English, asked by mishthi5555, 10 months ago

what does the poet says the wind God winnows​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
34

The poet says that the wind god winnows the weak crumbling houses, doors, rafters, wood, bodies, lives and hearts, and then crushes them all.

The first part of the poem describes the action of the wind. The poet asks the wind to come softly. He requests the wind not to break the shutters of the windows, not to scatter the papers and throw down the books from the shelf.

Answered by GAMINGFIRE
17

The writer says that the breeze god winnows the feeble and delicate disintegrating houses, wood, entryways, bodies, rafters, lives, and hearts, and afterward pounds them all. It breaks the screens of the windows.

It tosses down the books on the rack, and afterward tears separated their pages.

Winnowing implies a strategy used to isolate grains from the debris with the assistance of wind.

Similarly when a strong wind blows, the weaklings are evacuated, and just the solid ones remain.

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