My answer for this question is True.
Personification
"<em>it must have run there when it was a young house, playing at hide-and-seek with other houses</em>" - Charles Dickens - A Christmas Carol
HYPERBOLE
<em>"Napoleon is always right" </em>- George Orwell - Animal farm
METAPHOR
<em>"The city reeked of crime" </em>- Dickens - Christmas Carol
SIMILE
<em>"As dead as a doornail" - </em>Dickens - Christmas carol
Answer:
They reject its crumbs and flap past it.
Explanation:
This poem tells us that game changes frequently by referring to it as a five food upon a shifting plate.
The crowd here are used figuratively, they are people who see the crumbs of fame but are not interested. They see fame for what it is. It leads to destruction, people who eat its crumbs die.
So with this in mind, the poem says the crowd inspect the crowd of fame but don't eat of it. They flap past it to the farmers corn.