English, asked by Rohitkumar0153, 4 months ago

what stop the poet from helping and comforting the young boy in the ball poem​

Answers

Answered by aditya2323benka
0

don't no don't notice the difference in price and I think this would make it more difficult for us as well to have the best of our lives as a family that we are imbalances to and I hope you will find this useful in the form and non of your comments and non comments about this article you can be a great resource to the world and non of your own and I am sure that I am a great person to work for boy and non of the solid people who are imbalances

Answered by AntaraMukherjee22
0

The poet says that he'll not intrude upon the boy because he must learn to tolerate loss. The poet emphasizes this loss. He thinks that plutocrat can not compensate for the sense of loss. So he does not give the boy plutocrat or buy another ball for him.

This lyric is about losing commodity which we love and also learning to grow up. It's about a little boy, who in his youthful life, for the first time, is learning what it's like to witness grief after the loss of a important-cherished possession which is then his ball. perhaps for us, the loss of a ball is of minor consequence. Our natural response may be that still there are numerous further balls. So, need not worry. But to a little boy, this is commodity different. One can get another ball with a veritably lower quantum of plutocrat. But, plutocrat is external and immortal then, as it can not buy back the love and hence can not replace the effects that we love.

In this lyric, the boy’s ball van is fluently instantiating with his youthful days and which were happy and innocent. People may take balls just as they will take down our innocence and force us to grow up soon. And formerly we lose our innocence, also we can not get it back. But, despite all of these we've to learn to stand up. Obviously we need to be strong and get on with our life, irrespective of the sadness outside. This is the only way we will survive. thus, we've to learn to accept and let go.

The minstrel has made the use of the imagery while telling how the ball personifies the spirit of the boy’s jejune innocence. We may fantasize how the spirit of this little boy, like the ball, is sinking into the dark waters of the harbor. And as it drifts further down, the little boy will learn to grow up, and that part is linked to that ball grows up as well, until it's no longer a little boy.

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