['The Morning Inspection' is the title of a column I wrote for the Daily News from 2009 to 2011, one article a day, Monday through Saturday. This is the 234th article in the new series that began in December 2022. Links to previous articles are given below]
The
poet, according to the late Lakdasa Wikkramasinha, is one who, tossing a
bomb into the city, takes notes. That’s how his poem ‘The Poet,’
begins. Violent. Callous. But then, it is a poem and as such there’s
poetic license as well as the play of metaphor. Lakdasa, in this poem,
details what he believes to be the task or obligation of a poet.
A
bomb is a destructive device. It can be indiscriminate. It certainly
unsettles landscapes and perhaps what Lakdasa proposes is exactly that —
cause a rupture that facilitates deeper cuts to force a consideration
of complacency. He moves quickly to the source of agitation, the creator
of things that require conscious and decisive intervention: the enemy.
He leaves 'enemy' undefined and rightly so. ‘Enemy’ can take
innumerable forms. He hints at the enemy that preoccupies him or, put
another way, ought to agitate all poets and therefore all readers; it is
‘the speaker on the platform’ and therefore ‘politician’. Again, it’s a
catch-all. What kind of politician and of what ideological persuasion
are questions he does not address. He is more specific when he describes
the target of this gun-toting preparer of ambush. The poet, he insists,
sets traps and awaits an enemy who arrives in a car, seated in the
backseat. Thus does Lakdasa work ‘class’ into the story.
Pablo
Neruda had a different understanding of the poet’s task. In ‘The poet’s
obligation,’ Neruda proposes an empathetic, sharing and healing role.
So.
Drawn on by my destiny,
I ceaselessly must listen to and keep
the
sea's lamenting in my consciousness,
I must feel the crash of the hard
water
and gather it up in a perpetual cup
so that, wherever those in
prison may be,
wherever they suffer the sentence of the autumn,
I may
be present with an errant wave,
I may move in and out of the windows,
and hearing me, eyes may lift themselves,
asking "How can I reach the
sea?"
And I will pass to them, saying nothing,
the starry echoes of
the wave,
a breaking up of foam and quicksand,
a rustling of salt
withdrawing itself,
the gray cry of sea birds on the coast.
So, though me, freedom and the sea
will call in answer to the shrouded heart.
Lakdasa describes a role, Neruda an obligation. A kind reading of the former where the metaphorical worth of agitational elements is privileged, would yield a broad field of engagement for the poetic community. Lakdasa, however, despite the broad strokes, offers a very personal testimony. It is not a task or obligation; the business of bomb-throwing and taking notes is something he has to do, he just cannot help it.
The poet is the bomb in the city,
Unable to bear the circle of the
Seconds in his heart,
Waiting to burst.
So, the poet Lakdasa is forced to do two things: hurl himself into a crowd and, once exploded, take notes. Neruda was explosive in his own right, but it was a choice and one that was made at his discretion. However, if ‘enemy’ and ‘city’ are metaphors then both poets were bombs and both carried in their pockets representatives grains of oceans and their naturally tremendous dimensions so they could share with those who found themselves in unhappy lands far away from the surging waters.
There are enemies. They need to be engaged. Therefore there are battles. It would be a stretch to say all art is about enemies, friends, battles, defeats and victories, but there’s heart always; something that is subliminal or intangible and therefore has to be expressed through signs, the play of light and shadow, the twisting of words, colors, lines and spaces into metaphors.
malindadocs@gmail.com.
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