Justify the title *Goodbye Miss Mackenzie*
Author : Ruskin Bond
Answers
Explanation:
Goodbye, Miss Mackenzie It's when she meets Anil, a little Indian boy, that they bond through their love for botany. As Anil leaves for his vacation back home, loneliness creeps back into Miss Mackenzie's house and as the winter wind blows, it puts her at rest.
ANSWER
♡Ruskin Bond's 'The Eyes Have It' tells a moving tale of the blind.
♡The narrator is a blind man.
♡His eyes are sensitive to light and darkness only.
♡In the train compartment,he meets a girl and enjoys her company.
♡Considering her to be a quite normal ,he tries to conceal his blindness in every possible way.
♡He even praises the girl's face and gives an account of the lovely scenic beauty of mussoorie.
♡It is interesting that after the girl's departure the narrator discovers that the girl too is blind.
♡In the story whatever the narrator sees ,he sees through his mind's eye and his heart.
♡The story ends with the rail station that if the eyes are blind one must look into the heart.
♡The title 'The Eyes Have It' aptly portrays the experience of the journey called life ,both within and without.
♡The successful blend of the metaphors of sight and blindness makes the title a justified one.