English, asked by avnir0753, 1 month ago

Till the walls shall crumble to ruin, and moulder in dust away! (a)Explain these lines in your own words.​

Answers

Answered by Ananya2893
0

Answer:

Mushroom

Explanation:

Answered by AadilPradhan
2

Till the walls shall crumble to ruin, and moulder in dust away!

  • In terms of tone, The Children's Hour benefits greatly when the children's father welcomes their story, and the plot in the final four lines becomes about loving that story and incorporating it into the poem itself.
  • Of course, the father will not be present because it is Children's Hour. let his children leave the "fortress," returning their adoration as well as a promise to love them for the remaining of their lives, however, they do so by telling their own tale— the "round-tower of my heart" is a metaphor, but it fits here.
  • The image of the tower falling to dust is a terrible way to finish the poem, since it most likely represents the death of the father, who is expressing his love for he assures his children that there will never be a day when he doesn't love them.
  • It's a wonderful interpretation of a father's love in the interest of his children, which is very certainly the poem's inspiration. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's first three children were named Edite, Alice, and Anne Allegra Longfellow, a fact that makes The Children's Hour's lighthearted and infantile narrative all the sweeter to contemplate.

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