what do you mean by fly as thick as driving rain
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I think its from railway carriage
That was in the days when a guard would walk ahead of the train to the first...
That was in the days when a guard would walk ahead of the train to the first...
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Answer :
The line 'fly as thick as driving rain' has been taken from the poem "From a Railway Carriage" written by Robert Louis Stevenson.
The line means that just like heavy rain falls so quickly that it is difficult to distinguish one drop from another, the speeding train also passes by the scenery so quickly that it is difficult to distinguish one sight from another. So, the view from the train's window is undergoing constant change.
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