
Ozymandias by Percy Bysshe Shelley - Poetry: The Best Words in the Best Order - #BlogchatterA2ZChallenge2021
In this poem, the traveller tells the poet about two giant legs that stand in the desert, without a torso. Alongside on the sand, half buried, lies a stone head that is damaged. There is a frown and a sneer on the face, so well read by the sculptor. These expressions prove the arrogance of the ruler who took more from the people he ruled over than he gave.
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