Trees - Notes
Trees - Notes
Summary:
1. Trees Moving Out: The trees inside are coming out. They are coming out of those artificial glasshouses
where humans have so far confined them. The trees are freeing themselves from human bondage. They
are moving out into the forest. The forest has been and will ever be, the natural habitat of trees. `The
trees’ are metaphors for nature itself.
2. Empty Forests: Human civilization and progress have led to the cutting of trees on a large scale.
Without trees, forests have become empty. There are no trees left now where birds can perch themselves
on their tops. Even Insects have lost the places where they could hide inside them. There are no trees left
in the forest where the red hot sun could find some cooling by burying itself in their shadows. However,
the poetess is hopeful. The forest which remained ’empty all these nights’ will be full of trees.
3. Roots Work All Night to Free Themselves: The roots continue struggling all night. They want to free
themselves. They try to come out from the cracks in the veranda floor. The leaves strain themselves
moving towards the glass. Small twigs have become tough and hard. The long-cramped and crushed
branches move repeatedly from one position to the other under the roof. These moving branches look
like the patients who run out of the hospital in a hurry. Almost half-dazed, they move to the doors of the
hospital to escape from it.
4. Poetess Sitting Inside: The poetess is sitting inside. Doors open to the veranda. She is writing long
letters. But in those letters, she is not describing how trees are struggling to come out of their artificial
habitat. They are going to their real and natural habitat. The trees are moving towards the forest. It is
their real habitat. The night is fresh. The full moon is shining brightly in the sky. The smell of leaves and
lichen is spreading out into the rooms. It comes inside like a voice from outside.
5. Head Full of Whispers: The poetess is sitting inside. The struggle of the roots, leaves and branches to
free themselves from their artificial habitat continues. Her head is full of whispers. These are whispers of
the struggling trees. Then, she asks us to listen to those struggling sounds. We will notice that the
struggling trees have come out breaking the glasshouse. They are still stumbling but marching forward
victoriously towards the forest. Winds rush forward to welcome the victorious trees. The trees have
grown up to such dimensions that have even covered the full moon. Covered by the leaves and branches
of the trees, the full moon looks like a broken mirror into many pieces. These broken pieces of the moon
can be seen through the holes of the tallest oak at the top.
Read the following stanzas and answer the questions that follow:
STANZA 1
The trees inside are moving out into the forest,
the forest that was empty all these days
where no bird could sit
no insect hide
no sun bury its feet in the shadow
the forest that was empty all these nights
will be full of trees by morning.
Questions :
(a) From where are the trees moving out into the forest?
(b) Why can’t birds sit in them or insects hide in them?
(c) How was the forest ‘all these nights’?
(d) Are these trees useful for birds and insects?
(e) What type of trees are these?
Answers :
(a) The trees are moving out of the mind of the painter and coining on the canvas.
(b) These are not real trees. These are the trees in a picture or decorative trees in a house. So birds can’t
sit in them and insects cannot hide there.
(c) All these nights, the forest was empty.
(d) No, these trees are not useful for birds and insects.
(e) These are decorative or picture trees
STANZA 2
All night the roots work
to disengage themselves from the cracks
on the veranda floor.
The leaves strain toward the glass
small twigs stiff with exertion
long-cramped boughs shuffling under the roof
like newly discharged patients
half-dazed, moving
to the clinic doors.
Questions :
(a) What do the roots do all night?
(b) How are the small twigs?
(c) What are the boughs compared to?
(d) What do the leaves do?
(e) Name the poem and the poetess.
Answers :
(a) All night the roots work to free themselves from the cracks in the veranda floor.
(b) The small twigs are stiff.
(c) The boughs are compared to newly discharged patients.
(d) The leaves strain towards the glass.
(e) Poem: The Trees,
Poetess: Adrienne Rich.
STANZA 3
I sit inside, doors open to the veranda
writing long letters
in which I scarcely mention the departure
of the forest from the house.
The night is fresh, the whole moon shines
in a sky still open.
Questions :
(a) Where is the poetess sitting?
(b) What is the poetess doing?
(c) What does she not mention in her letters?
(d) How does the poetess describe the night and the moon?
(e) How is the sky?
Answers :
(a) The poetess is sitting in her room.
(b) The poetess is writing long letters.
(c) She does not mention the departure of the forest from the house.
(d) The night is pleasant and fresh. The full moon is shining.
(e) The sky is still open.
STANZA 4
the smell of leaves and lichen
still reaches like a voice into the rooms.
My head is full of whispers
which tomorrow will be silent.
Questions :
(a) Where is the poetess sitting at present?
(b) Which smell is reaching her?
(c) What is her head full of?
(d) What will be silent tomorrow?
(e) Name the poem and the poetess.
Answers :
(a) At present, the poetess is sitting in her room.
(b) The smell of leaves and lichen is reaching her.
(c) Her head is full of whispers.
(d) Tomorrow, the whispers will be silent.
(e) Poem: The Trees,
Poetess: Adrienne Rich.
STANZA 5
Listen. The glass is breaking.
The trees are stumbling forward
into the night Winds rush to meet them.
The moon is broken like a mirror,
its pieces flash now in the crown
of the tallest oak.
Questions :
(a) What is happening to the glass?
(b) What does the poetess say about the trees?
(c) What rushes out to meet the trees?
(d) How does the poetess describe the moon?
(e) Why does the wind rush?
Answers :
(a) The glass is breaking.
(b) The poetess says that the trees are stumbling forward into the night.
(c) The wind rushes out to meet the trees.
(d) The poetess says that the moon is like a broken mirror.
(e) The wind rushes to meet the trees.
Important Long/ Detailed Answer Type Questions- to be answered in about 100 -150 words each
1.’Departure is painful’. So is the departure of the trees painful for the poetess. What will happen
after their departure?
Ans. Just like the departure of someone close to us is painful, so also is the departure of a tree. When they
are planted as a sapling they look nice and enhance the beauty of our surroundings. But as they grow and
spread out their branches, they look wild and require more space for their growth. The roots create
cracks in the floor and the leaves stretch out as if to move towards the glass, perhaps in need of sunlight.
The soft twigs become strong and stiff. So the trees need to be removed from the house. No more do the
leaves cover the sky, but the trees breathe and they are welcomed by the wind. The moon resembles a
broken mirror, reflecting off the leaves. The poetess reveals that she will feel lonely after the trees’
departure.
2. How does the poem ‘The Trees’ make a strong plea against deforestation?
Ans. The poem, ‘The Trees’ sends home a strong message against deforestation. It highlights the
importance of trees. As a sapling, the plant adds to the beauty of the surroundings when it spreads its
branches, leaves and roots around. The poetess does not want to mention the departure of the forests as
she feels guilty for merely looking silently at them as they depart. This way she subtly points out the
thanklessness of man towards forests.
3. Explain the phrase “the forest that was empty all these days”. After reading the poem for whom
do you think are the forests needed? Imagine you are a tree in a forest, who; values would you like
the humans to learn from the tree? (100-120 words)
Or
What message does Adrienne Rich want to convey through her .poem, The Trees’?
Ans. In her poem, ‘The Trees’ poetess Adrienne Rich subtly drives home the message about the
importance of trees. Without trees, the birds would not in a place to sit, insects will have no place to hide
and the sun would not bury its feet in shadow. As saplings, we enjoy the beauty of plants as they adorn
the surroundings. But slowly the tree spreads its roots, its branches and leaves and seems to yearn to go
outside where it can live and grow without any restrictions No more does the tree look attractive indoors.
The trees are however welcomed into nature by strong winds and the moon. The author hereby
emphasizes that trees need to be kept alive, but should not be ‘imprisoned’ inside the house as they look
more beautiful, and tend to thrive outdoors that is where trees belong.
Q4. How does Adrienne Rich use trees as a metaphor for men? Isn’t the struggle of the trees to free
themselves and go to the forest is the struggle of crushed men, particularly of women against the
powerful and atrocious men?
Ans. The poet Adrienne Rich uses trees as a metaphor for men, particularly struggling women. Nature,
itself is represented by trees and forests in the poem. Man’s foolish and atrocious attempts to exploit,
subdue, tame and control nature have led to disastrous results like deforestation. Forests have become
empty. The futile attempt of humans to put trees and forests in the artificial glasshouses fails miserably.
The trees, their roots, leaves, twigs and boughs wage a long and hard struggle to come out of the artificial
barriers. Ultimately, the trees and forests reach where they should be. The victorious march of the trees
to the forest tells the saga of nature’s victory over the onslaughts of man.
The liberation of the crushed and the women is based on the same theme. In a male-dominated society,
women are struggling to come out of the clutches of men to gain freedom. It is hoped that like the trees in
the poem, they will be liberated in the end.
Q5. The poem ‘The Trees’ present a conflict between man and nature. Describe the struggle of the
trees and their victorious march to their natural habitat—the forest.
Ans. The poem ‘The Trees’ is based on the universal and age-long theme — the conflict between man and
nature. Nature has endowed innumerous blessings on man. However, the greed, arrogance and
foolishness of man have constantly tested the patience of otherwise peaceful nature. When nature can’t
bear any more, it revolts and causes havoc on man in the form of storms, droughts and floods. Man’s
greed leads to deforestation. Forests without frees have become a curse for birds, insects and even for the
sun. This disaster can’t be redeemed.
Any attempt to subdue and control nature will end in failure. Uprooting trees from their original habitat,
the forests and confining them to artificial glasshouses will end in failure. The trees rise against the
onslaughts of men and wage a long and hard struggle to liberate themselves from the bondage of man.
Ultimately, they are victorious. They return to their original home where they should be. Ultimately,
nature asserts itself and repulses man’s attempt to exploit, subdue and tame it.