English, asked by gulshankumar13181, 10 months ago

The mouse and the cake by Eliza Cook summary

Answers

Answered by ArshAziz
4

Answer:

SUMMARY OF THE MOUSE AND CAKE

Explanation:

The Mouse and the Cake written by Eliza Cook gives the children in the Victorian Era a good tale with a strong moral ending. She conveys a poetic message of not to be greedy or selfish and to share whatever you have with everyone.This poem is about a greedy mouse who finds the most delicious plum cake. When he finds the cake he decides not to share any with his siblings and eat every last crumb of it till he got sick. The family brings in the doctor and the he says "if you had but divided the cake with your brothers,/Twould have done you no harm, and been good for the others" but the advice was of course too late and the mouse dies. In the last two sentences of the poem it says "Not to be over-selfish with what we may gain;/Or the best of our pleasures may turn to pain." which is the moral of the story.

Answered by Jaswindar9199
0

Summary Of The Mouse And The Cake By Eliza Cook

  • The Mouse and the Cake is a poem written by Eliza Cook which gives the children in the Victorian Era a nice tale with a powerful moral ending.

  • Eliza Cook expresses it in a poetic message of not being greedy or impolite and sharing with a clean heart whatever you have with anyone.

  • The poem "The Mouse and the Cake" is basically about a greedy mouse who discovers the most delicious plum cake. When he gets at the cake he chooses not to share it with any of his siblings and eat all the last crumb of it till he got sick.

  • The family brings in the doctor and he says if he had divided the cake with his brothers, it would have not harmed him and been good for the others. But the advice the doctor gave was too late and the mouse dies.

  • The moral of the story is expressed in the last two sentences of the poem, the poet Eliza Cook advises everyone not to be over-selfish with what we may gain, or the best of the pleasures may turn to pain.

#SPJ2

Similar questions