Please explain me all the stanzas of the poem "Snake"

Please go through the below mentioned link for the summary of the poem:

http://cbse.meritnation.com/study-online/chapter_translation/english/58G@2fGsw9HwSrSAjyr3Ug!!

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I cannot give u the meaning of each stanza instead i am giving the complete summary of it.i collecteed it from internet.

In this moving poem, D.H. Lawrence recalls a time in 1923 when he was living in Sicily. Lawrence, our narrator, is thirsty and goes out into the courtyard to fetch some water from his trough (at that time plumbing was not invented). He receives a surprise when he sees a “golden-brown” snake drinking peacefully at his trough. He has conflicting views on what he should do-society and his “conditioning” tell him to kill the snake, as does religion (the snake represents the devil, and tempts human beings in genesis). However, his inner nature tells him that the snake is not to be feared, as all it is doing is peacefully drinking and will depart soon. This poem is really a battle between human nature and conditioning. For me personally, my general belief of what this poem is about is a mixture of things, one of them being reason vs. fear. The narrator has been taught to kill poisonous snakes- not all snakes. It's a dangerous animal, and his first instinct is to kill it because that is what he was taught. Kill the snake before it kills you. However, the snake is only drinking peacefully and so the narrator is then conflicted. On one hand he's fascinated by the creature and doesn't want to harm it if it isn't aggressive, yet the voices continue to tell him to kill it. He thinks himself a coward for not doing so. In the end he attempts to kill the snake only to deeply regret it, because he struck first without being provoked.
D.H. Lawrence uses repetition to emphasize repeatedly the fact that the snake may not be as bad as we humans believe. He says: “Was it cowardice, that I dared not kill him? Was it perversity, that I longed to talk to him? Was it humility, to feel so honoured?â€
 This gives a striking effect of repeated loops, and leads us to consider our own misgivings. Consider this: “He lifted his head from his drinking, as cattle do, and looked at me vaguely, as drinking cattle do.” This emphasizes that the snake is actually more harmless than they seem to be. Repetition also reinforces his own conditioning as shown here: “And voices in me said, If you were a man, you would take a stick and break him now, and finish him off…And yet those voices: If you were not afraid, you would kill him!”
D.H. Lawrence also uses extensive language to convey the situation. He uses words like: “convulsed… undignified… vulgar…â€
 to express exactly how the snake and he himself looked and felt like. These long words also help to keep the pace and rhythm. These make the poem slower, conveying the extreme heat of a hot day in Sicily. It makes the poem slurred and slow. Even when reading, it is read slowly and emotionally. The words “earth-lipped…burning bowels…slack” also convey the extreme heat. He also uses ‘lush’ words to show the extent of nature. “Lords of life…god” conveys the power of the being that he sent away.

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Thanks for your answer.. Thumbs up

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