Identify the lines that reveal the critical tone of the poet towards the felling of the tree.
view answer >Identify the words that help you understand the nature of the poet’s father.
view answer >‘Trees are sacred my grandmother used to say’— what does the poet imply by this line?
view answer >‘No trees except the one which grows and seethes in one’s dreams’— why is the phrase ‘grows and seethes’ used?
view answer >How does the banyan tree stand out as different from other trees? What details of the tree does the poet highlight in the poem?
view answer >What does the reference to raw mythology imply?
view answer >‘Whose roots lay deeper than our lives’— what aspect of human behaviour does this line reflect?
view answer >Comment on the contemporary concern that the poem echoes.
view answer >Most of us have had this experience of seeing trees in our neighborhood being mercilessly cut down in order to build a house or a public building or to widen a road. Describe any such experience you have had of the felling of a tree you were attached to, with reasons for your special attachment to the tree.
view answer >Find out the equivalents for sheoga, oudumber and neem in your language and English and the equivalent of banyan in your language.
view answer >The adjective ‘scraggy’ is used to describe ‘roots’ in the poem. Find out two other items which could be described as ‘scraggy’: scraggy…………….
view answer >Use the following adjectives to describe suitable items
Raw, Aerial, Sacred
view answer >