Explanation Of lines from Poetry for English Class -12 | Bihar Board Exam

Explain the following lines from Poetry : Class 12 BSEB || By Amar Sir

1. Oh! How feeble is man’s power

   That if good fortune fall

   Cannot add another hour, 

   Nor a lost hour recall

Present lines have been taken from “sweetest love I do not goe”. It has been written by John Donne.  He is known as a metaphysical poet. He was a great poet of 16th century.

            In these lines the poet is talking to his wife when he leaves the house for the journey. He says that man’s power is very weak. He cannot repair his bad luck. He can neither add nor racall his spent time with his wife.

2. And when you think he is half 

 asleep, He is wide awake 

Present lines have been taken from the poem “Macavity-The mystery cat”. This peom has been written by a great poet T.S. Eliot of 20th century. In these lines the poet is talking about his cat named Macavity. He is a devil in the shape of cat. He says that when someone thinks he is sleeping but he is not sleeping he is wide awaken.

3. Macavity, Macavity, there is no like 

 Macavity For he is fiend in feline 

 shape, A monster of depravity.

Present lines have been taken from the poem “Macavity-The mystery cat”. This peom has been written by a great poet T.S. Eliot of 20th century. In these lines the poet is talking about his cat named Macavity. He is a cat. He says that there is no any cat like Macavity. He is a devil in the shape of a cat. He has long and thin body shape. He looks like a devil. lasses for

4. Now the leaves are falling fast, 

 Nurse’s flower will not last 

Nurses to the graves are gone, 

And prams go rolling on

Present lines have been taken from the poem “Now the leaves are falling fast” It has been written by a modern poet W.H.Auden. He was a great poet of 20th century. In these lines the poet says that man’s life is going very fast to death. His protector will not present. His well-wisher has gone to the grave. And the time of man’s life is running very fast to his death. 

5. Season of mist and mellow 

 fruitfulness, close blossom of the  maturing sun 

Present lines have been taken from the poem “Ode to autumn”. This poem has been composed by John Keats. It is a nature poem and the poet is the great friend of nature. In the present lines he says that season of mist and ripens fruits is the close friend of the sun. It helps to the fruits to grow and the juice in them.

6. And think this heart. All evil shed 

 away, A pulse in eternal min, no less 

 gives somewhere back the thoughts 

 of England given

Present lines have been taken from the poem “The Soldier”. This poem is written by Rupert Brooke. It is a patriotic poem. In these lines the poet describes the evils of the heart which becomes the cause of war. He wants to remove all the evils from his heart. He wants to give gratitude to his country for everything he gets from his country. 

7. That thou lov’st mee, as thou say’st, 

 If in thine my life then waste Then art

 the best of me 

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne of 16th century. In these lines the poet describes his feeling of separation from his beloved. He says to his beloved that he loves her very much. If his beloved cries and gets worries for him, he could not live in happy mood. In this way his beloved waste his life. So he wants to live in joy mood.

8. I think she was the most beautiful lady, 

   That ever was in west country 

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

9. There is a house now far away,

   Where once I received love. 

   That woman died, 

   The house withdrew into silence.. 

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

10. And active hands must freeze lonely on the separate knees.

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

11. Her sight and sounds; dreams 

 happy as her day: And laughter, 

 learnt of friends; and gentleness. 

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

12. It never forgot, and twenty years 

 since, And as I consigned my first 

 born to the flames 

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

13. I Celebrate myself, and sing myself, 

 And what I assume You shall assume.

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

14. Hoping to cease not till death

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

15. They who one another keepe; 

    Alive, no’r parted bee 

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

16. And the nightingale is dumb, 

   And the angle will not come  

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

17. That is for even England.  

    There shall be In that rich earth a richer dust concealed. 

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

18. I swore to save fire, From the sin of forgetfulness. 

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

19. If I should die, think this of me, 

That there’s some corner of a foreign field. That is for ever England.

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

20. Once strolling at down past river bank and ghat, 

We saw embers losing their cruel redness

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

21. In the deep, strange scented shade of the great dark Carobtree,  I came down the steps with my pitcher. 

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

22. The burning ghat erupted phosphorescence: and wandering ghost lights frightened passers-by as moonlight scuttled among the bones

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

23. A body of England’s breathing English air, washed by the rivers, blest by suns of home. 

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

24. He’s broken every human law, he breaks the law of gravity. 

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

25. Where are the songs of spring? Ay, where are they? 

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

26. Cold impossible, ahead, List the mountain’s lovely head Whose white waterfall could bless, Travellers in their last distress. 

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

27. Creeds and schools in abeyance, Retiring back a while sufficed at what they are, but never forgotten. 

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

28. Sweetest Love, I do not goe, For weariness of thee, Nor in the hope the world can show, A fitter love for mee.

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

29. A Zoroastrian I, my child-fingers clenced into a little knot of pain, I swore to save fire, From the sin of forgetfulness 

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

30. He drink enough, And lifted his head, dreamily, as one who has drunken. 

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

31. There, to peer through blind eyes of windows or just listen to frozen air.

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

32. I whos have lost, My way and beg now at stranger’s doors to Receive love, at least in small change? 

The present lines have been taken from the poem “The sweetest love that I do not goe”. This poem has been written by a great metaphysical poet John Donne 

Thanks 







Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top