what is tagore,s definition of freedom,? class in FYBY
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The poem is a prayer to God. Rabndranath Tagore wants his countrymen to wake up and to be together and to fight for their goals and rights It includes freedom of expression and freedom of conscience. Spiritual freedom is the guiding force behind political freedom.
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Tagore (1861-1941) was a Bengali poet and the winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1913. He supported Indian independence from Britain and desired the end of the British Raj, which is the subject of "Freedom."
In the first two lines of the poem, he refers to India as the "motherland" and states that he wants India to be free from fear. His use of alliteration, or repetition of the "f" sound in the words "freedom," "from," "fear," and "freedom" again in the first line, emphasizes the urgency of his call for Indian independence. The word "freedom" is repeated throughout the poem to express the poet's deep wish for his country to be independent. In the third line, he builds on the image of India as an aging mother, and he wants her to be free from the "burden of the ages," which refers to the yoke of English control of India. The aged woman who represents India bends her head, bends her back, and blinds her eyes under the burden of colonialism. These lines also use alliteration with the repetition of the "b" sound. Tagore speaks of the way in which India does not see the future or imagine a brighter future for herself by blinding her eyes.
Instead of looking forward, India sleeps with what Tagore calls "shackles of slumber," or time spent not thinking of her future. Instead, India is fastening herself "in night's stillness," meaning that the country is committed to the past and to the current situation of colonialism. The country "mistrusts the star that speaks of truth's adventurous paths," meaning that the country does not look around in its dark time (represented by night) and imagine a brighter future for itself as independent.
When Tagore asks for "freedom from the anarchy of destiny," he means that he doesn't want his country to just blindly and passively follow the fate that has been given to it, and he compares this fate, or destiny, to a sailboat that has to follow winds that are blowing in every direction and that is captained by an uncaring hand. This is a metaphor in which his country is compared to a sailboat following uncertain winds with an uncaring person at the helm.
Then, Tagore asks for freedom from India living in a "puppet's world," by which he means a world in which India is controlled by other countries and forces as a puppet is controlled by a puppeteer. The movements are orchestrated through "brainless wires," meaning that England controls India without thinking and by following "mindless habits," meaning customs that are followed without reason. In this extended metaphor comparing India to a puppet show, figures, who are clearly Indians, wait obediently just to follow the master of the show, meaning their English rulers. Therefore, the Indians live "a mimicry of life," meaning an inauthentic life controlled by others.
In the first two lines of the poem, he refers to India as the "motherland" and states that he wants India to be free from fear. His use of alliteration, or repetition of the "f" sound in the words "freedom," "from," "fear," and "freedom" again in the first line, emphasizes the urgency of his call for Indian independence. The word "freedom" is repeated throughout the poem to express the poet's deep wish for his country to be independent. In the third line, he builds on the image of India as an aging mother, and he wants her to be free from the "burden of the ages," which refers to the yoke of English control of India. The aged woman who represents India bends her head, bends her back, and blinds her eyes under the burden of colonialism. These lines also use alliteration with the repetition of the "b" sound. Tagore speaks of the way in which India does not see the future or imagine a brighter future for herself by blinding her eyes.
Instead of looking forward, India sleeps with what Tagore calls "shackles of slumber," or time spent not thinking of her future. Instead, India is fastening herself "in night's stillness," meaning that the country is committed to the past and to the current situation of colonialism. The country "mistrusts the star that speaks of truth's adventurous paths," meaning that the country does not look around in its dark time (represented by night) and imagine a brighter future for itself as independent.
When Tagore asks for "freedom from the anarchy of destiny," he means that he doesn't want his country to just blindly and passively follow the fate that has been given to it, and he compares this fate, or destiny, to a sailboat that has to follow winds that are blowing in every direction and that is captained by an uncaring hand. This is a metaphor in which his country is compared to a sailboat following uncertain winds with an uncaring person at the helm.
Then, Tagore asks for freedom from India living in a "puppet's world," by which he means a world in which India is controlled by other countries and forces as a puppet is controlled by a puppeteer. The movements are orchestrated through "brainless wires," meaning that England controls India without thinking and by following "mindless habits," meaning customs that are followed without reason. In this extended metaphor comparing India to a puppet show, figures, who are clearly Indians, wait obediently just to follow the master of the show, meaning their English rulers. Therefore, the Indians live "a mimicry of life," meaning an inauthentic life controlled by others.
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