what does the narrator like to do on a summer morn
Answers
Answer: This may help you
Explanation:
‘Summer Morn in New Hampshire’ by Claude McKay describes how one speaker is unmoved by the brilliance of day as he is too consumed by his love for another.
The poem begins with the speaker stating that the current setting in which he lives is dark, misty, and filled with pouring rain. There has been no reprieve from the onslaught for two days and the rain is beginning to drive the speaker mad. The sound is deafening on the roof of his house.
In the second half of the poem the sun rises on a new day and everything is transformed. There is a new warmth in the world, the wind blows lightly, and the birds sing in the trees. Although this is a welcome change, the brilliance of the moment does not touch the speaker. He states that the only thing which can move him is the love of another who is “far away.” Until this person returns he will remain downtrodden.