The poem also compares Coleridge's witnessing of the performances to a child hearing stories told to him.
Later poems compare themselves implicitly to gossip, "truest about who says it": like gossip, they want to be repeated and passed on.
The poem touches on the violinists art and compares his death to the death of his violin.
A traditional poem allegorically compares the ichirizuka that mark distance to the Kadomatsu marking the years of a person's life.
The poem discusses watching Two Rivers in a wrestling match and compares the pre-determined outcome to the Boston Tea Party.
The poem compares the theme of vengeance from the Old Testament to the theme of regeneration in the New Testament.
Bharathidasan's poems compare with Bharathi's in literary achievement and poetic fervour.
The poem compares the sea and the shore to the body and the soul.
He always said that his poems will not compare to the old masters.
The poem compares the act of poetry with dreaming and says that the two are the same.