Create a Outline comparing these two poems "The Three Kingston of Nature and "INTIMATE ASSOCIATIONS

Ciccarelli: Psychology_5 (5th Edition)
5th Edition
ISBN:9780134477961
Author:Saundra K. Ciccarelli, J. Noland White
Publisher:Saundra K. Ciccarelli, J. Noland White
Chapter1: The Science Of Psychology
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Create a Outline comparing these two poems "The Three Kingston of Nature and "INTIMATE ASSOCIATIONS".
THE THREE KINGDOMS OF NATURE
While drinking, all at once I saw
Why nature's made of three realms.
Animals and people both drink and love,
Each according to its urges.
The dolphin and eagle, the flea and the dog,
Experience affection, and use their mouths.
So whatever can drink and love both,
Those in the first kingdom have their place.
Vegetation, then, makes up the second realm.
That falls far short of the higher one.
Leaves have no love, but they can drink,
When the dripping clouds sink low.
The cedar drinks, the clover drinks,
the grapevine and the aloe tree.
So whatever drinks, but cannot love,
Those in the second kingdom all belong.
The kingdom of stones makes up the third.
Diamonds we have, and also gravel.
Stones feel no thirst, no tender urges;
a stone grows without rain or love.
Well then whatever can neither drink nor love
those in the third kingdom have their place.
And, human, tell me, if you have neither
love nor wine-what are you? A stone.
GOTTHOLD LESSING/ 1753
adapted by Robert Bly from the
translation of Alfred Baskerville
18
INTIMATE ASSOCIATIONS
The natural world is a spiritual house, where the pillars, that
are alive,
let slip at times some strangely garbled words;
Man walks there through forests of physical things that are
also spiritual things,
that watch him with affectionate looks.
As the echoes of great bells coming from a long way off
become entangled in a deep and profound association,
a merging as huge as night, or as huge as clear light,
odors and colors and sounds all mean-each other.
Perfumes exist that are cool as the flesh of infants,
fragile as oboes, green as open fields,
and others exist also, corrupt, dense, and triumphant,
having the suggestions of infinite things,
such as musk and amber, myrrh and incense,
that describe the voyages of the body and soul.
CHARLES BAUDELAIRE/ 1856?
translated by Robert Bly
€
Transcribed Image Text:THE THREE KINGDOMS OF NATURE While drinking, all at once I saw Why nature's made of three realms. Animals and people both drink and love, Each according to its urges. The dolphin and eagle, the flea and the dog, Experience affection, and use their mouths. So whatever can drink and love both, Those in the first kingdom have their place. Vegetation, then, makes up the second realm. That falls far short of the higher one. Leaves have no love, but they can drink, When the dripping clouds sink low. The cedar drinks, the clover drinks, the grapevine and the aloe tree. So whatever drinks, but cannot love, Those in the second kingdom all belong. The kingdom of stones makes up the third. Diamonds we have, and also gravel. Stones feel no thirst, no tender urges; a stone grows without rain or love. Well then whatever can neither drink nor love those in the third kingdom have their place. And, human, tell me, if you have neither love nor wine-what are you? A stone. GOTTHOLD LESSING/ 1753 adapted by Robert Bly from the translation of Alfred Baskerville 18 INTIMATE ASSOCIATIONS The natural world is a spiritual house, where the pillars, that are alive, let slip at times some strangely garbled words; Man walks there through forests of physical things that are also spiritual things, that watch him with affectionate looks. As the echoes of great bells coming from a long way off become entangled in a deep and profound association, a merging as huge as night, or as huge as clear light, odors and colors and sounds all mean-each other. Perfumes exist that are cool as the flesh of infants, fragile as oboes, green as open fields, and others exist also, corrupt, dense, and triumphant, having the suggestions of infinite things, such as musk and amber, myrrh and incense, that describe the voyages of the body and soul. CHARLES BAUDELAIRE/ 1856? translated by Robert Bly €
Expert Solution
Step 1: Introduction

The connectivity between the natural world and the human experience is explored in "The Three Kingdoms of Nature" and "Intimate Associations," two poems. The second poem explores the spiritual and sensory ties between people and the natural world, while the first poem explores the division of nature into three realms based on drinking, loving, and the absence of both.

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