Asked by Chris

In The poem "The Nymph"s Reply to the Shepard" the poet writes When the river rage and rocks grow cold, but he could have written when rivers rush and rocks grow coldwithout affecting themeter,rhyme, or alliteration in the line Also both rage and rush communicate that the river was flowing very quickly. Why would the poet have used rage instead of rush here?

Answers

Answered by bobpursley
Rage is an emotion, to me. The river is "raging" over rocks that have grown cold. I am reminded of a inspirational speaker full of sound and fury at a funeral, but the audience is somewhere else, not in tune.
Answered by SraJMcGin
OR it could be an example of "personification" because inanimate objects do not "rage."

Sra
Answered by GuruBlue
Think of the connection between rage and cold.... there is a clear one.
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