The only thought that occurs to me, considering that his mother feels she needs to ask him about his bequests (he gives his mother his gold and silver), is that somehow the lover felt that since he had declared his love for her she would get his dough if he died ("I didn't know the brown and speckled eels were poison, honest!")
"Lord Randal" tells the story of a young man who has been poisoned by his sweetheart. When he comes home one evening, his mother asks him where he has been. He tells her he has been hunting in the wood and wants to lie down. His mother continues to question him, and he reveals that he had a dinner of boiled eels with his sweetheart. He says that his bloodhounds, who probably ate the scraps, swelled and died, prompting his mother to guess that he has been poisoned. The poem ends with Lord Randal sick at heart and in body.
Lord Randall was poisoned by his sweetheart. There are several versions of this traditional poem, in which the dish she cooked for him is variously fish or eels, fried or boiled.
Lord Randall was poisoned by his wife, who was unhappy in their marriage and sought to inherit his wealth and title. She wanted to gain power and control over his estate and believed that poisoning him was the only way to achieve her goal.
In the poem "Lord Randall" , the hero Randall dies from eating poisoned eels given to him by his true love. The poem does not say if the poisoning was intentional or not.
In the ballad "Lord Randall," the phrase "four and twenty milk kye" refers to Lord Randall's poisoned meal. It signifies that the young man has ingested a lethal substance, which eventually leads to his demise. The mention of the milk kye (cows) highlights the method through which the poison was hidden in his food.
Very ancient poem/song the author's name is lost to history.
why does the mother suspect the man has been poisoned? (Lord Randal)
The refrains in the fifth stanza of "Lord Randall" create a sense of despair and hopelessness as they reinforce the repetitive nature of the conversation between Lord Randall and his mother. The variations in the repeated lines highlight the mother's growing concern and emphasize the inevitability of Lord Randall's fate.
The speaker in the poem "Lord Randall" is Lord Randall himself. The poem is a dramatic monologue where Lord Randall recounts a conversation with his mother about his strange and unsettling encounter with his lover. Through his dialogue, we learn about his poisoning and impending death.
the main conflict to the story lord randall is the fact that he was poisen by his true love, the woman he trusted............ answerd by Dailove:)
In the Scottish traditional ballad "Lord Randall," the line "Four and twenty milk kye" refers to 24 milk cows. The lyrics suggest that these cows were killed by Lord Randall's lover as a way to harm him.
yes, because his true love poisoned him.
No one poisoned Krishna. Krishn's end comes when a hunter shoots an arrow onto his foot, mistaking it be the face of a deer.