7) How did the author came to conclusion that the child had come from another planet?
(THE LITTLE PRINCE)
Answers
Answer:
The Little Prince draws unflattering portraits of grown-ups as being hopelessly narrow-minded. In contrast, children come to wisdom through open-mindedness and a willingness to explore the world around them and within themselves. The main theme of the fable is expressed in the secret that the fox tells the little prince: “It is only with the heart that one can see rightly: what is essential is invisible to the eye.”
French- and English-language versions of the novella were published in 1943 (though the book did not appear in France until 1946). Critics were unsure what to make of The Little Prince, and it was not immediately popular. It was unclear whether the book was meant for children or adults, though British writer P.L. Travers said that it had the necessary ingredients for a children’s book in that “it is true in the most inward sense, it offers no explanations and it has a moral.”
Many critics drew parallels between the characters and events of The Little Prince and the life of its author, who wrote the book while living in New York City, having fled the turmoil of World War II in France. Like the narrator, Saint-Exupéry was a pilot who experienced a plane crash in a desert (Libya). His wife, Consuelo, is also said to have had erratic behaviour similar to that of the prince’s rose—a parallel further emphasized by Consuelo’s later autobiography, The Tale of the Rose (written in 1945 and published 2000). Thus, the narrator and little prince have been viewed as expressions of different aspects of Saint-Exupéry himself.
The Little Prince was translated into more than 250 languages. It was also adapted into radio plays and films—among them animated and musical versions—as well as operas, ballets, and theatre in countries throughout the world.
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Answer:
The behavior of the child was doubtful so the author thinks so.
Explanation: