Analysis Of Sarah Teasdale's There Will Come Soft Rains

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Published in 1920 by author Sarah Teasdale, There Will Come Soft Rains explains her reaction to World War I. Sarah uses nature to describe how she feels about war and basically puts nature over mankind. In the first six lines in the poem how beautiful the spring is. While also explaining the different variations of beauty that mankind could not effect, dead or alive. In Sarah’s poem she states that, “Not one would mind, neither bird nor tree if mankind perished utterly.” Which means to her that mankind is not that important as it thinks it is, in other words that it is a defect of Mother Nature. Sarah believes that once the human race is gone, the environment will go back to its regular and systematic