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Read the final stanza of " A Red, Red Rose."

And fare thee weel, my only luve! And fare thee weel a-while! And i will come again, mu luve, Tho it were ten thousand mile.'

How does this stanza change the mood of the poem?

Respuesta :

The speaker is saying his final farewell, and he tells "his love" that he will come again.

Answer:

Explanation:

This Excerpt from "A Red Red Rose" (1794) by Robert Burns which is a love poem based on a folk version of a song that he heard while traveling. The poem is written in four quatrains, in the first three stanzas, the speaker expresses his love by using various similes. In the first stanza, he compares his love to a rose, then to a melody and echoes his love for her. In the second stanza he exaggerates her beauty and compares it to bonnie(French term) means pretty. In the third stanza, he portrays his never-ending love for her and promises to love her even when "seas gang dry" or "rocks melt wi' the sun". But the last stanza puts a halt to his love and shows his grief as he must bid her farewell for a while which entirely converts the mood and tone of the poem from highly joyous and loving to sadness and melancholy yet he promises to return and loving her even if he travels ten thousand miles.