Where there are no trees except the one except the one which grows and setter in one's dream
1) which place does the word where refers to? where did the poet family ?
2) which trees does the poet refer to in the given life is it a real tree?
3) what does the tree do? Explain the phrase grow and setters in one dreams.
Answers
Answer:
In the climax of the poem, the poet with his family moved to Baroda. There, the poet sees banyan tree. The memory of the banyan tree in his own garden rushes to him. And now that the tree in reality is dead, for his father brought it down, the poet carries its memories in his faded dreams. The poet personifies the banyan tree by saying that this tree is the one that grows in one's dreams, i.e., in poet's dreams. There in the dreams, the tree seethes, i.e., boils. It is to be considered for why the poet has used the second term. Is it possible that the tree is in anguish, because it was brought down, and thus it boils in anger while it grows in the poet's dreams though dead in reality.
Explanation:
When the poet shifts to Baroda he sees a banyan tree that takes him back to the memory of the tree that his father had chopped while shifting. The memory of that banyan tree is imprinted upon him and often appears in his dreams faded and blurred. The memory of the tree grows strongly in his dreams and affects him. The poet uses the term “grows” and “seethes”, that the tree grows and grows with rage and anguish in an attempt to avenge her death