The Tide Rises, The Tide Falls

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As one matures, he or she gains a deeper insight of life. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow is a prime example for this statement. "The Tide Rises, The Tide Falls" was written in Longfellow's old age and contains a more pessimistic, yet more realistic, outlook on life compared to his earlier works. This poem draws an image of the ocean waves, interrupted by a traveler hurrying to town. All footprints left by this traveler are erased by the tides after he or she has left the shore. This poem reveals that time goes on even after we die, and, eventually, erases all memories of us, the passing traveler.
As the tide rises and falls, the traveler, a passerby, "hastens toward the town". There is an oncoming darkness, night, that cloaks the ocean as the waves erase the traveler's footprints. Finally, although night is over, the traveler fails to return. The tide continues to rise and fall. The traveler respresents any one of us, hurrying through life and trying to make our marks on the world. Soon afterwards, we die in hopes of being remembered forever. However, even though life stops for us, tim...

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