The Boy and the Gull
LHan
1 Each morning when the fishing boats come in
their nets brimful of herring and cod,
a young boy perches on a rock above the harbor.
He has not come to watch the fishermen
5 unload the gleaming nets
or to stare at the horizon and dream of distant shores.
Instead, like a stargazer scanning the skies,
the boy awaits the seagulls that circle and swoop
on fish bits to devour for their breakfast
10 He could watch them forever, dipping and gliding,
as he dreams of flying, of catching the wind,
his arms outstretched like wings.
If only he knew that one gull in the flock
watches him each day with envy.
15 She dreams of spending her life on land,
and never having to fight a mob
just to get some breakfast
or flap her wings 1,000 times
to return to shore each evening
受
受
X
x In which point of view is this poem written?
A
First and then third person
B
Second and then first person
C
First person
D
Third person