English, asked by Preety5502, 1 year ago

Which sense does the imagery in this line appeal to? And the grumbling grew to a mighty rumbling; sight touch taste hearing?

Answers

Answered by rmb
4

Answer:

The sense of hearing

Explanation:

This line is from the poem "The Pied Piper of Hamelin" by Robert Browning.

Here the poet draws upon the reader’s auditory sense in two ways.

To begin with, both the words ‘grumbling’ and ‘rumbling’ are used to communicate sound effects. It is the poet’s way of telling the reader, through the decibel levels,  how the number of rats grew. A few rats seemed to be ‘grumbling’, but as their number grew, so did the noise, until it finally became a ‘rumbling’.  

Additionally, both the words rhyme. So, that further adds to the tempo and the auditory appeal of the poem.

More on imagery(metaphor) https://brainly.in/question/13792051

Answered by ksiva9kumar
0

Answer:

l do not get this answeruhegehhhdjydhhdjhejdhhsjhsjwhehejwjjdghwhshdhqoshxjieshhdjhwjb9xi zip xovobzj dobbosjsj0rg9hw0dobsbpvpsgpsb0dowgpdpdpdvpsvoevoebpgpqsgowjh0eh0whhejjjsb9xobk avobxibaoshigzhpxaohxoajpjpdjpqx

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