"There are many who hold, as I do, that the most important part of life is not the age of university studies, but the first one, the period from birth to the age of six. For that is the time when a man's intelligence itself, his greatest implement, is being formed. But not only his intelligence; the full totality of his psychic powers." (Maria Montessori, The Absorbent Mind)

Have You Ever Thought

by Jacqueline Brown

A comb has teeth but can't bite,
A shoe has a tongue but can't talk,
Rulers have feet and tables have legs
Yet neither of them can walk.

A chair has an arm but no elbow,
A clock has two hands but can't hold,
Hills have brows, and corn has ears
Though they never turn blue in the cold.

Needles and spuds have eyes
But not one of them can see,
And though a jug has a lip, and a tunnel a mouth,
They can't drink coffee or tea.

Rocks and clocks have faces,
Books have backs and a spine,
A well's got a bottom, a sausage as skin;
There's a neck on a bottle of wine.

Roads have hard shoulders but can't shrug,
A car has a body plus parts,
Tools have chests and chimneys have breasts.
But only people - and lettuce - have hearts!

13 comments:

  1. Can any one tell me the summary of this poem plz

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    1. Summary of the poem is that the poet says that you should imagine things in a new way and that imagination is creative imagining things in a new way completly changes its meaning living things and non living things both have body parts but only humans(living thing) are able to use them so we should thank god how he has created us

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  2. add info about the poet too
    add meanings about the words that are difficult

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  3. though poem but no nothing
    thumbs medium
    lololololol

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  4. In this poem can you tell me more than 20 parts of the body

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  5. Can any one tell me the paraphrasing of this poem

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  6. May anyone please tell me the structure of the poem☺❤

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  7. May anyone please tell me the structure of the poem☺❤

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  8. commenting from english rn

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