English, asked by pujasardar, 10 months ago

"Then I made a mistake"- What 'mistake' did the speaker make? Why was it a mistake? What removed the speaker's doubts? What did the speaker do then?​

Answers

Answered by hetpatel67
121

A ) THE MISTAKE WAS THAT HE ASK THE GIRL WHAT IS THE SCENERY OUTSIDE

B) it it was a mistake because it would give out the fact that he was blind

C) IN THE END OF THE STORY THE NEW PASSENGER TOLD THAT THE GIRL WAS BLIND

PLEASE MARK AS BRAINLIEST

Answered by shawk9069
23

Answer : The speaker made the mistake of asking the girl about how the outside looked from the train compartment.

The speaker made the mistake of asking the girl about how the outside looked from the train compartment.

The speaker made the mistake of asking the girl about how the outside looked from the train compartment. It was the narrator's mistake because the narrator was trying to hide his blindness from his co-passenger, the young girl by pretending that he could see. But normally a sighted person do not ask such question to others.

The speaker made the mistake of asking the girl about how the outside looked from the train compartment. It was the narrator's mistake because the narrator was trying to hide his blindness from his co-passenger, the young girl by pretending that he could see. But normally a sighted person do not ask such question to others. The girl did not find anything unusual with the narrator's question and asked him why he did not check in himself by looking our of the window. This question removed the narrator's doubt.

The speaker made the mistake of asking the girl about how the outside looked from the train compartment. It was the narrator's mistake because the narrator was trying to hide his blindness from his co-passenger, the young girl by pretending that he could see. But normally a sighted person do not ask such question to others. The girl did not find anything unusual with the narrator's question and asked him why he did not check in himself by looking our of the window. This question removed the narrator's doubt. The speaker then moved easily along the berth and felt for the window ledge and pretended to be studying the landscape outside. He could hear the different sounds of the moving train and imagined about the vision of flashing telegraph posts.

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