English, asked by joshuameledathu, 6 days ago

*THIS IS THE SUMMARY OF "The Scholar"*
In the poem ‘The Scholar ‘, Robert Southey describes the great delight and companionship the poet enjoys in the company of books. The scholar in the poem is Southey himself.
The poem has a clear and interesting movement from the present to the past and then to the future. The first two stanzas show the poet’s engagement with the dead authors through the books they have left. Adverbs of time like ‘day by day’ and ‘often’ indicate this.
The third stanza looks at the possible continuation of the relationship between the poet and the dead authors in the future. The phrase ‘through all futurity ‘indicates this. The poet begins by saying that he owes a great deal to books, ‘his never-failing friends’. He can turn to them for joy, comfort and inspiration at any time. As he thinks about it, his sense of gratitude brings tears to his eyes.
The poet says he lives with the authors in the distant past. He learns valuable lessons from their experiences. The poet knows that he would also die. He hopes that, just as the names of the dead authors live on, his name also will live after he is dead and gone to take his place with them.
Thus in four rhyming and well-ordered stanzas, Southey expresses his scholarly views and his indebtedness to books.
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Answers

Answered by yadavpushpa938
3

Answer:

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