This would be a very liberal stretch as alliteration, if it is alliteration at all.
Normally alliteration repeats the first consonant sounds of a few words in a sentence or phrase, in order to punctuate the meaning or feeling of the phrase. A simple example would be: "The fair maid stood mute in the misty moonlight gazing dreamily at the...blah blah blah". Or "Tom's foolhardy thoughts ran fervently through his fevered mind that blah blah blah..."
In "To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time" The author says the part of life is best is "When youth and blood are warmer".
"To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time" by Robert Herrick is a carpe diem poem, which encourages seizing the moment and not wasting time on youth and love. It is a lyrical poem that emphasizes the fleeting nature of life and the importance of living in the present.
Robert Herrick, a 17th-century English poet, is best known for his collection of poems called "Hesperides." This collection includes famous poems like "To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time" and "Gather Ye Rosebuds While Ye May." Herrick's poetry often celebrates nature, love, and the passage of time.
Yes
NEVER! they are all virgins.
In Robert Herrick's poem "To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time," the sun is personified as a chariot driver racing through the sky. This personification conveys the idea of the sun moving swiftly and time passing quickly, urging the listeners to make the most of their youth and not waste time.
For the first time in forever
Alliteration and personification
Probably. I mean, they DO spend all of their time playing a card game
In the King James version the word - virgin - appears 33 times the word - virgin's - appears once the word - virginity - appears 9 times the word - virgins - appears 22 times
There were undoubtedly many, particularly at the time of the three festivals when everyone in the country traveled to the temple ... Passover, Shavuot, and Sukkot. But in the sense of "temple virgins" who somehow participated in the religious services there, no, there were none. Likewise, there were no human sacrifices there either.
The Vestals of ancient Rome had no restrictions on their diet. They ate whatever was common at the time.