52.0k views
5 votes
1. What is the speaker's perspective in "The Children's Hour" on his children and their relationship? Provide at least three pieces of evidence from the poem to support your answer.

User Tequila
by
4.7k points

1 Answer

0 votes

Answer:

The speaker's perspective is that of a loving father, happy to entertain and play around with her daughters. He expressed his caring and endless love for them throughout the whole poem.

Step-by-step explanation:

The poem "The Children's Hour" is written by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow about a father and his daughters' relationship. The poem presents a caring and deeply emotional love a father has for his daughters.

The speaker in the poem is an unnamed man, probably the father of the three girls. He comments about himself as "an old mustache as I am." But through his reaction to his daughters bursting into his room, suggests he is a loving father. This can be inferred from the lines that express his feelings for his daughters-

"voices soft and sweet"

"They almost devour me with kisses"

"And there will I keep you forever".

These three lines from the poem are evidence of the father's/ speaker's love for the three little girls- Alice, Allegra, and Edith.

User Wojtek Dmyszewicz
by
4.2k points