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Reflections of a young poet
REFRESHING IMAGERY, spontaneity of expression, unexpected
maturity of thought in many poems are prominent features of this
first collection of verse. Silence, loneliness, death, darkness -
infatuations of the emotionally over-powered, sensitive, thinking
young appear as the underlying echoes in seemingly
straightforward outbursts. What also impresses one is the general
absence of mundane, sulking sentimentality which would otherwise
mark the works of someone so young and vulnerable. His
observations are taut. A certain vibrant energy, a certain
restlessness characterises most poems.
On the negative side, Feroze Varun Gandhi suffers from the common
need to conclude many of his poems with a reckless statement.
Often in variance or in complete contrast with the apparent mood
or tenor of rest of the poem. And his statement is not
necessarily in the concluding line but even in the middle of a
perfectly harmonious expression of an outburst. There is also the
tendency to over-emphasise words in certain poems. This not only
appears unnecessary but also at times succeeds only in achieving
the opposite.
Several of these are more mood and moment reflections than poems
of any literary merit. Some tend to be mere pontifications on
life, and meanderings about nothingness, eventually. These could
have been set aside as juvenilia unbound and done away with.
"Stacked," for instance. The deliberate or otherwise abandoning
of punctuations jar the reading, also resulting in the fruitless
interpolation of thought, particularly where the expression is
lacking in a thematic wholeness. This is also, perhaps, due to
the latent inexperience in managing emotional outbursts, which
then destroy the original thought.
Those that come through effectively include "Death" ("Die I must/
But not alone/ For the moon will/ steal me into her marble eyes/
and through her umbilical cord/ I will learn things they made me
forget"); "Scent" ("God is further than torture/ younger than
truth/ unreachable in this quiet time of death"). Notice again
the death metaphor, so imminent and common in the poetry of the
young anywhere, in any language. And the short poem, "Alone"
amongst others:
is like being in a crowd
my thoughts trapped in
confusion
Like a kite caught in the sky
Imagine being caught in the
sky...
Here too, like in many other poems one wishes the young poet had
avoided the emphasis. Feroze Varun Gandhi's early work shows both
a spark and the promise to go a long way should he continue to
pursue the Muse relentlessly.
SURESH KOHLI
The Otherness of Self, Feroze Varun Gandhi, Rupa and Co., Rs.
295.
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