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An Explication of Love Without Trust

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Many of us can relate to being loved without being trusted. Of course, this includes but is not limited to the teens and those of us who sincerely want to help them. In fact, an poet named Emi writes on behalf of all of us. Indeed, she uses a variety of figurative language in order to contribute to the overall effect of the poem by explaining what love without trust is really like especially via comparisons. The following explication will further identify the tropes and other rhetorical devices that are contributions to the essential meaning of the text.
Ultimately, the author incorporates a variety of similes and metaphors. In the first line of poetry, she compares mistrustful love to a "perfume without a scent (1)." Similarly, she conveys that this overprotection is "like climbing a mountain on your own" in verse line seven (7)." What's more, she reveals that this suffocation is "like winter without the cold in phrase thirteen (13)." In row fourteen, she links this suppression to a "pirate's lost treasure without the gold (14)."
Likewise, she utilizes metaphorical images to describe the importance of this key ingredient for peace and healthy relationships. For example, she says in the third succession that "trust is the foundation of love (3)." In the next line of verse, she explains that "it's the soul of every body (4)." On a similar note, she confirms that this desire of our hearts is the "sweetest sound" we will ever hear (9). In unit fifteen, she reassures us that this gift from You is the "greatest landscape" our eyes can see (15)."
Besides the analogies, there are various forms of repetition. This embodies the echo of the title in poetic lines 1, 7, and 13. There is also alliteration, such as the consonance of the "single scent" in the second linear verse plus the assonance of "and" and "at" in the very last group of words (24). Moreover, there are the rhyming words "cold" and "gold" (13-14). Furthermore, there are the common morphemes "see" and "agree" as this word pair additionally highlights perfect rhyme (15-16).
In summary, the gist of this versification is just what it says. Love without trust is smother love, which is described by different figures of speech. Hence, the narrator is our advocate and this work of art is Your defense on behalf every single one of us who feels mistrusted by anybody. You have given us this desire so that we can serve You via helping, encouraging, giving, or otherwise contributing to others without contributing to the spread of the virus. To put it another way, we want trust in order to make a difference in society and so that the dreams that You have given others will come to pass.....

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