You see a familiar face in front of you; then make accidental eye contact. As you try to look away from that person, you can't understand why you are suddenly fascinated by them. Then, as time passes, this fascination turns into a desire to be with them, to find the courage you lack to talk to them. Lack of confidence will not stop your self-realization as this particular desire is stronger than the others. However, the universe has the ability to turn everything into a paradox; as soon as you meet the person you were obsessed with, in a silent stupor or with some obvious content, you are not satisfied with that person; this is regret, everyone experiences it at various times during their life. Even if there was disappointment, it is how you handled the situation that will indirectly teach you a life lesson: not everything will work in your favor. Sir Phillip Sidney has successfully described the madness and sudden dissatisfaction they may encounter and their hatred of desires and everything in them; the hidden essence of Thou Blind's Man Mark is that desire is vain, remorse is inevitable. Sounding the same consonant at the beginning of every word in a row is a real challenge for some people. In the next lines, three and six, of the poem, “…cradle of unmotivated care” and “With price of mutilated mind”, with the consonants 'c' and 'm' taking precedence, respectively. This repetition alludes to mental confusion when starting a new routine; routine in this case not only means something that occurs regularly in the long term, but as a temporary habit. When you add a new portion of memory to the mind, a… medium of paper… ingenious and cunning abilities. Unlike alliteration and paradox, this anastrophe shows no form of remorse, as the elite will continue to grow richer and increase their power, while everyone below them grows weaker. Yes, as many have stated before me, it is about his hatred of unwanted desires and the burdens they will have on you in the end, but that is just the tip of the iceberg. As Sir Phillip Sidney tries to explain his poem about his love life, or lack of one, it is not just about him, but warning us of our future mistakes. It is a sign of remorse that we will all feel after some sort of sadness or failure has occurred. We are only human; mistakes are almost as regular as using the bathroom, in fact they are predictable, because we are not perfect. Likewise these missteps are not our downfall, your life continues whether you want it to or not.
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