How is the tiger described in the poem "the tiger and the deer"?
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Answer:
The poet compares the deer to attributes like love, softness and innocence. He describes the tiger's action as the end of good healthy values in life. Even as he says that life is meant to be enjoyed, one cannot but help understand the poet's longing for a peaceful world without harm to anyone.
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The Tiger and the Deer is an didactic poem by Aurobindo. It's a contrast between good and evil, innocence, life and death.
Explanation:
- A description of the tiger starts with the poem. The tiger shrinks brilliantly and slowly across the green forest. It has sparkling eyes, a strong chest and soft paws. People tend to be frightened of the tiger. It's rough and dangerous, you hate it. The world of the tiger represents death, darkness and arrogance in the poem.
- The poem's deer implies innocence, softness and love. The tiger's killing of the deer suggests that the cruelty of modern civilization kills and destroys sound values of life.
- The tiger waits for the deer to come and then decides to pounce upon poor deer into the wilds of Nature signifying it what is: dark in it, brutal, horrific, wild and beastly and deadly, cataclysmic and terrifying.
To know more
the tiger and the deer poem summary - Brainly.in
https://brainly.in/question/1535871
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