“She had beautiful eyes, but
they were of no use to her”- find irony in this line. “The Eyes Have It” by Ruskin Bond.
“She had beautiful eyes, but they were of no use to her”
From the beginning of the story “The Eyes Have It” the
blind narrator was in attempt to hide his blindness from his co-passenger girl.
To make his attempt successful, he tried a lot. He took the help of his
experience, walked down memory lane and even guessed the beauty of the girl
only to make the girl confirm that he was not blind. He was successful in his
attempt as the girl did not suspect anything and left the train. But there was a
twist as well as irony at the end of the story. From the third passenger came
to know that the girl’s eyes were useless to her as she was completely blind.
Ruskin Bond very craftfully ends the story with an irony. To whom the boy was
desperate to conceal his blindness was blind herself. The girl more skillfully
concealed her weakness than the boy, making the boy as well as the readers
fool.
- The Eyes Have It is a short story
- “Then I made a mistake”- discuss about it | The Eyes Have It By Ruskin Bond
- “You have an interesting face”- Who said this and to whom? How did the person spoken react?
- What was the next comment of the speaker?
- “You are a very gallant young man”- who is the young man? why is he called “gallant young man”? How does the remark impress him?
- The story “The Eyes Have It” is a comment on seeing
- Irony used in the story “The Eyes Have It”
- Character of the girl in the story “The Eyes Have It” by Ruskin Bond
- What message does the story offeer? The Eyes Have It |
- Exchange between the fellow passenger and the narrator