Jul 02, 2005 19:25
4. The way he quotes Shakespeare hints at the poems namesake of "leisurely eduacation", the way he says the is in another language is like aying that the when he learnt it at school was in a different world a naive one where flies fly always and people with degrees and education get jobs always and the vicar comes over for afternoon tea. ohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh living on the inside edge of a penny, aint got nuthin to eat. try thinking for my penny but my thoughts aint much more than how my boots ache my feet! i see wishing stars in the sky above n wish for money over love cos a love or a like wont launch a fourth reich (money trees climb up much higher. deary me i'd like to afford acuupaatea. i do behold the ghsotl gold i traded in to a copper, but the copper was bent and the gold all spent and now I shadow penny droppers.
The bailifs took the poets words, quiet like night so nobody heard, they took his pen but not his tongue, which sang for sweet solice whilst he was hung.
I'm so skint man, wheres my means? needs to be catching up with my living (no ends) how much is a cup of tea round these parts.
I once a king and chief. now am the tree barks thief: ever twixt trunk and leaf. chasing the pren...
5. We learn in stanza 3 that the narrator's inner feeings are of extreme arrogance, he feels he is "godly".
6. In stanza 4...
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