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Re: This Author must have been ... incongruousness
by
RY Deshpande
Putting Sri Aurobindo in the Dryden-Ruskin-Virginia Woolf is a case of misjudgement-misapplication of criteria. Luckily nowhere in the Lives we have comparison of Sri Aurobindo’s poetry with the latest genre of poetry. Let us take an example from one of the latest annual collections of poems with Sri Aurobindo’s Who or Invitaion. We need not add any further comment about these two sets of composition, except indicate the incongruousness of such dissimilar areas of prose and poetry belonging to different genres. ~ RYD Here’s Gavin Ewart’s The Process of Ageing:
In everything living
the process of ageing, like loving and giving,
is roaring and raging.
A terrible lion
and worthy of hymning
on someone’s Mount Zion,
where daylight is dimming.
We all have an inkling—
the hair that is graying,
the skin that is wrinkling,
are certainly saying
with voices too truthful
—though your voice may falter—
‘You’re no longer youthful,
you’re starting to alter!’
It’s quite universal,
the fate we are facing,
there’s no reversal—
but life is replacing
our tiredness and stiffness
with new unworn bodies
Of promise and ifness,
through Venus (a goddess).
Before the last breathing
and final bereavement
the poet wants wreathing—
a little achievement
acclaimed in some quarters,
the giving of pleasure
to grandsons and daughters—
growing old at their leisure. |
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