used the tones with a fit of anger. Readers are going to more inspire
that still they have the opportunity to fight and not giving up in some circumstances.

There is something in life that we cannot avoid, which can affect us but it is not like we are
going to have that with peace. Thomas used inescapable as a symbol in his poem to justify that
as a reader we just not embrace it and welcome it as it is normal. Inevitable makes it regret as
Thomas uses it in his writing. I think for a reader it is more likely to inspire that we can still fight
against inevitable things.

We should try to fix the problem even it is not fixable, we can fight against uncertainty and
making things possible by not wasting our time in welcoming it with peace rather than fighting.
Is Shakespeare concerned with outward appearance in his sonnets? Why and why not?

People used to justify someone by their outward appearance in a first meeting as they don’t know
them personally. Shakespeare is not concerned with an outward appearance in his sonnets
because he defines a person by their eternal beauty rather than physical appearance.

In regular life, we communicate with many people with gestures which is our body language to
approach. .Shakespeare uses gestures in his sonnets to justify a person. He uses comparison in
one of his sonnets to justify his love with other things which is more likely to be eternal
appearance. Gestures like cheeks, walking like a goddess, love to hear and hairs like wires
signify the fact of eternal appearance as a symbol rather than knowing a person by their outward
appearance.

Beauty is something that is not related to physical appearance. Shakespeare uses beauty in one of
this poem to justify the fact that as it is considered as the inner image or with nature. He explains
it as beauty lies in the eyes of beholder which creates the fact that the beauties he sees eternal
rather than physical appearance. Shakespeare talks about a person in one of his sonnets to justify
the person eternally which reflects the look in some aspects rather than outward appearance.

Physical appearance will fade away where eternal beauty will stay as long as people
remembering it.

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