Question:

Explain this quote: "A withering rose is deeper than the deepest water?"?

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Explain this quote: "A withering rose is deeper than the deepest water?"?

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  1. that really means nothing. I think the person who wrote it was on drugs or something.


  2. The rose represents the memory - consider the reason for having a rose (usually a token of affection) and those cherished memories will run in you deeper than any other.

  3. a  withered person (shattered through harsh experience in life) h\when decide to rise again in his life wil have experience deeper than the depth of water.

    water as keeps flowing his experience will keep him going.

    that why a withered rose is deeper than the deepest water..

    think positive

    hope u are satisfied with my logical answer

  4. A rose is generally considered the ultimate imagery in beauty and love etc. As such, to me, I think the quote is displaying how fragile and beautiful it can be to see the end of something so special. Water, in the end, is water.

    Have you ever seen American Beauty? When asked why he would find fascination in a dead homeless man, he replies "because it was amazing"

    Same idea.

    To me anyway.

  5. i don't know... maybe because a withered rose has lived it's life and so it's full of ( deep with) life's experiences.

  6. Water isn't really a living thing with a beginning and an end, therefore it doesn't get to experience death. A withering rose, however, is obviously at the end of its life, and if you are wise and content at the end of your life then I would say your soul is as deep as a soul can be.

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