English, asked by juswingeorge135, 10 months ago

Can anyone say the summary of the poem where the mind is without fear

Answers

Answered by theprimus2446
1

The poem, THE MIND IS WITHOUT FEAR. written by Mr. Rabindranath Tagore... tells the mindset of the people to be free.

he wrote this poem in the late century when our country India was a big backward and believed in taboos and all.

so, it tells the people to be open minded... to improve their thinking and come out to the real world

Mr. Rabindranath Tagore said/wrote these lines by being well educated...

I think that this will be ok

hope it helped

pls leave a thank


juswingeorge135: Thank you
theprimus2446: pls press the button
theprimus2446: pls
theprimus2446: now, I thank you
Answered by einsteinly
0

Answer:

‘Where The Mind Is Without Fear’ has been taken from Gitanjali. It is a prayer to God. He prays that his country should be free from narrow-mindedness and people should not be slaves to dead habits and customs.  

He wishes people to be truthful and they are not slaves to dead customs and habits. They should ever be making tireless effort to attain perfection and satisfaction. He wishes that in his country knowledge should be accessible to all.

The poet prays that his ideal country should have people with fearless minds. People can hold their heads high in self-respect.  

The poet emphasizes not only about his own country but says that people in the whole world should not be divided by any superstitions or prejudices and people stand united.

They should not be slaves of outworn habits and customs and superstitions because these are like a dull desert in which the clear stream of reason loses its way.

He wants people to be clear about what they believe and follow; not to get lost in the desert of superstitions.

He prays the Almighty to lead the people to make them do something extraordinary. He wishes his countrymen to be broad-minded.  

He prays to his Father, the Almighty God, to enlighten his countrymen so they can be free from the darkness of prejudices, superstitions and all other restrictions.

Similar questions