“All of the sights of the hill and the plain Fly as thick as driving rain”
a) Name the poem and the poet.
(1) b) What poetic device has been used in the second line?
(1) c) What are the sights that the poet sees during his train journey?
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Answer:
All of the sights of the hill and the plain. Fly as thick as driving rain. In the wink of an eye.
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Alliteration used in the poem "From a Railway Carriage":
Faster than fairies.
Houses, hedges.
Child who clambers.
Lumping along with man and load.
Glimpse and gone forever.
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The answers to the given questions are given below.
(a) The name of the poem is 'From A Railway Carriage' and the name of the poet is 'Robert Louis Stevenson'.
(b) The poetic device which has been used in the second line is 'simile'.
(c) In the given stanza the poet sees through the sights of the hills and the plains which are being left behind by the train which is, as quick as a drop of rain precedes to another in a storm.
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