Saturday, July 27, 2013

Mighty and the Weak, A poem by Alok Mishra

Mighty and the Weak

Difficile est proprie communia dicere.

In solace of night, two tormented fought
Over the issue of right to exist,
It is though accepted, anticipated and sought,
Weaker for the stronger is always a feast!
Poor candle with her tender light,
In the dense dark, served a sight.
Mighty wind with his bloody eager sword
Was ready to slay the sweet poor chord.
‘Pardon me, my frail existence, show mercy
‘O broad chested, O devouring wind
‘Omit me of your morsel, set free
‘I beg you… my life, not you grind!’
Pleaded thus, she stood calm, and did wait
For the reply of her piranha, her fate,
And he, the swollen might, in anger tried
To make her afraid, he thus replied:
‘I’m mighty; I love mighty; you be mighty
‘Or I slay you, you feeble poor creature!
‘To do you justice, to endure propriety
‘Are for the mighty like me just a torture!
‘To maintain peace, you weaker must die
‘And with peace and hope in grave lie!’
The gentle flame, the thin spirit, the brave soul
Boldly stood but in calm pose she listened his whole.
‘For the perils like you, might is right.
‘In His abode, where justice happens always,
‘Still the echoes say that right is might,
‘There devils are imprisoned and put in cage.’
The candle, true and upright, but weak,
Said these in her tender voice, so meek.
Arrogant and wild, the mighty wind lost sense,
For the thirsty of blood, nothing is offense!
With a blow, he collected some dry leaves
And pushed the innocent flame over them.
Pathetic! How one of her life he bereaves
With no regret, no mercy, and no shame!
The melting candle, dying of enormous pain,
Thought she how her stronger sisters grew insane!
‘How your beautiful earth will survive?
‘Shall you see with silence, or thrive?
‘If your world is for the might and power,
‘Why do you make creepers sans bower?’
With these words, she melted; she did die!
But she left questions to God, to be done.
The God who sits and watches all from high
The world that with same Moon and Sun,
To escape from these questions always does try…

Alok Mishra
28-07-2013

Sunday, July 7, 2013

A Comparison Between Mathew Arnold and Tennyson

Paradoxically, if we say that Victorian age in the history of England suffered an enjoyment, it will be true to speak thus! The whole country, under the reign of their queen, Queen Victoria (1837-1901), underwent an all-round progress. Mechanically, the country touched the new heights of prosperity. Industrialization on a great scale marked the rise of new business era for England. Moreover, we must remember that this was the age in which England made the grip of dominance stronger in the colonized countries.

However, this growing prosperity and the decaying faith in the existence of supreme divinity did not lure the hearts of the great literary figures of Victorian age. The poets, writing in Victorian age, were in dire need of escaping to the countryside areas in search of peace and solace! John Clare stands as an example of this group of poets, who was a farmer and painted the rural life in his poetry. Another perfect and foremost example of this trend is Mathew Arnold who always remains with his ‘scholar’ in the countryside areas of Oxford and enjoys the company of nature and rustic people. Arnold despises the city life and advises the ‘scholar’ of his imagination and indirectly the fellow citizens to escape:

“But fly our paths, our feverish contacts fly!
 For strong the infection of our mental strife,
 Which, though it gives no bliss, yet spoils rest.”

Another contemporary of Mathew Arnold is Alfred Lord Tennyson. He also writes of the disappearing faith in the existence of God and the increasing interference of enlarging hands of Science and Mechanism in the society. In his protracted elegy, In Memoriam, he expresses the agony of his heart and in a way, the entire Victorian society:

“Our little systems have their day:
  They have their day and cease to be:
  They are but broken lights of thee,
  And thou, O Lord, art more than they.”

We can have the conspicuous glimpse of the conflict prevailed the Victorian age, in the hearts of Victorian people; and we can see the realization that the heart of this great poet, Tennyson, feels. Thus, we can say that the Victorian period saw the prosperity of mechanics and industries, which the governing body and the citizens liked, but the poets of higher spirit and noble soul, felt the coming danger of moral and religious decadence and tried to present their foresight to the society.

Victorian age bears two greatest poets of the English Literature of all time, the first is Alfred Lord Tennyson, and the other is Mathew Arnold. They both are genius on their place. No one can hold the dignity of another. They both enjoy the gift of heavens; they both have the poetic fire; the “Muse” has been very tender to her both sons! Therefore, to make an analogy amid these two great figures of the English Literature is a very difficult task. Still, we can try to exercise our wit to present the qualities and special merits of both of them as a poet. This effort will lead us to make certain perceptions that discriminate the two great poets, their style, their views to art and poetry, and more.

The View towards Art and Poetry:

The first and foremost point that discriminates the great literary figures is undoubtedly the view towards art and poetry; moreover, the two, Arnold and Tennyson are not the exceptions. They are certainly different in their perception about art and poetry, though, they are the representatives of the same age. Both the poets were aware of the falling standards of art in the age of Victorian Flourishing. Amid the topsy-turvy of faith and belief, both the poets had to choose their way different and set a standard of themselves. We have certainly to rank Arnold above to Tennyson in this regard. Arnold was very early to know what the standard of poetry should be; he decided the way of his poetic growth and always moved constantly on that like the Etna. For Arnold, “poetry is the criticism of life under the conditions fixed for such a criticism by the laws of poetic truth and poetic beauty.” Arnold, in his poetic creation, The Buried Life, compiled in Empedocles on Etna and other Poems, announces the weakness and crisis of the Victorian age:

“Alas, is even love too weak
To unlock the heart, and let it speak?
Are even lovers powerless to reveal
To one another what indeed they feel?”

This quote reveals the motive of Arnold and his poetry- only to reveal the truth and unbiased judgment, to announce the society of his time as it is, and to tell the ways of a content and alive life!

Moreover, we have to admit that Arnold knew the ‘poetic truth’ and the ‘poetic beauty’. However, when we have to make a judgment of Tennyson in the regard of his realization of art and poetry, we have a quote made by the great critic, IforEvans that is worth to quote:

 “….. Though Tennyson was charged with sometimes having one eye on the audience and, after he was made laureate, with having both eyes on the Queen.”

This remark says so much about the perception of Tennyson towards poetry. He had in view the audience, and then the Queen. However, it is the masterpiece of Tennyson, In Memoriam, and some other writings indeed, where Tennyson, to an extent, surpasses all the poets of his age or any age in the matter of realization the true meaning of poetry! The very opening line of the longest elegy written hitherto in English, In Memoriam, strikes our conscience with a grand force:

“Strong son of God, immortal Love,”

In this line, we have the mature and learned Tennyson, who enjoys a washed soul and solace after the protracted suffering of the loss of his friend, Arthur Henry Hallam. Tennyson announces in the same elegy:

“I hold it true, whate’er befall;
 I feel it, when I sorrow most;
‘Tis better to have loved and lost
Than never to have loved at all.”

However, if we are compelled and bond to compare the two great poets in this regard, that is, in the realization of the poetry and its motive, we certainly have to rank Arnold above Tennyson; Arnold was quick in realizing, Tennyson was late! Arnold, almost in each of his poems, speaks with the authority of his own propagated theory; Tennyson at the same time fails to follow the rhythm of In Memoriam in all of his poems! Thus, the first and foremost of the distinguishing points, announces Arnold as superior to Tennyson.

Style of Composing Poetry:

In the matter of style, it is indeed tough to fix that who is superior- Arnold or Tennyson. They both enjoy their own way of expressing their great ideas. However, Tennyson has been praised for his beautiful lyricism and Arnold has been charged of “Coldly efficient narrative.” Arnold emphasizes on the grand style of composition, while Tennyson bends towards the charming ways of expressing his ideas in the poems. For instance, if we consider the lines of Tennyson, in the fragment of his poem, The Eagle:

“He clasps the crag with crooked hands;
 Close to the sun in lonely lands,
 Ring’d with the azure world, he stands.”

Here we have the sight animated in front of our eyes; we can see; we can imagine; we can trust the poet of his imagination too. The lyricism is apparently visible. Moreover, the beauty of the lines is unchallenged! Now, let us concentrate on the lines of Mathew Arnold, in his poem, Dover Beach:

“Sophocles long ago
Heard it on the Aegean, and it brought
Into his mind the turbid ebb and flow
Of human misery; we
Find also in the sound a thought,
Hearing it by this distant northern sea.”

After the beautiful expression of the ‘calm sea’, ‘fair moon’, and other sceneries, the poet expresses his great ideas in a fashion suiting to it; in other words, he adds the ‘poetic truth’ and ‘poetic beauty’ to his ‘criticism of life.’ We all know the erudition of the great figure, Mathew Arnold, and in the words of IforEvans, he imparted something ‘permanent and major contribution’ to the English literature with his great prose writings. However, the same critic, IforEvans charges him of being not so great in the matter of being a poet. By and large, we see it in the case of his expression, Arnold is able to perceive great ideas; he is able to impart knowledge and wisdom to his verse; yet, he is not able to make his expression as beautiful as Tennyson!

The Influences on the both Poet: Their General Tendency to Follow

Any poet is not a poet at once; a poet is born and he is lulled amid some certain fancies and tendencies. Every poet has liking for poets of the past, or the contemporary, or a person or people of another areas of art. No poet can pave his was alone in the field of literary production without being affected by some other literary figure. Tennyson and Arnold are not the exceptions. These two great poets also reflect certain impressions of the older poets. Except some occasions, generally, both of the poets were unaffected by the growing mechanism of the Victorian age. We have the example of Locksley Hall where the poet Tennyson finds himself amid the mirage of Victorian bright diadem!

Arnold was in favour of the Ancient Classic masters and always tried to reinforce his verses with a universal message like them. Even in the great essay written by him, The Study of Poetry, Arnold tends to blow the triumph of the Ancient Masters and warns his readers to use them as the ‘touchstone’ jewels to brighten their readings. Tennyson, just contrary to Arnold, finds himself amid the Romantic remains. Except of some fixed numbers of examples, he leaves nothing of permanence for his readers to remember! His poems are the ‘day’s enjoyment’ except the elegy or long length that remains to suggest us the value of universal and eternal realm! However, we must not forget that the lasting phase of the career of Tennyson showed him as the magnificent poet who tries to follow the ancient style of writing:

“Where never creeps a cloud, or moves a wind,
 Nor ever falls the least white star of snow,”

Tennyson in these two lines stands in the rank of Homer! The beauty of the lines, the grandeur of the rhythm, everything we have to remark thus…

Now, to conclude the argument of the comparison between these two poets, I must leave it upon the readers to choose whether one is surpassing other or the two, just move along on the road to greatness.
The concluding verse of Arnold, the most worthy to quote of the poet who is very hopeless of the crisis of Victorian prosperity:

“But ah, though peace indeed is here,
 And ease from shame, and rest from fear;
 Though nothing can dismarble now
 The smoothness of that limpid brow;
 Yet is a calm like this, in truth,
 The crowning end of life and youth?”

And the concluding verse of the poet Tennyson:

“And it sings a song of undying love:
 And yet, tho’ its voice be so clear and full,
 You never would hear it; your ears are so dull,”


Both the poets stand dazzling on the ground of English Literature! To compare them, and to come to a solid ground of judgment, is too tough a task for any scholar! Still, it was my attempt to bring out their merits and qualities together. 


Written by Alok Mishra
Author and Poet
Student of MA in English Literature at Nalanda College, Biharsharif, Bihar