B. Answer these questions,
1. What is the connection between the flowers and the bees?
2. Why is the season of mists called the 'close bosom-friend' of the sun?
3. How do the season of mist and the sun conspire?
4. In what way has the summer helped the bees?
5. In the later lines, the speaker says that autumn is found sleeping on a
half-reaped furrow. What has induced it to sleep?
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Answer:
1.the necter in flower attract bees and bees collect necter to make honey
Answer:
Answer:
1. Flowers rely on bees to cross-pollinate their female plants. When bees feedt on the pollen, their body picks up excess via their pollen-collecting hairs, which is then released when they land. Pollen act as the flower's seed, which is mandatory for the survival of that flower species.
2. The poet has manipulated the language in order to attribute human qualities to or personify the season. He refers to autumn as a dear friend of the sun who has now come down to rid him of his responsibilities.
3. His method of developing the poem is to heap up imagery typical of autumn. ... In the final stanza, autumn is seen as a musician, and the music which autumn produces is as pleasant as the music of spring — the sounds of gnats, lambs, crickets, robins and swallows.
4.For the bees, perhaps their "warm days will never cease" because those warm days have helped them to produce so much honey. In other words, while the warm days may literally disappear, they will live on in the form of the honey that they have helped the bees to produce.
5. "To Autumn" is an ode by the English Romantic poet John Keats written in 1819. ...Anyone might also find you asleep in the fields, on an incompletely harvested crop row, fatigued because of the sleep- including Aroma of the poppies. ... The speaker envisions autumn as a transitional season that straddles the line between.