Questions About Love
When the speaker says rivers cannot quench her love, to what is she comparing her love? What does that comparison really mean, anyway?
Would you use some of the lines from the poem to declare your love for somebody? Or are they just too corny for your taste?
Do you think the lines about riches and gold are generic or clichéd? Or are they new and inventive? (Remember, she was writing this half a millennium ago!)
Does the fact that the speaker mentions love in nearly every line make the poem annoying or tiresome? Or is it swoon-worthy all the way through?