On Killing A Tree
On Killing A Tree
On Killing A Tree
- Gieve Patel
Humans cut and chop the bark of trees into many pieces but that
is not sufficient to destroy the tree. The point of the tree which
gets cut gives out sap just like a human being bleeds. Gradually,
this would heals and from there new branches start growing again.
STANZA 3
No,
The root is to be pulled out —
Out of the anchoring earth;
It is to be roped, tied,
And pulled out-snapped out
Or pulled out entirely,
Out from the earth-cave,
And the strength of the tree exposed
The source, white and wet,
The most sensitive, hidden
For years inside the earth.
Anchoring earth: trees are held securely with the help of the roots in the earth
Snapped out: chopped out
The poet says that in order to kill the tree, it has to be uprooted. One has to separate
the tree from the Earth which supports it. The roots of the tree bind the tree with the
soil in the pit of the Earth. From there, the most sensitive and hidden part of the tree –
the roots have to be detached. The roots are white in colour and are damp.
STANZA 4
Then the matter
Of scorching and choking
In sun and air,
Browning, hardening,
Twisting, withering,
And then it is done.
2. How has the tree grown to its full size? List the words suggestive of its life and activity.
B. The tree has grown by consuming nutrients from the Earth, absorbing sunlight, air and water. The words suggestive
of its life and activity are – consuming the earth, Rising out of it, feeding Upon its crust, absorbing years of sunlight,
air, water.
4. The poet says “No” in the beginning of the third stanza. What does he mean by this?
D. ’No’ means that the tree will not die by cutting or chopping the trunk.