|
Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, July 15, 2001 |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Entertainment |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home |
|
Features
| Previous
| Next
Beyond the confessional
WHEN does a writer discover his own voice and identify it as
distinct from that of his ancestors or his compeers? When he
swings away from the other voices that drown his own in the early
years - perhaps. But when does that happen? What makes him do it?
How does he know his difference and difference? We remember that
when British/ American poets started the confessional genre, our
poets in India jumped on to the bandwagon and started confessing
with all their vehemence - outdoing the British/ American
confessionalists. That certainly is not the way to identify one's
own authentic voice. Temptations are many in the ways of writing
poetry.
These speculations were occasioned by the new slim volume brought
out by Gopikrishnan Kottoor who has for sometime been engaged in
the process of discovering his identity and inventing his own
style. Patent, autobiographical, he avoids being sentimental or
confessional. The title Father: Wake Us In Passing is one long
poem (36 pages in close print) although the poet describes it as
"a book of poems". Gopi Krishnan's poetry comes of age in this
sustained polyphony of his own voice: what had been kept at bay
all these years, his poetry in the making, rushes forth as the
floodgates open. The dying father had to beckon the son to claim
his own. The opening lines give a hint of this self recognition:
This is not In memoriam
This is not an elegy
Look, I've come.
I've come across the seas for you.
I've cried alone in single rooms
To forget the last frozen look in your eyes
While I climbed the plane
Father wants him to come back. And then the son remembers:
I know you'll want me to come.
Because we have hurt each other the most.
You hurt my flesh
You hurt my heart
You threw me out of the house
With the first smell of whiskey on my breath.
But now father is in hospital. "Pain walks across the curves of
your writhing face". He wants his son to come back:
"Son, what is there in America?
Come back."
And then the poem bursts into a splendour of silver and gold. Now
it is the son's turn:
Father, in America
The fall is now breathless beauty
The cypresses draw crimson upon their leaves
The boughs bend low
Looking for the beauty of blood
In their own reflections.
Upon the water's edge
Maple leaves fall
With a redness of cheeks around the blaze of strange funerals
Holding mist with a wetness of tears
The dialogue goes on. And as the poem gains in insight, the son
recreates the image of the father: a full scale image of the man
as father. Child is the father of...
I have set about doing the things
You loved most about me.
About a gift called poetry.
Never wrote like this before
Perhaps never again must
Writing about pain
Is cruel.
Until one learns about the implicit cruelty of pain, one hasn't
become mature. It is through the sufferings of the father that
the son becomes mature. What a price! But is there another way?
Hence, cruel, indeed! But who drives the pen?
I do not want to write these poems
But you don't seem to want to make me stop.
So the little details of the family - mother, sisters and others.
Grief is replaced by anger is replaced by bitterness is replaced
by pain: they go in circles. Then come the memories of the past -
father's college days - only there is no let up in the intensity
of the pain or the intensity of the poem. The pain is the poem -
as the first of poets Valmiki realised. So everyone prays:
Father, please let go
We loved you so long
We'll always love you
I've come to light your fire
Let me.
But flashes of poetic vision induce thoughts of beauty and
silence:
Deep in the mind's sea
You are the lonely boat in distant sail
You are there alone by the rocks
Where the tired gulls
Fall dead
Breaking their feathers
To memoirs.
The son knows he fulfills the father's pet dream and their
understanding is the achievement celebrated in the process.
Hence, it is no elegy, no lament, but a strange kind of painful
celebration. Hence the tryst between father and son becomes the
poem caused by the father:
Once upon a time there was no pain.
There was no need to appease gods.
So God made fathers cry out in their hospital beds
For their eldest sons.
At moments such as these
He moved near ones far away
Brought the far ones near
He made man die crying out the name of his beloved
And to add to pain
To bring beauty to pain
As when color flares in fire
He made a son a word carver
And weighed his father
Between death and sleep,
And the son wakes up
In the middle of a dream
Where the father appears
In the shroud of Turin
His hands rise
As in the resurrection
His words blaze across the red skies
Son, turn my sleep
Into your waking
Turn my coma
Into your calm beautiful poem
So it was on Easter Sunday, marking the resurrection propheised
by the poem, father was called to heaven, leaving the son to
manifest his infinite creative power - installing him into the
position of poet. The apotheosis closes the poem:
Slow ashes to ashes
Is perhaps the tryst you made,
Dearest, silent hill,
Where ancient crosses
Sprout and bleed
And down by the rivers of our sorrow
The calm, sleeping hamlet of your face.
AYYAPPA PANIKER
Father: Wake Us in Passing,
Gopi Kottoor, The Poetry Chain, p.36, price not stated.
Send this article to Friends by E-Mail
|
|
Section : Features Previous : Unravelling complexities Next : First impression | |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Entertainment |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home | |
|
Copyrights © 2001 The Hindu Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu |
|