English, asked by kartikkahate1, 4 months ago

What does the following line mean?
'Both wry at the labored ease of loss.
Tha Ya
in the
em The​

Answers

Answered by bansaltaniya605
1

Explanation:

The line refers to the sea holiday as remembered by her mother and the poet remembering her mother’s laughing face. Both these now belong to the past. Her mother is no more now. The memories in both the cases, were beautiful yet painful to recall as time has paced away fast.

Answered by PrinceArunsakthi
0

Answer:

The line refers to the sea holiday as remembered by her mother and the poet remembering her mother's laughing face. Both these now belong to the past.

This is actually a idiom used looooooong back

Explanation:

The poetess is sad about the fact that her mother's laughter is history. Her mother feels the same for her childhood days. The word 'wry' here means disappointment.

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