Respuesta :
Answer:
It’s good to guard your faith, nor let your grief come forth
Until it cannot call for help, nor help but heed
The path you’ve placed before it. It’s good to find your grace
In God, the heavenly rock where rests our every hope.
Explanation:
This poem, found in the Exeter Book, a manuscript of Anglo-Saxon poetry,
is about a grieving man who wanders in exile since the death
of his lord and kinsmen. His journey is cold, lonely, and extremely harsh.
By the end, there´s a speaker who claims that only faith in God is a consolation for earthly suffering.
The line of the poem that shows that there is consolation for earthly suffering is: "The path you've placed before it. It's good to find your grace."
This line shows that the life that causes us suffering is the same life in which we will find grace and comfort.
As stated in the question above, this line is part of the poem "The Wanderer." Concerning this poem, we can say that:
- It's an old Anglo-Saxon poem.
- It has a melancholic speaker, which wanders alone.
- This speaker is exiled from his people and feels sad because of his loneliness.
- However, he recognizes that he must keep walking until he finds the comfort he needs.
- This walk must be done with faith and hope in God, who is the only one who can help him and listen to him at this moment.
The poem, despite being melancholy, is hopeful that all the problems will end one day.
More information:
https://brainly.com/question/11923260?referrer=searchResults
