"Worldly desires are of no use when a child has lost parental shelters."- Discuss this
with reference to the chapter „The Lost Child‟. (5)
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Answer:This sentence refers to the part when the child loses his parents in the carnival. All his 'worldly desires'— the sweets that he wanted to eat, the stalls he wanted to play in, the merry-go-round that he wanted to ride on were nothing compared to the distress he was feeling at the separation from his parents. They were mere distractions that led to the situation he was in. He missed his parents, and without their company, nothing seemed to be appealing.
This sentence can mean that none of the material things could beat the abstract melancholy he was feeling at the loss of love.
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