asked 149k views
3 votes
N the poem “To a Mouse” by Robert Burns, how does the speaker feel about the grain the mouse steals?

A. The speaker is excited about the missing grain.
B. The speaker is not concerned with the missing grain.
c. The speaker is angry about the missing grain.

2 Answers

0 votes
Hello.

The answer is

B. The speaker is not concerned with the missing grain.

The speaker thinks the mouse steals all the grains and needs it to surive so the speaker doesnt care.

Have a nice day

answered
User Muhammad Waheed
by
8.5k points
4 votes

Answer:

B. The speaker is not concerned with the missing grain.

Step-by-step explanation:

Here, the speaker recognizes the burglary as one ear out of twenty-four, which he thinks about a little wrongdoing. The speaker is certain that what is left is all that anyone could need for himself. Somewhere else in the ballad, the speaker laments how his furrow has bothered the mouse's home. He perceives how much work that speaks to for the mouse and recognizes that with the virus winter coming, there is no green grass left for it to construct another home with. In general, the speaker feels that the mouse is in an ideal situation than he himself is, on the grounds that the mouse lives just in the present, while the speaker can both look in reverse with lament and forward with regret of what may come.

answered
User Bayman
by
7.9k points
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