Farewell to the sea, I will not forget your solemn beauty. To sea

In the poems of F.I. Tyutchev "Probleme", "Alas, that our ignorance ..." and "We are not given to predict ..." a common theme is expressed - man's ignorance of nature, lack of desire for unity. The works are based on a deep thought, expressed by the phrase: "We are not given to predict ..." The poet reveals its philosophical meaning with the emotional tone of the poems. There is a feeling of dependence on higher powers that burdens a person. The lack of unity with nature leads to an unknown outcome: "It is not given to us to predict // How our word will respond...", "No one has yet resolved the issue..."

The poet makes it clear that a person can turn out to be the same stone that "lay down in the valley."

By whose will he was overthrown is unknown. As conceived by the author, people in the rest of the world are like grains of sand, small and helpless. Nature is presented to them as an object of study, and not a living soul. The hostile perception of the surrounding world makes people aware of their own weakness and loneliness in spiritual terms.

All poems contain rhetorical questions that draw attention to the problem posed by the author and encourage the reader to think about it: "Alas, that our ignorance / / And more helpless and sadder? ..", "How did he fall? .." emphasizes the unresolved problem: "No one has yet resolved the issue ...", "How grace is given to us ..."

Despite the fact that all three works are independent, they are perceived as a whole. With the help of means of artistic expression, the author creates an atmosphere of silence, reflection, inherent in philosophical themes: inversion ("rolling down from the mountain, the stone lay down in the valley..."), vocabulary of "high calm" ("ignorance", "fallen down", "now" ); epithets ("alien", "helpless", "sader").

Thus, the poems of F.I.

Tyutchev's "Probleme", "Alas, that our ignorance ..." and "We are not given to predict ..." have a common theme - ignorance of nature by man. The philosophical thought of the poet makes us rethink our understanding of the events of life.