English, asked by carchana763, 8 months ago

what are the two signals mentioned in the story the signal​

Answers

Answered by nishchyrathod121
1

Answer

WRITE THE HEADING, THEN CONTENT, THEN MORAL 5 MARKS MASTER THUK MAARKE DEGA !

Explanation:

Answered by rajagrewal768
0

Answer:

'Signal-Man' (1866) is a short story by English author Charles Dickens (1812-1870). In the story, a real-life narrator meets a railway worker who was seeing supernatural visions. The narrator doubts the man at first, but at the end of the story a strange event makes him a believer.

The story has a simple structure. It begins with a narrator (who for some unexplained reason chose to visit a maskandi, who did not know him) standing on the edge of a railway line, shouting at a signer in his house.  Shouting words, twice, 'Hello! Down there! ' While that may seem like a simple greeting, it does have an effect. These very words, which we later find, were announced to the man who was the sign by the ghost he saw. As a result, the narrator received a cold greeting as he went downstairs to greet the man.

The narrator and the signal-man eventually became friendly, however, and spent some time talking about the life of the signal-man. On the second visit, the signal man feels comfortable enough for the narrator to pour out his chest depending on whether he has seen the ghost. What the ghost does, explains the signal man, emerges from the mouth of the train tunnel and shouts at him (with the same words as the narrator he used at the beginning of the story) and shakes his arm, as if to indicate - someone should get out of the  This in itself is not a sad thing, but a signal-man explains that after the appearance of the ghost a certain tragedy occurred. First, there was the train accident that killed or maimed several people. Then, a woman on the train died suddenly, without explanation. But what really scares the person who is the sign is that the ghost has appeared for the third time, and he does not know what the worst will happen.

While the signal man narrates the story, the narrator listens intently but skeptically. She loves the signal man and wants to believe him, but the narrator in the heart is a real, real person. He does not believe in ghosts. Instead, he thinks the signal-man is dreaming. The ghost's voice, the narrator thinks, is the wind blowing in the gorge. These disasters are coincidental.

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