English, asked by taniyabeck53, 2 months ago

what is the moral of the story chlrjopher​

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Answered by Manjotmaan455
0

Answer:

In “The House at Pooh Corner,” A. A. Milne’s last book about Christopher Robin, the mop-haired boy bids farewell to Winnie-the-Pooh, the endearingly befuddled and honey-besotted bear. It is a bittersweet encounter. As they reflect on life and more, Christopher Robin muses that what he likes doing best is nothing. “It means just going along, listening to all the things you can’t hear, and not bothering,” he tells Pooh. But he adds, wistfully, that he can’t do nothing anymore. The time has come. The boy makes the bear promise never, ever to forget him, even when they grow old. Pooh promises. This marks the end of Christopher Robin’s enchanted childhood.

Answered by bablijaiswal867
1

Answer:

what is the moral of the story chlrjopher

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