English, asked by sachdevakavys10, 1 year ago

what is the summary of the poem sympathy by Paul Laurence Dunbar?

Answers

Answered by smartysurya773389
4
Paul Laurence Dunbar through this lyric poem highlight the suffering of the oppressed by prejudice and unfair laws with the use of the analogy of caged bird. This poem is written in three stanzas containing seven lines each.

Paul L. Dunbar (1872-1906)


The first stanza opens with the thematic refrain: ‘I know what the caged bird feels’. When the sun shines in the early morning when the first bird opens, the first bird sings, the river flows in its own way and all the natural things take the natural track, the caged bird feels deprived. It feels sorry for not having the freedom of others and this feeling leads him to the protest.

The second stanza deals with the theme of protest using the thematic refrain, ‘I know why the caged bird beats his wings.’ Feeling of constraints leads the bird to protest but that protest does not give anything except the wound. He beats until the bar is red with blood; his wound becomes a scar, but he does not get the freedom. As a result he moves to the act of singing for freedom. The third stanza, which deals with the prayer of the bird comes a thematic refrain, ‘I know why the caged bird sings.’ When the protest does not give him anything, he starts making a prayer which he sends towards the heaven. Through this prayer, he is making a plea for freedom. Protest fails and Dunbar supports the prayer.

It is at this point comes a difference between Dunbar and other modern post-modern black poets. When Dunbar goes for prayer, supplication, modern and post-modern black poets go to protest. In the postmodern poetry, blacks use the themes of protest whereas in Dunbar we find the tone of supplication.


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Answered by amita1979singh27
1

Summary:

The speaker starts us off by saying that he knows exactly what a caged bird feels. It doesn't feel good, especially when outside of the bird's cage the sun is bright and a river is flowing and the wind is stirring through the grass. The bird can't go out and frolic in that beautiful landscape. Not only that, but—stuck in its little cage—this bird can't hang out with other birdies, and it can't smell the beautiful flowers. At the end of the first stanza, the speaker again tells us that he knows how the caged bird feels. In other words, he understands why it suffers from being locked up in a cage.

In the next stanza, things get a little bit more violent. The speaker tells us that he knows why the caged bird "beats his wing" until they're bloodied against the bars of its cage. Yikes—this birdie is really miserable. This stanza focuses on the idea of physical pain. Not only is the bird wounded because it beats its wings against the cage, trying to get free, but every time it does so its "old scars" throb again with a new pain.

In the final stanza, the speaker tells us he knows why the caged bird sings. We can guess by this point in the poem that this bird is singing not because it's a happy bird. After all, its wing is "bruised" and its bosom is "sore." The caged bird's song, the speaker tells us, is a prayer and a plea that he (the bird) sends to heaven. Though the speaker doesn't tell us what this prayer is for exactly, we can assume that it's a prayer and a plea for freedom.

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