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Which are the three phases of life explained in "The Indian weavers" ? Discuss ? In 150 words

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Answered by panchalisen12
6

Answer:

This poem represents the three stages of human life: birth, youth, and death. The poet depicts Indian weavers who weave tirelessly at different times, while also describing the three stages of human life, from birth to death, just as the weavers do tonight from dawn to dusk. The poet selects three different time settings: the weavers weave the new-born baby’s garments early in the morning, the queen’s marriage-veils in the evening, and the dead man’s shroud at midnight. The central theme of the poem is the parallelism that the poet draws between the three stages of human life and the three parts of the weaver’s workday.

The poem is written in iambic tetrameter, owning rhyme scheme “aabb,” “ccdd,” and “eeff,” respectively. The poem’s style is compelling, with each stanza beginning with a question to pique the reader’s interest.

To enhance the poetic appeal of the text, the poetic devices alliteration, consonance, inversion, metaphor, repetition, and smile have been used. These poetic devices include the use of simile in “blue as the wing of a halcyon wild,” metaphor in “break of day” to compare it to “childhood,” alliteration in “we” throughout the stanzas or “p” in “purple peacock,” and the use of the words “weavers,” “weave,” and “weave” throughout the poem. In relating the parts of the day to the stages of life, the poet has used vivid imagery. Almost every line of the poem contains imagery that conjures up a mental image of the “weavers weaving”, “blue-coloured

robe on a new-born baby”, “a queen wearing purple and green coloured marriage-veil” and a “dead body covered with a white shroud”.The poem’s main symbolism is that the “threads” of a person’s life are woven by “destiny” or “Fates,” which are represented by the poem’s “weavers.” The Fates determine when a person is born, how long he or she lives, and when he or she dies.

The weavers weaving garments and a shroud for various occasions may be the poem’s contextual meaning, but symbolically, the poem represents the cycle of life and death, with the Fates weaving the threads of each stage. The poem’s message is that life is in constant motion, with each stage characterised by its own set of emotions lasting only a short time before the next one arrives to take its place. This poem is enjoyable to read because it is a short poem with a lot of imagery. I like the poem because of the colour scheme that the poet has chosen for the garments woven by the weaver based on the intended wearer’s life stage.

Answered by AJTamil09
2

Answer:

The three phrases of life are New-born , Youth , Old age and

“Indian Weavers”  by Sarojini Naidu The poem can be folded into three parts – each stanza represents the three stages of life. Each stage represents childhood, youth and old age, respectively. Or more appropriately, birth, living life, and death appear to have been signified as the three stages of the cycle of life. The birth of the daughter of pre-independent India, Sarojini Naidu (13 February 1879 – 2 March 1949), was at a crucial time when India was laden with unfathomably tormenting issues. Sarojini Naidu suffered in making India an independent nation, happily estranged from the British empire and to become the woman that she is, she had to contest with innumerable stereotypical notions of  being a woman and thus, fragile and incapable, as supported by Indians, to be considered capable of fighting her own battles and those of her own country and, more importantly, to be heard and taken seriously. Called the “Nightingale of India”, Sarojini Naidu, is one of the most influential woman patriot, freedom fighter and poet of modern India. With her poems, she tries to educate the eradication of some sickly thoughts that are bred India.

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