English, asked by tamannarastogi08, 9 months ago

explanation for the poem 'Forest Fire' by Kamala Das

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Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

Explanation:      Kamla Das's poem are a representation of her human consciousness. Her poems deal much while describing her personal life and her desires. In the poem "The Forest Fire" the poet compares herself to the forest fire. She says that as the forest fire spares nothing and no one in its rage, so does the poet.

Answered by arynnair
1

Answer:in “Forest Fire” the poet consumes whatever comes before her and as a result she

achieves “brighter charm”. Like a forest fire, which leaves nothing behind it, the poet swallows

up everything that happens around her:

Of late I have begun to feel a hunger

To take in with greed, like a forest fire that

Consumes and with each killing gains a wilder,

Brighter charm, all that comes my way . (1-4)

There is the suggestion of reproduction in this process. And Kamala Das positively brushes

aside the approach of death which she thought as the only solution to escape the burden of living.

‘Forest Fire’ shows how Das tries to transcend the barrier of personal moods and feelings and

through a poetic assimilation projects the universal. Anisur Rahman describes, “She assimilates

the fond details of life in myriad form and projects an inclusive human consciousness in her best

poems” (78).

This poem becomes one of those where Das expresses her own experience of becoming a

poet. It’ll be unjust to treat her just as a love poet. Rahaman rightly says that the prime target of

Das is to project ‘human consciousnesses’. She consumes, as a forest fire engulfs and destroys

whatever comes in its way, all human experiences and out of them creates her poems. Rahaman

says, “…courage to own all that comes her way arises probably from the circumstances of her

desperate love-life and emotional wreckage” (78). This description of love-life and suffering in

her life has already been depicted in her poems and memoirs. ‘Forest Fire’ appears almost at the end of her poetry collection.

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