Love can be strong as faith. The author sends a message that love can be just as strong as faith in a religious figure head. She compares him to her childlike faith, like how a child has a very forgiving soul and open heart.
In this poem the author uses literary elements and figurative language to help us to understand the feeling and the poem’s reason, some examples of it are the metric pattern that is used.
The poem use a metric pattern in iambic pentameter the author is using this technique around the whole poem to make the reader feel and think like he wants to. It also give a rhythm to the poem. …show more content…
“Several critics have pointed out that "the depth and breadth and height" echoes Ephesians III 17-19, where Saint Paul prays for comprehension of the length, breadth, depth, and height of Christ's love and the foulness of God. The terms "Depth, breadth, and height" all refer to dimensions, and the speaker specifies the condition of her soul at the time these dimensions are largest: "when feeling out of sight." Taken in context, the phrase probably describes a soul that feels