What lies in mounds in unkempt yards
Answers
Answer:
bangles — sunny gold, paddy green, royal blue, pink, purple, every colour born out of the seven colours of the rainbow — lie in mounds in unkempt yards, are piled on four-wheeled handcarts, pushed by young men along the narrow lanes of the shanty town.
"The spirals of bangles lies in mounds in unkempt yard"
Explanation:
Saheb, the son of a emigrant family from Dhaka, is a ragman who lives in Seemapuri, at the periphery of Delhi, and goes about barefoot disarranging around in the clump of garbage to earn his livelihood. For the children like Saheb, a clump of garbage is like a gold mine. Thousands of such children alive with their families in Seemapuri. They live in a blighted area with not even the basic amenities, such as water and sanitation, available to them. These families are living in complete poverty.
The children have nothing to achieve except ragpicking through which they earn something to eat at least. Garbage to the elders is a means of durability but for these children it is a magical wonder. In order to earn finor, Saheb starts working at a tea-stall where he is paid Rs.800 per month but it seems he, after this, failure his carefreeness. He effort for someone else and is no longer his own master. This loss of identity weighs steadily on his tender shoulders.