Answer:
This funny poem, a parody of “The Old Man’s Comforts and How He Gained Them” (1799) by famous English poet Robert Southey, tells the modern reader that older people, like the mischievous Father William, may have aged, but they can still have a sharp, optimistic, and witty attitude - or they may develop it precisely as they age. For instance, when asked how, being old and fat, he has done a somersault, Father William replies to the irreverent young man by saying that maybe he should try the ointment that has been keeping his limbs in good shape since he was a young fellow. Furthermore, it also tells the reader that it is precisely at an older age when people may become more self-confident, carefree, wise, humorous, spontaneous, and definitely more knowledgeable. The young man reprimands the old man for standing on his head, and the old man says that as a young man he was afraid of injuring his brain, but now that he is old and is certain that "he does not have one," he is determined to do it again and again. Finally, it also tells the modern reader that, often, young people are arrogant, prejudiced, and disrespectful to older people, and they underestimate, and often marvel at, their abilities. The young man vainly tells the old man that his jaws may only be good to eat suet, yet he has eaten a whole goose, and the old man replies to him by saying that the strength of his jaw is the result of endless discussions with his wife as a young adult. In addition, the young man marvels at the old man's balance, which allows him to keep an eel on his nose.
To sum up, older people are happier, more patient, they have more sense of humor, and they play down simply because they have lived more and know "how life works," so to speak. Young people, on the contrary, tend to have preconceived, usually negative, notions of old people, they underestimate them, and they often address them rudely and arrogantly. And this poem is a wonderful lesson to teach us, or to remind us of, that.Step-by-step explanation: