Silent Days, Jaydeep Sarangi, Cyberwit.net, Allahabad, Pp 68, Rs.200/-,
ISBN 978-81-8253-396-7
Dr.
Jaydeep Sarangi’s “Silent Days”, a book of 50 short lyrical poems,
in free verse, highly speaks volume of his poetic sense and sensibility and his
keen observation of life. Dr. Jaydeep Sarangi, a well-known bilingual poet,
writer, academic, editor and translator, has taken up simple themes from day to
day activities and given to them a literary height with a magical wand of his
poetic skills. The anthology in question is an exotic expression of poet’s
internalized experience of the life he spent in his native land and different
parts of the country and the world. The themes of love and respect for
cultures, faiths, dreams, longings, bonding, joys and sorrow, desires and
wishes, nostalgia, sense of alienation, waning of literary taste, empathy,
pathos, friendship, beauty, love, gain and loss, side effects of urbanism, etc
run through his poems.
With “From Dulong To Beas: Flow of the Soul” and “ Silent Days”, the two poetic masterpieces and poetic collages of touching
poems, Dr. Jaydeep Sarangi has emerged as one the greatest bilingual poets of
the contemporary time, who has given a new orientation to poem writings in
India with his metropolitan outlook and his heart rooted in the countryside. To
his credit, he has many other literary outputs of great worth as well. What he
finds observes and feels around him in different milieus, finds an excellent
expression in his writings. He has very closely observed the country and city
life and has given an outpouring vent to volleys of thoughts, perspectives and
perceptions, hitherto formed. In the Acknowledgement of the anthology, Dr. Sarangi has himself
revealed that his “tradition and roots in rural Bengal is the sap of energy.” He further mentions that his poetic passion
has built up on his association ‘with small things” and, that is what makes his poetry bigger with
all the grandeurs.
The most striking beauty of these self-contained poems is the
brilliant use of a very simple and lucid language. The poet, without any of his
ornamental decorations and abstruse thoughts, has simply put in to communicate
the essence of thoughts and ideas, very common with the common people, dipped
in spontaneous emotions flowing from the depth of his heart. Very few poets on
contemporary literary horizon have ever used such a simplistic language, quite
comprehensible to even the common readers. Highlighting the poetic beauty of
his language, Lakshmi Kannan, in the forward to the book, has rightly written:
“Jaydeep Sarangi’s poems touch you with a
simplicity that is invaluable in any writer, be he a poet, novelist or a
short story writer. For it is important that a poem should communicate clearly
before it sets out to work on our consciousness the way poems do.”
A patient and comprehensive reading of the poems contained in the
present anthology brings out many moods of the poet - a paradigm shift and his
poetic response to different situations in his life, be it in his native place,
metros- Kolkata, Mumbai etc, abroad, on beaches or on roads or in the
playground. He has done justice to the recording of his mood swings very
honestly.
In the very first poem “Stop Here, Please” Dr. Sarangi makes a
striking differentiation between an urban life and a rural life and
categorically states that we are “ slave in our urban” and that the people living in metros are so
numbed that they “ poison” the sweet and innocent
people of the countryside. The metro life dwellers are so ‘cold’ and “untimely hot”- the malaise of their hectic life style. He seems to be siding
with innocent people of the countryside.
He is conscious of the
hectic activities of modern life jostling between home and work station, and
the cumbersome journey amid traffic snarl -fleet of autos, cars etc carrying
the exhausted body with nostalgic mind doesn’t let him even pick up the calls
nor does he call back. That’s why he accepts honestly in “Missed Calls”.
“ It is not always possible to call back
Promises hide their faces
Amidst crowds of everyday duties”.
“ It is not always possible to call back
Promises hide their faces
Amidst crowds of everyday duties”.
However, he never forgets the ‘aroma
of chanachur” and “puffed rice”.
Dr.
Sarangi seems to be a voracious reader in quest of the truth. That is why in
“My Dreams” he expresses his longing for fathoming the depth of literary and
poetic world to satisfy his inner quest :
" My hungry heart can swallow
The whole world
Of poems and rhyms”.
The whole world
Of poems and rhyms”.
This
poem also throws light on his cooperative attitude as well, as he wants the
youths of India to take to poetic path with “indigenous ink”. The ideas of
nationalism are well reflected here.
In spite of his broader outlook on globalization it is very nice
of him that he wants to be rooted in his soil. His profound love and
respect for his native land and language, and sympathy for the people finds a
vivid description in the poem “Bilingual Bard” :
“ I speak for my
soil
My people in distress
My ancestral affinity with a tradition.”
My people in distress
My ancestral affinity with a tradition.”
He also pays his gratitude to his
native soil in the poem “ A Rose Is a Rose”:
“Only my
native within sinks
As the rosary of pains
Register what I am made of”.
As the rosary of pains
Register what I am made of”.
He very honestly accepts and reveals
that “English is my sword, my refuge and “ Bengali is the language of my soul”.
Dr. Sarangi has felt
that ‘chatting’ followed by cordial “mingling” forms a strong loving bond, and
in his case, it has culminated in the feelings of love which find a candid
expression in his poem “Bonding”:
" Poems
of easy bonding seek expression,
Feelings of sheer love!”
Feelings of sheer love!”
Literary degradation in the people
living in metro- urban life in the ‘land of commerce”-Mumbai pains him to
such an extent that he cries out in “The Chessmaster And His Moves”:
“ Here no one
reads fiction
Poetry dies hard
In a flat metro tunnel”.
Poetry dies hard
In a flat metro tunnel”.
From
the very first poem “Stop Here, Please” which deals with the cold attitude of
town-dwellers living in poisonous scenario of urban life, to the concluding
poem “Going To Holy Place” the overall emotional and spiritual journey of
Sarangi as a man is undertaken with sense of acceptance in the beginning and
with sense of surrender to God is highly remarkable. The quintessence of
his poetic journey along with the reflection of his religious temperament is
pervasive throughout his poems.
Some of the poems are religious and spiritual pigments of Dr.
Sarangi, who very devotedly sanctifies his inner self through his poetic
offering to different gods and goddesses such as Lord Shiva and Lakshmi. While
the first poem is suffused with his indignation and frustration of the metro
life, concluding one is testament to his faith and belief in God as strong as
“metals and bricks” with peace of mind;
“Mind as focused as
an arrow
My faith enlivens metals and bricks”
My faith enlivens metals and bricks”
And
“ My mind
takes an inward journey
To be part of everything.”
To be part of everything.”
Sometimes
he becomes philosophical in midst of struggles of life, and makes great lines
such as “Everything
is in translation / Of an image or an action.”
(The Act of Writing”)
In the final analysis, it must be proclaimed with aplomb that Dr.
Sarangi’s “Silent Days”,
being a poetic gem with strings of beautiful and though provoking poems, is
replete with socio-economic consciousness, social realism, and hard realities
of life, homesickness and above all, his poetic outburst or cries. Marked by
simplicity and brevity of expression and spontaneous flow of thoughts, it is
“home-bound” to be a significant and valuable contribution to Contemporary
Indian English Poetry, as his“Unspoken fossilized feelings / Seek
freedom in easy poems” (The Torch) is what
has culminated in his “Silent Days”
where vibrant poetic voice of Dr. Jaydeep Sarangi speaks a language of
heart to his mind in his seer solitude.
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