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Returning We Hear The Larks Analysis

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Again, when Rosenberg writes,
“Returning, We Hear the Larks,” 1922, p. 92) we read the metaphorical expression “we have our lives” by virtue of the conceptual metaphors LIFE IS A POSSESSION and LIFE IS A CONCRETE OBJECT, according to which the soldiers’ lives are conceptualized as precious properties that are properly kept and maintained. However, the soldiers do know that there is some sort of wicked threat skulking around and watching in silence for an appropriate chance so as to seize these properties. This “threat” is supposedly death, which metaphorically functions as some agent that is most likely to wrest the properties away and, accordingly, to put an end to the soldiers’ lives, since the loss of a property, Lakoff and Turner suggest,

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