Where the Mind is Without Fear
—from Gitanjali by Rabindranath Tagore
Analysis
Consisting of one sentence, Tagore’s simple prayer for his country, India, prior to her gaining independence from Britain, has become one of the most quoted poem/prayers by political activists. The universality of this prayer allows it to transcend both time and space, as all great poetry does.
The first seven lines consist of adverb clauses that denote a condition portrayed by a metaphor of place, “where the mind is without fear, “where knowledge is free,” etc. Until we read the last line, we do not know the exact reference of this place, but we do realize that it is a place where many wonderful qualities exist: fearlessness, knowledge, unity, truth, useful work, reason, and progress.
Then after depicting all these useful qualities, in the main clause of the sentence the speaker names that condition, that metaphoric place as “that heaven of freedom” and asks the “Father,” i.e. God, to allow his country to arrive there or “awake” to the realization that she must strive to achieve the ability to demonstrate all these wonderful qualities.