English, asked by abdulaziz78, 11 months ago

paraphrase the poem "the dawn's awake"​

Answers

Answered by VineetaGara
90

Answer:

"The Dawn's Awake" is written by Otto Leland Bohanan.

Explanation:

Paraphrase of each passage:

First Passage:

"The Dawn's awake!

A flash of smoldering flame and fire

Ignites the East. Then, higher, higher,

O'er all the sky so gray, forlorn,

The torch of gold is borne."

In this stanza, the poet says that it is time of dawn. The sun is rising from the east making the sky look like it is burning with red flame. The sun rises higher and higher until it is only a golden ball of fire.

Second Passage:

"The Dawn's awake!

The dawn of a thousand dreams and thrills.

And music singing in the hills

A paean of eternal spring

Voices the new awakening."

This dawn is not only a natural process but also a dawn, a awakening of dreams and fears. With a new dawn, comes new springs of new dreams and new thrills.

Third Passage:

"The Dawn's awake!

Whispers of pent-up harmonies,

With the mingled fragrance of the trees;

Faint snatches of half-forgotten song--

Fathers! torn and numb,--

The boon of light we craved, awaited long,

Has come, has come!"

The dawn has shown the miserable fathers who work day and night a new light of hope. A hope for freedom from the bondage of slavery. It is like a half-forgotten song that is now being sung with new harmonies.

Answered by lovingheart
37

The dawn’s awake poem makes us to have thousands of dreams and music from the hills. It makes us feel as a group of people are waiting for the sun to raise. Dawn’s awake magically describes the sun how it has raised and how precious its presence is. When we read this poem we will feel like a lots meaning hiding in the poem. Yes every day we want sun without sun we can’t imagine the day.

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