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Don't Cut Down The Trees, Brother Woodcutter

Balakrishna Sama (1902-1981 ) (Translated by Michael Hutt) I.                   Literal Comprehension Context: This poem has been written by Balakrishna Sama (1902-1981). He was a dramatist par excellence, a performing artist, painter, sculptor, poet, essayist, novelist and short story writer. In this poem, he has advocated of nature conservation. The speaker of the poem is trying to persuade the woodcutter not to cut down the trees. Therefore, he calls the woodcutter ‘brother’ and tries to establish emotional attachment with the trees using the phrase ‘dead mothers’. He requests the woodcutter not to cut down the trees because they provide us with the motherly love and care. They protect us from the sun and the rain, seat us on their laps, carry us in their arms and shoulders, give us fruits and flowers, and kiss our foreheads with leafy lips. They also weep for us, but they cannot speak and plead with us. In winter, we sit around the fire and enjoy the warmth inside our h

BHM TU English Notes (Flax Golden Tales)

FLAX GOLDEN TALES SUMMARIES: Yudhisthira's Wisdom The Brave Little Parrot If Not Higher Why Go to University? Don't Cut Down the Trees, Brother Woodcutter Surely You are Joking, Mr. Feynman A 1996 Commencement Speech The Parrot in the Cage A Sound of Thunder No Smoke From the Chimneys The Wretched Stone TV Can be a Good Parent Marriage is a Private Affair Then and Now: Finding My Voice Arranging a Marriage in India Life is Sweet at Kumansenu The Lunatic How Sane are We? Gaia The Making of a Scientist Scientific Inquiry: Invention and Test King John and the Abbot Canterbury Third Thoughts The Clock Tower The Stub-Book Mr. Know All Keeping Errors at Bay What is Intelligence, Anyway? To His Coy Mistress The Telegram on the Table Piano The Great Answer Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening A Tale Ethics Where the Mind is Without Fear New Year