Answer:
The two lines are:
And we are here as on a darkening plain
Swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight
Explanation:
From the excerpt, the above set of lines actually suggest that the speaker has undergone a loss of faith.
This is true because from the passage, the speaker reveals that there is a world that lies before them like a land of dream which they see as beautiful and new. The speaker discovers that the world has neither joy, nor peace, nor love, nor help for pain and then realizes that they are "on a darkening plain" and "swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight". It means that what they expected from the world they saw as land of dream wasn't what they actually found it out to be.
This then suggests that the speaker has undergone loss of hope.
Answer:
the ancient tale
Explanation:
In this poem, the Swan is a metaphor for the spiritual pursuit of one who treads the path of self-realization. The metaphor refers to the ability of the bird to move between different planes of reality (earth, water, air) without clinging to any of them.
In the poem Kabir indicates a place where the swan can be free of doubt and sadness, this place would be the heaven that the author compares with an old tale in the passage:
"There, woods flourish in everlasting spring,
And its fragrance makes us move forward more and more.
Immersed in it, the heart, like a bee, was inebriated.
Immense in her, she no longer wants any joy"
Answer:
D) Subjective
Explanation:
To be honest I'm not entirely sure of the answer so please refer to the other answers given tok