English, asked by ananyagirdhar85, 13 hours ago

In the poem A Tiger in the Zoo, what does the tiger’s ‘quiet rage’, indicate? It indicate s that the tiger’s anger is A. forgotten. B. provoked. C. suppressed. D. opposed.​

Answers

Answered by KamilSinghThakur
3

Answer:

(C) suppressed is the correct option. It indicates that the tiger's anger is Suppressed.

I hope this may help you..

Answered by letmeanswer12
0

"The Tiger's 'Quite rage' indicates Suppressed"

Explanation:

                    A Tiger in the Zoo story starts with a description of a tiger that is very beautiful and is walking in his small cage. He has beautiful lines on his skin and has velvet like soft paws. But the tiger is not happy and is actually angry about being restricted in the cage. The poet said that if the tiger was not restricted to the zoo cage, he would have been covering himself behind the long grass near some water body, in order to seize its prey that is the antelope.

Also, he would have scared the residents of the villages around the forest area. But the reality is completely opposite to this. He was restricted in a cage which was made up of strong building material and he was helpless there. He could not show his strength to the visitors, therefore, never tried to scare them. The tiger is described as being powerless and disastrous by the poet. He says that during night also he is alone, hearing the voice of the policing vehicles of police and looking at the stars.

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