English, asked by palsudipta15p66, 6 months ago

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Answered by svasudha2008
0

Answer:

The speaker of the above lines is Robert Southy

Context of Speech: In the above stanza of ‘After Blenheim’, the poet describes the severity of battle. ‘Fire’ and ‘sword’ are symbols of man’s cruelty for man. They represent destruction, death and horror. ‘Wasted’ is an emotionally charged word. It conjures an image of a land raped of any use, purpose and dignity. It shows both the futility of war and its power to destroy. The image of mother and baby killed in war here makes us see battle as catastrophic of both present and future. It powerfully evokes the death of innocence.

Whether he believes it or not, Kaspar has resigned to the inevitability of death. That’s why he takes those killings casually and thinks it ‘must be’ there at every such victory. ‘Famous victory’ is intentionally repeated by the poet to create a sense of irony.

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Answered by mohinigoswami9
0

Answer:

kaspar is the speaker

Explanation:

in this stanza he wants to say that the country was covered by fire and sword , and the pregnant women also suffer due to this war and they have to leave their house and they has forced to leave their child and their house . and many new born child died because of this war but for kaspar it was a simple and casual destroy as it happens in every war , and that destruction was a matter to be proud according to kaspar

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