Stanza 1 "Loveliest of Trees - the Cherry Now" - by Alferd Edward Housman - Book III Poem 3-BISE Gujranwala

 

"Loveliest the trees, the cherry now
Is hung with bloom along the bough
And stands about the woodland ride
Wearing white for Easter tide."


Reference:
These lines have been taken from Loveliest of Trees, The Cherry Now”, by Alfred Edward Housman.

Context:
   In this beautifully composed poem, the poet has expressed his profound and passionate love for nature. Its shows the poet's admiration of nature and its stunning objects especially cheery during the spring season. The tree has cast a tremendous and captivating impact on the feelings and mind of the poet when the poet sees his beloved tree, cheery loaded with white flowers. The poet wants to enjoy the company of his loveliest tree for a long time. Nevertheless, he cannot quench his aesthetic thirst in his short span of life, as he thinks fifty years is not a big period to enjoy.

Explanation:
In these lines, the poet in his spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings describes a beautiful scene of a cherry tree during his ride through a woodland. The cherry is ladened with white flowers. It seems as wearing a white dress to welcome the Easter festival. This religious festival of Easter, which is observed on or after 21 March. So with reference to the festival, the spring season is mentioned in the poem. The cherry is in full bloom. It is covered with white flowers. The poet calls it the loveliest of trees. His joy knows no bounds to see the cherry tree. 


   "A thing a beauty is a joy forever, its loveliness increases it never dies." 
    John Keats
    The language of the poem is very simple, but the meanings it conveys are very profound and thought-provoking. Both the implicit ( inner ) and explicit (outer) meanings invite the reader to make his own subtle imagination conclusion.
Related Topics:
Explanation of Stanza 2 of  "Loveliest of Trees, the Cherry Now"

 

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