Q.6.Answer the following.
question(long Question)
1. Bring out the difference between Mr Parsons and Markwardt.
Answers
Answer:
Note: The Monitor is indebted to Gary Wunder, President of the Missouri affiliate and editor of The Blind Missourian for bringing this story to our attention. MacKinlay Kantor is not particularly noted for his philosophy about blindness, but perhaps he should be.)
A beggar was coming down the avenue just as Mr. Parsons emerged from his hotel.
He was a blind beggar, carrying the traditional battered cane, and thumping his way before him with a cautious, half-furtive effort of the sightless. He was a shaggy, thick-necked fellow; his coat was greasy about the lapels and pockets, and his hand splayed over the cane's crook with a futile sort of clinging. He wore a black pouch slung over his shoulder. Apparently he had something to sell. The air was rich with spring; sun was warm and yellowed on the asphalt. Mr. Parsons, standing there in front of his hotel and noting the clack-clack approach of the sightless man, felt a sudden and foolish sort of pity for all blind creatures.