The author's diction is in terms of God and the Bible. In stanza three, the line "Let love through all your actions run and all your words be mild" preaches religion through peace. In the last stanza, the author preaches against violence by suggesting that God "marks" the children dwelling in love as "His own". In the first stanza, the author uses different animals to symbolize God's meaning between animals and humans. God made animals, not humans, to "bark and bite" and "growl and fight" (lines 1 and 3). The author uses the word "let" to express release; the author wants the readers to "let", as in allow, animals to provide all the viciousness in the world, instead of humans. The author uses a visual imagery to show praise in God. In the last stanza line 18, the author states God sits at his "heavenly throne". This line gives the visual image to the readers of a king-like persona. God "reigns from above" on his throne portrays a sense of someone keeping an eye of the reader; "Heavenly throne" gives a perspective of ruling the
The author's diction is in terms of God and the Bible. In stanza three, the line "Let love through all your actions run and all your words be mild" preaches religion through peace. In the last stanza, the author preaches against violence by suggesting that God "marks" the children dwelling in love as "His own". In the first stanza, the author uses different animals to symbolize God's meaning between animals and humans. God made animals, not humans, to "bark and bite" and "growl and fight" (lines 1 and 3). The author uses the word "let" to express release; the author wants the readers to "let", as in allow, animals to provide all the viciousness in the world, instead of humans. The author uses a visual imagery to show praise in God. In the last stanza line 18, the author states God sits at his "heavenly throne". This line gives the visual image to the readers of a king-like persona. God "reigns from above" on his throne portrays a sense of someone keeping an eye of the reader; "Heavenly throne" gives a perspective of ruling the