English, asked by soundaryaksonu2, 3 months ago

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How does the poem, "If I was a Tree" bring out nature's accep-
tance of all its creatures as a contrast to man's rejection of his own
kind?​

Answers

Answered by mg443379
2

Answer:

It shows how man rejects their own kind but on the other hand nature accepts all of his creations. They don't ask for the cast before taking in point of the presence of a tree. Birds chirp out of happiness not out jealousy. We as human beings try to compete with each other but nature's creatures don't.

Explanation:

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Answered by gayathridevimj
1

Answer:

The poem satirises the idea of defilement and purification. ... It is clear from the poem that the speaker has suffered the bane of discrimination in human society. His statement that if he were a tree, no bird would ask him what caste he was, makes it clear that the speaker is made to feel ashamed of his caste repeatedly.

It shows how man rejects their own kind but on the other hand nature accepts all of his creations. They don't ask for the cast before taking in point of the presence of a tree. Birds chirp out of happiness not out jealousy. We as human beings try to compete with each other but nature's creatures don't

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