English, asked by alokpatramail, 9 months ago

where does the poet see herself when she thinks of her childhood ? from, Mild the mist upon the hill​

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Answered by ajita3352
2

Answer:

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The narrator continuing to imagine their childhood, watching, near the old hall door, the same sight they are seeing in the present day that’s caused this melancholy flashback. While the description of the natural world here alludes heavily to the same sight as described in the first verse, Brontë’s word choice, along with her choice of what to describe about the scene, sets this apart significantly from “mild the mist upon the hill.” For one thing. the mist is described as “blue” and “sweet,” giving the phenomenon a pleasant colour, as well as a positive description (respectively). The “pall” of the fog, normally a world with negative connotations, is prefixed with the word “summer” which gives the entire verse a pleasant, sunny kind of feeling. The additional description of the mountain chain and horizon adds to this significantly. The entire verse is being dedicated to describing the same idea as the one that introduced the poem through the eyes of a child.

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