English, asked by drmanojsharma3815, 9 months ago

write quotes or peom on Corona warriors

Answers

Answered by anupamaseanu36
0

Answer:

follow me .................

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Answered by roshnisethi05
0

Heyyaa!!

Here is the answer to your question!!

Answer:

Yes there is fear.

Yes there is isolation.

Yes there is panic buying.

Yes there is sickness.

Yes there is even death.

But,

They say that in Wuhan after so many years of noise

You can hear the birds again....”

The BBC Radio broadcast it as a plea to pause, listen and reflect.

“Humans have always had their own ways to cope with disaster and literature and poetry have always been born out of great suffering,” says Bhaskaran Bara, artist, writer and poet. “Now, we have the facility to air our haikus and verses instantly as they occur to us.”

British poet Simon Armitage in a poem, (also titled 'Lockdown') remembers the villagers of Eyam in Derbyshire, who locked themselves up during the 17th century outbreak of plague:

“And I couldn’t escape the waking dream

of infected fleas

In the warp and weft of soggy cloth

By the tailor’s hearth...”

Actor Amitabh Bachchan wrote a few lines in Hindi, urging people to stay safe.

“In times such as these, we all have our coping methods. Poetry is mine,” says Aditya Jadhav, who runs a digital marketing company and poet. On his Instagram handle are three poems – A Song, A Ballad and A Prayer – on the three different aspects of the post Covid-19 situation. While ‘A Song’ is hopeful, stating that it took a calamity to make us appreciate simple things about life, ‘A Ballad’ is an ode to the healthcare professionals who work tirelessly. The last in the series is an impassioned prayer to the universe to lend us strength to tide over these troubled times:

“He captured the world, every village

every city

Invincible and dangerous than

anybody has ever been

But little did he know of the secret

army

The army of heroes clad in white and green...”

Any art can help you tackle the gloom, says Meena Shaktivanam, who has been putting up stories, songs and limericks on Instagram for children who have to stay indoors this vacation. Her Kunjiamoomma stories have been made for “corona times”, she says.

Poet Jeena Mary Chacko from Bangalore writes in her poetic FB post that the “Great Isolation” has taught her a few things about life:

“That I long for things to go back to normal. I long for my workstation, my routine, the white board, my purple markers and the wooden duster I keep in my desk....That life is persistent and relentless ....That uncertainty is the only constant.”

Ultimately, it is about taking a re-look at your priorities, says Kristin Flyntz in her poem, “An imagined letter from Covid 19 to Humans,” which was shared over 27,000 times on social media and is still being passed around. In it, she writes:

“Despite what you might think or feel, we are not the enemy

We are messenger. We are Ally. We are a balancing force

We are asking you.

To stop, to be still, to listen…”

Hope it helps you!!

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