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| Melody VII
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Unit
8
Summary | Questions | Answers |
Poem
8. Vocation (Rabindranath Tagore)
When
the gong sounds ten in the morning and
I
walk to school by our lane,
Every
day I meet the hawker crying, “Bangles,
crystal
bangles!”
There
is nothing to hurry him on, there is no
road
he must take, no place he must go to, no
time
when he must come home.
I
wish I were a hawker, spending my day in
the road, crying,
“Bangles, crystal bangles!”
When
at four in the afternoon I come back from
the
school,
I
can see through the gate of that house the
gardener
digging the ground.
He
does what he likes with his spade, he soils
his
clothes with dust, nobody takes him to
task,
if he gets baked in the sun or gets wet.
I
wish I were a gardener digging away at the
garden with nobody to
stop me from digging.
Just
as it gets dark in the evening and my
mother
sends me to bed,
I
can see through my open window the
watchman
walking up and down.
The
lane is dark and lonely, and the streetlamp
stands
like a giant with one red eye in
its head.
The
watchman swings his lantern and walks
with
his shadow at his side, and never once
goes
to bed in his life.
I
wish I were a watchman walking the street
all
night, chasing the shadows with my
lantern.
(Rabindranath
Tagore)
Short Summary
"Vocation" by Rabindranath Tagore is a poem that captures the innocent desires and fantasies of a child who observes various adults at work. The child envies the perceived freedom and simplicity of their lives, yearning for the independence he believes they possess. The child first sees a bangle seller, then a gardener, and finally a watchman, and he imagines that their lives are free from the constraints and restrictions he faces. The poem highlights the child's longing for a life without limitations, reflecting a universal theme of the desire for freedom and the simplicity of adult roles as perceived by a child.
Working With the Poem
Visit Vocation
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