what does the poet mean by 'charging along like troops in a battle' in the poem from the railway carriage.
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Faster than fairies, Faster than witches, Bridges and houses, hedges and ditches; And charging along like troops in a battle, ... Poet says that train runs more quickly than the fairies can fly or the witches can move. When train advances forward it seems as the soldiers are attacking enemy in a battle field.
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The following words are taken from the poem 'From a Railway Carriage'.
Explanation:
- The following words are taken from the poem 'From a Railway Carriage'.
- 'From a Railway Carriage' is a poem written by the poet Robert Louis Stevenson.
- “From a Railway Carriage” is the 37th poem of Robert Louis Stevenson’s A Child’s Garden of Verses (1885).
- In the poem, the poet describes and shares his experience of a railway journey.
- According to him the speed of the train is very fast and liberating to his soul.
- He presents natural senses seen from the window of a railway carriage.
- The line of the poem 'Charges along like troops in a battle' means the train rushes forward with a purpose and a destination like the soldiers on a battlefield who rush to attack the enemy.
- Soldiers also march with a specific rhythm as does a train.
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