English, asked by kumbhajchandrak7550, 1 year ago

What is the significance of the mother in the flowers school by rabindranath tagore

Answers

Answered by aliya90
2

What are the various figures of speech in the poem, "The Flower School"? What symbolism is used throughout the poem?

In Rabindranath Tagore’s poem “The Flower School,” the speaker is a young child trying to explain the phenomenon of flowers blooming in the spring. The poem uses personification, metaphor, and imagery throughout to convey the symbolic meaning of the flowers.

The flowers are compared to schoolchildren, which is an example of metaphor. The speaker tells his mother that the flowers have to go to “school underground” before they are allowed to play during “holidays,” or the rainy season. This combination of personification and metaphor highlights the speaker’s imaginative, juvenile understanding of how flowers sprout and bloom.

The flowers, however, are not the only personified group in the poem. The speaker even personifies the “moist east wind” that blows “its bagpipes among the bamboo.” In the speaker’s view of nature, everything is alive with its own personality. This is further demonstrated in the last line of the poem, where the speaker likens nature itself to his own mother.

This metaphor of the earth as a mother and the flowers as children reveals that even the smallest things in life need to be nurtured in order to grow, both literally and figuratively. It also highlights the symbol of the flower: the speaker sees the flower as him

Answered by darkwader
2

Answer:

The answer is in the third and fourth line as follows

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