English, asked by Crystal5730, 9 months ago

In poem casabianca, what do you think English might have felt on looking at the boy?​

Answers

Answered by abhaytamang111
1

Answer:

Answer:The opening line of this poem is probably one of the best known lines in English literature, even though many people might not know anything about the rest of the poem, let alone who wrote it. ‘Casabianca’ was memorised and recited by vast numbers of English‑speaking children in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

Answer:The opening line of this poem is probably one of the best known lines in English literature, even though many people might not know anything about the rest of the poem, let alone who wrote it. ‘Casabianca’ was memorised and recited by vast numbers of English‑speaking children in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.Casabianca was a thirteen‑year‑old Corsican boy sailor who died at the Battle of the Nile, refusing to leave his ship when it had caught fire. The poem’s appeal as a recitation piece in the nineteenth century is fairly obvious. In addition to its easy‑to‑remember, galloping rhythm, it is a morally uplifting tale of dutiful heroism. But ‘Casabianca’ contains surprises, and not least in terms of its rhythm. Where are the stresses in that famous first line?

Answer:The opening line of this poem is probably one of the best known lines in English literature, even though many people might not know anything about the rest of the poem, let alone who wrote it. ‘Casabianca’ was memorised and recited by vast numbers of English‑speaking children in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.Casabianca was a thirteen‑year‑old Corsican boy sailor who died at the Battle of the Nile, refusing to leave his ship when it had caught fire. The poem’s appeal as a recitation piece in the nineteenth century is fairly obvious. In addition to its easy‑to‑remember, galloping rhythm, it is a morally uplifting tale of dutiful heroism. But ‘Casabianca’ contains surprises, and not least in terms of its rhythm. Where are the stresses in that famous first line?The opening offers an almost nightmarish picture of the young sailor, surrounded by dead bodies illuminated by the encroaching flames. The boy will not leave his post until his father, the admiral of the ship, gives him permission, but the man is already dead.

Answer:The opening line of this poem is probably one of the best known lines in English literature, even though many people might not know anything about the rest of the poem, let alone who wrote it. ‘Casabianca’ was memorised and recited by vast numbers of English‑speaking children in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.Casabianca was a thirteen‑year‑old Corsican boy sailor who died at the Battle of the Nile, refusing to leave his ship when it had caught fire. The poem’s appeal as a recitation piece in the nineteenth century is fairly obvious. In addition to its easy‑to‑remember, galloping rhythm, it is a morally uplifting tale of dutiful heroism. But ‘Casabianca’ contains surprises, and not least in terms of its rhythm. Where are the stresses in that famous first line?The opening offers an almost nightmarish picture of the young sailor, surrounded by dead bodies illuminated by the encroaching flames. The boy will not leave his post until his father, the admiral of the ship, gives him permission, but the man is already dead.Consider the dramatic tension in the description of the boy’s plight and the graphic account of the boy literally blown to pieces by the exploding ship.

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