An elementary classroom in a slum poem explanation
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This poem by Stephen Spender gives a vivid description of a school classroom in a slum and the children in the class.
The faces of the children are dull. Their appearance shows that they are unwanted. The children have gloomy faces. Their heads hanging low in sadness due to being poor. They have diseased bodies inherited from their parents and are victims of poverty. At the dim end of the room, sits one child who has bright eyes which seem to dream - of playing outside with squirrels. He is different from the others in the dim, dark room.
The walls of the classroom are dirty. People have donated different charts and images which have been put up on them. One of them is a picture Of the great playwright Shakespeare. His head is bald and resembles the rising Sun. The next poster is of the Tyrolese valley, full of churches and flowers which symbolizes the beautiful creations of nature. Another one is a map of the World. To these children the world is not the one shown in these pictures, but it is the one they see out of the class room window. They are trapped in the slums. Their future is dim and hopeless. They have a dark future as their options in life are limited and are covered with dismay. They are far away from the bright light of knowledge.
Comprehending these pictures is beyond their abilities. They hate everyone and for them, Shakespeare is a wicked man. As no one loves them, they dislike everyone. the desire for love and acceptance forces them to do crimes like stealing. The children are so skinny that their clothes are like a skin and their skeleton is visible through them. This is due to lack of nutrition. They have worn looking glasses made of steel which are cheap, heavy and uncomfortable. Their chances of fulfilling their dreams and moving out have been further reduced by building bigger slums. Until they come out of the slums, they will never know what the world looks like.
The Government system which makes these slums is the cause for these people to live in them. The education system is such that it forces them to live in these slums. They are not given the right to dream beyond these slums. They have been restricted to the slums.
The poet requests the authorities to allow these children to go out of these slums so that the maps on the walls of the class room become a reality for them. They should be taken to the green fields rather than the dim slums.The sunny, warm sand of the beaches and the bright blue sky will instill a hunger for knowledge in their minds. Then they will absorb all of it. Then these children will become economically empowered. The poem ends with a powerful line - those who make history are the ones who shine like the Sun.
An Elementary School Classroom In A Slum
By Stephen Spender
This poem represents the condition of slum children. The poet describes the condition of slum children reading in elementary school as exhausted, stunted, malnourished and skinny. They were compared to rootless weeds as they were unwanted children in the society. The paper seeming boy, weighed down girl and each and every slum child in the classroom had no future.
The classroom possessed world maps, Shakespeare's portrait and many more things but they couldn't offer any hope to the slum children. The classroom walls were sore as same as the dull future of the children.
The poet showed his concerns in the poem too. The poet says that these children need quality education and better opportunities. The high class society must look forward the condition of these children.
The slum children, could also lead a bright future ahead if they would be provided quality education. This was consulted as the best way for the betterment of these slum children.