English, asked by Prashanttiwari3944, 1 year ago

Why did the man fall on the wise man's feet

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Answered by harshitkuradiya2004
0

They finished searching the north side and started on the south. They told stories every night, touching on:

Oren Velciter, Laniel Young-Again, Illien. Stories of helpful swineherds and lucky tinker’s sons. Stories of demons and faeries, of riddle games and barrow draugs.

Oren Velciter is alive, and told Chronicler his story. Pat has recently mentioned that he wrote a short about Laniel Young-Again, a middle aged women going off on adventures. Illien is the Edema Ruh poet, the person Kvothe thinks is the greatest who ever lived. We met a helpful swineherd near Borroril in NW.

The Edema Ruh know all the stories in the world, and I am Edema Ruh down to the center of my bones.

Unless he’s not—he’s only half Ruh to his own knowledge… but I guess his mother was a convert and that counts? In any case, if they know all the stories in the world, why not this one? And anyway, we know they don’t. Look at Arliden questing for the story of Lanre. They might want to know all the stories in the world—though why?—but it’s quite clear Kvothe is exaggerating here.

But he enjoyed the stories even though he knew them, they had new details, even though he knew their bones. A story he didn’t know was rare, and after twenty days he got one.

Hespe tells it. The story she told before was a romantic one, and this is anything but. It’s also a recitation, she has to go back to the beginning when she is interrupted. She says this is exactly how she heard it from her mother. We don’t know where Hespe comes from, or I don’t, but she’s a Vint.

It begins with a strange boy named Jax who fell in love with the moon.

We later, from Felurian, hear that name as Iax. Shalter and others have pointed out that Iax, Jax, and Jakis are similar, and perhaps Ambrose is a descendant of Jax as Kvothe is of the Lackless.

In Hespe’s story, Jax was always strange, and he lived in an old house at the end of a broken road, later a “alone in a broken house at the end of a broken road”.

We’ve speculated about the broken house being the Underthing, or being the 4C world, or being Fae.

One day a tinker came to Jax’s house and asks for a drink, which Jax gives him, water in a cracked clay mug. Jax proposes a trade—if the tinker has anything in his pack that will make him happy, he’ll trade it for his broken house, and if not the tinker will give Jax

the packs off your back, the stick in your hand, and the hat off your head.

Answered by manojkumarshanu800
0

Answer:

why did the man fall on the wise.s feet 5calss ans

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