English, asked by Vibhor1979, 9 months ago

the poem ‘The Listeners’ what do the horse and the bird represent?

Answers

Answered by tandonaayana13
8

Answer:

I believe the bird is significant because it represents a part of nature which is disturbed when the traveler shatters the silence by knocking loudly at the door.  In keeping with the theme of the poem, the scene in the wood is quiet and placid - "the horse in the silence champed the grasses of the forest's ferny floor", and the lone house with its spirits within is shrouded in silence, at peace with the wildlife around it.  The traveler, with his loud, imperative ways is an encroacher, incongruous in the serenity of the natural world.  The bird, startled, flies "up out of the turret" when the traveler breaks the silence by calling out loudly, "Is anybody there?", and rapping sharply on the cottage door.

Explanation:

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