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The idea of the last quatrain is also very effective.
He had scored high with his quatrains in the Twenties.
In the third quatrain the author compares the death of the two flowers.
Like the quatrain poems it is funny at the same time as serious.
The poem is written from a first person point of view, and contains five quatrains.
The statement that dominates the second quatrain is, "My reason has left me."
However, this quatrain cannot have been written by Nostradamus in 1503, when he was less than one year old.
The first installment was published in 1555 and contained 353 quatrains.
Some quatrains cover these disasters in overall terms; others concern a single person or small group of people.
When he first heard the 15-second quatrain, it was embedded in 45 seconds of a spoken commercial.
At this point dreadful sobs were heard to come from one of the quatrains.
The first quatrain describes what the speakers' love would be like if it was simply a result of circumstance.
The second quatrain asks the question of how beauty can be maintained through time and poetry.
The statement he talks about in the first quatrain is:
In the first quatrain, the family's "hearts are singing out" for the deceased.
The second quatrain continues Shakespeare's attempt to define love, but in a more direct way.
An English translation of 152 quatrains, published in 1888.
This poem consists merely of six quatrains, and we quote them in full.
There is, however, an economic aspect as well, changing the connotation of the quatrain.
The other quatrains are much less well known.
Love is defined in vague terms in the first quatrain.
In the third quatrain, the beloved becomes "now the world's fresh ornament".
The poem contains 1216 lines of verse, arranged in 304 quatrains.
The poem consists of eight lines, in two quatrains.
In particular, the first verse's second quatrain is often quoted: