Make a story mountain on the topic the eyes have it
Answers
Ruskin Bond Is a widely writer of Indian original who writes in English. The setting for most of his stories are the hills of the Himalayas. Among his most notable works are The Room on the Roof, The Angry River, Rain in the Mountains.
In this story Bond exploits the situational irony that originates between two people who meet by chance in railway compartment. The young man and the girl are unaware of their individual blindness and converse with each other from the conviction that both of them can see.
Summary
The story traces an ironic encounter between two people who are blind but are unaware of each other’s blindness. The narrator, himself a young man, meets a young girl in a train compartment. The narrator finds the young girl to be attractive and strikes up a conversation with her. Assuming that the young girl can see, the narrator describes to her the beauty of the hills. The narrator relies on his memory for the description, for he has not always been blind. The narrator is quite taken with the young girl and wants to spend a memorable time with her as long as their brief journey lasted. The narrator continues to address her not as a blind man, but as someone who could see. When the women alights at her destination, the narrator is shocked to learn from his new fellow traveller that the young girl was as blind as the narrator himself.