What are the reaction of the other creatures in the bog towards the frog's voice?
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HOMEWORK HELP > THE FROG AND THE NIGHTINGALE
What was reaction of other creatures in "The Frog and the Nightingale?"
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Seth depicts the other creatures as no different than the public whose fascination is held for a moment and then moves on to other elements. When the nightingale sings its first song, the reaction of the creatures in the bog is noteworthy:
Ducks had swum and herons waded
To her as she serenaded
And a solitary loon
Wept, beneath the summer moon.
Toads and teals and tiddlers, captured
By her voice, cheered on, enraptured:
"Bravo! " "Too divine! " "Encore! "
The nightingale is appreciated by the reaction of "the public" and gives them more of what they want for she was "unused" to this type of adulation and praise.
Over the course of the poem, the frog is able to put the nightingale in front of everyone, seeking to ruin her voice. As a result of the frog's "guidance," it gets to the point where she sings so much that the public tunes her out:
Night on night her tired song
Zipped and trilled and bounced along,
Till the birds and beasts grew tired
At a voice so uninspired
And the ticket office gross
Crashed, and she grew more morose -
HOMEWORK HELP > THE FROG AND THE NIGHTINGALE
What was reaction of other creatures in "The Frog and the Nightingale?"
print Print
document PDF
list Cite
Seth depicts the other creatures as no different than the public whose fascination is held for a moment and then moves on to other elements. When the nightingale sings its first song, the reaction of the creatures in the bog is noteworthy:
Ducks had swum and herons waded
To her as she serenaded
And a solitary loon
Wept, beneath the summer moon.
Toads and teals and tiddlers, captured
By her voice, cheered on, enraptured:
"Bravo! " "Too divine! " "Encore! "
The nightingale is appreciated by the reaction of "the public" and gives them more of what they want for she was "unused" to this type of adulation and praise.
Over the course of the poem, the frog is able to put the nightingale in front of everyone, seeking to ruin her voice. As a result of the frog's "guidance," it gets to the point where she sings so much that the public tunes her out:
Night on night her tired song
Zipped and trilled and bounced along,
Till the birds and beasts grew tired
At a voice so uninspired
And the ticket office gross
Crashed, and she grew more morose -
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Explanation:
How did the creatures in the bingle bog react to the frogs voice.
The creatures felt annoyed because of the singing of the frog. They were tired of his incessant crocking and insulted him whenever he started singing. However their complaints, insult and brickbats did not stop him from croaking stubbornly and pompously
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