English, asked by abrahamkeng, 5 months ago

why does Yeats say that the falcons cannot hear the falconer?​

Answers

Answered by jaionkar64
7

Explanation:

It's not surprising that looking at the horrific devastation, the killing fields of Europe ('the blood-dimmed tide') and what was then their colonial possession, the rest of the world, that he felt that the world had lost its centre and could no longer hold, and that mankind (the falcon) could no longer hear what ...

regards ❤

Answered by AMEERSOHAILDALAWAI1
4

Explanation:

The falcon cannot hear the falconer; The falcon is described as "turning" in a "widening gyre" until it can no longer "hear the falconer," its human master. ... In actual falconry, the bird is not supposed to keep flying in circles forever; it is eventually supposed to come back and land on the falconer's glove.

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