![]() Plow up: move in a fast and uncontrolled manner Lurks: be or remain hidden so as to wait in ambush for someone or something. The village people are misguided by the city people who teach them to sleep all day which they are not habitual of as the village people spend their day working hard. The people who consider themselves as the do-gooders or the charitable ones simply manipulate them and accomplish their own selfish motives. In this stanza, the poet tells that there is a news that these people living in the villages or the countryside will be relocated and shifted to the city near the theatres and the store where they will be equally benefitted by the development and growth. The owner of the stand thought that once the family has enough money they can live the life that was promised to them by the political parties. ![]() These people are hurt because they hoped that the city dwellers will buy their produce from the stand which will generate income for their family and they will be able to live happily, simply remains a ‘trusting sorrow’ as nobody bothers about their sale and instead they want the stand to be removed as it spoils the beauty of the landscape. They simply get mad about the presence of the shed their or the old rustic signs despite looking at the berries and the golden squash which is put up for sale.įurther, the poet continues by speaking on the behalf of the owner of the roadside stand that if they have the money with them (which they certainly do) why they act so mean towards these people and hold it so dear to them. Further, he describes that even if for a moment they forget about their city life and have a good look at the landscape all they do is criticise and judge. In the following stanza the poet uses ‘polished traffic’ to describe the people who live in the city and even when they are passing through the countryside their minds are still occupied with their profession and city life. These people or this family is deprived and need the money that has been circulating in the city with the help of which city people are flourishing. He wasn’t begging in fact he was trying to earn some money by selling fruits and vegetables. The owner of the roadside stand awaits if someone would stop their car to buy something from his stand. In this stanza, the poet describes the new shed that had been set up by the occupants of old little house on the edge or side of the road that was busy with the traffic. Sped: the rate at which someone or something movesĭole: a charitable gift of food, clothes, or money. Further, the poet also points out that growth and development are unequal in cities and villages which is why people in the villages tend to remain dissatisfied and unhappy as well.The owner wants to be accepted by the city people even if they don’t buy anything from his stand. ![]()
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