English, asked by elviinsingh9599, 1 year ago

A monsoon day fable by Jayant Mahapatra summary

Answers

Answered by aqibkincsem
4
The famous poem by Jayanta Mahapatra reminds the reader of Keats’ “Ode to the Grecian Urn” which deals with the idea of the practice where one is the victor while the other the victim.

It deals with sacrificial offerings, irrespective of human beings and animals, without much sensibility.

He expresses his disgust and anger caused by the nation’s governing body that fulfills its responsibilities by indulging in verbal embellishments and imposing order upon disorder.

It is in fact one of the most popular odes in modern culture, currently.
Answered by paikarayamit32
1

Explanation:

The faint starlight rolls restlessly on the mat.

Those women talking outside have clouds passing across their eyes.

Always there is a moon that is taking me somewhere.

Why does one room invariably lead into other room?

We, opening in time our vague doors,

convinced that our minds lead to something never allowed before,

sit down hurt under the trees, feeding it simply because

it is there, as the wind does, blowing against the tree.

Yet time is not clairvoyant,

and if it has the answer to our lives, proud

in its possession of that potential which can change our natures,

beating the visions of childhood out of us,

the socialism and the love,

until we remain awkwardly swung to the great north of honour.

What humility is that which will not let me reveal the real?

What shameful secret lies hidden in the shadows of my moon?

All these years; our demands no longer hurt our eyes.

How can I stop the life I lead within myself--

The startled, pleading question in my hands lying in my lap

while the gods go by, triumphant, in the sacked city at midnight?

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