Here's the cover of my new collection of poems expected shortly from AuthorsPress, New Delhi:
Reviewed by Dr S L Peeran:
Reviewed by Dr S L Peeran:
New and Selected Poems
Tanka and Haiku by Ram Krishna Singh. Published by AuthorsPress, Q-2A,Hauz
Khas Enclave, New Delhi 110016. 96 pages, Price Rs 150/- ISBN 978 81 7273 635 4
R K Singh has emerged with a new voice in this collection of
poems like a caterpillar to a beautiful butterfly. No longer the poet numbers
his poems. He has captioned all the poems and there is new vigor, new
realization and poems are pensive with deep introspection sans eroticism, which
had been the common feature in the other works of the poet. There is depth in
the emotional expression in the present collection.
In the preface the
poet reflects on his new expression thus:
“Genuine
poetry happens as an event to be truthful, clear, courageous and honest to
oneself; to be open about things one often tries to conceal. Poetry provides an
opportunity for expressing one’s intimate moments with the same passion as
while talking about the interwoven out realities.
I also
view it as the expression of cosmic, organic, erotic life, creating its own
forms, expressing itself and in being expressed, finds its voice.”
There are 53
captioned and titled poems with a collection of 41 Tanka and 39 Haiku in the
book.
Poetry is an
incantation of the soul, celebration of the abiding varieties of our human
existence. It mirrors a perception of to world peculiar to each poet.
If life is a celebration, we are known and we
leave our footprints on the sands of time and our progeny and history records
the deeds of man. But for the poet in the introductory poem “Death”, he is
pessimistic
“as stranger we come
as stranger
we pass
like withered grass
uncelebrated
unmourned,
unknown”
For the poet in
the poem “Libyrinths”
“life still awaits intrigues
Through meandering pathways”
Yet the poet is
hopeful to find light in the end of the tunnel with
“the guarding angel
leads me to golden award.”
There are
several poems with well chiseled imagery and depth of thought. The poet’s self expression
of his painful soul’s sufferings is evident in many poems like ‘Smoke’,
‘midnight cry’, ‘Revelations’ and in many more poems.
Time passes,
age withers, customs stale and self realization dawns. The poet muses:
“wheeze December
In lonely
drizzles:
Sun’s last glow
measure wisdom
to unknown, now lower gaze
and look
within”
The poet’s
declining passion is evident in the poem “Liberation”
“I still
wander my mind with fire
but no heat or light, sterile
emotion
routs the
spirit to live making
all
presences dark and absence”
There are
several poems resonating this thought of dying embers.
In the
poem “Rotten Rat”, the poet quotes Berlolt Brecht:
“Man is an
animal
With
peculiar smell.”
And then
the poet probably refers to a politician and compares him to a “rotten rat/as
he waves his khaddar arms/with fake smile”
In the
poem ‘Valley of Self’, the poet has arrived at self
realization that the ordeals are his “alone in the valley of self” and that he
“must learn to clear the clouds soaring high or low.” The poet expresses
despair at not knowing which Psalms to sing or know the god or goddess or
mantra to chant “when fear overtakes/ my being and makes me suffer.”
The same
thought reverberates in several poems like “Wisdom,” “Helplessness” “Elements
clack” and in several others.
“Its More
Voluptuous to Float” is full of imagery and is a metaphysical poem with an
erotic line.
It is not
east to perceive God and His ways. In the poem “Eyeless Jagannath,” the poet
expresses this thought:
“the wings of my thought
Are too short to climb God’s height
Or blue deeps of peace.”
Tanka and
Haiku writing is an art. R K Singh has excelled in this art form having won
laurels and awards. But he has not stuck to the Japanese format of 5,7,5,7,7.
in Tanka and 5,7,5. syllables in Haiku but has experimented with his own
syllabic format.
Most of the
Tanka are sensual and erotic but Haiku has indeed nature element, which is one
of the requirement of a Haiku. To quote one or two:
Shadows waver
in the dewy grass--
butterfly
***
flower beds
purple pulsatilla
winter’s end
***
On the
whole, the collection of New and Selected
Poems Tanka and Haiku is another wonderful feather in the works of the
poet.
-- Dr S.L.Peeran, Bangalore. Email: slpeeran@gmail.com
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home