06 - Chapter 3
06 - Chapter 3
06 - Chapter 3
The Descendants
poems in all. This collection has many poems which are death-
the speaker asserts that she faces the sea, heard long ago as ceaseless
she lay beside her grandmother. The house has since crumbled and
the old woman is dead. The second unit speaks of the loss of
speakers removal from the sea and the sea‟s recurrence in her dreams.
The third unit tells of marriage and sexual interactions with both men
and women, none of which appease, the most of which require play-
acting. It ends with the poetess saying that she misses her granny. The
fourth unit reiterates the futility and sameness of all sexual encounters
and the indifference of the external world to the soul. The fifth unit
recalls the time when the speaker‟s grandmother invited her to spend
one night in the old family home, waited for her, burning a lamp, but
she could not go for which she regrets now. The sixth unit presents
enmity. It closes with a call for despair on every side and a longing
for a walk into the sea in the hope of rest. The seventh and the final
brings no rest; the pains continue, the cells cannot escape, immortality
speaker in the poems allows the early memory to surface through the
pain of growing:
painful. The poem is ironical in tone. „Glass‟ has the same theme. The
feelings preceding and following the birth of her son Jaisurya. The
with the theme of unfulfilled love and yearning for love. „The Dance
of the eunuchs with their shirts going round and round, and their
gulf between the external, simulated passion and the sexual drought
and rottenness inside. The contrast is sustained all through the poem.
The dance of the eunuchs is a dance of the sterile, and therefore the
Freaks‟ too, the theme is the same. Like Alice in Wonderland, Kamala
loaf. This helps her husband to play his own games and even to
„embalm‟ her with lust, but lust is not what she is pining for. She
and her greatness as a love poet arises from the fact that her love
which she could not untie, Kamala Das‟s story, despite its
be mutually exclusive, but for her, they have proved to be so. She
does not advocate promiscuity, her love poetry merely voice her life
long yearning for fulfillment though love. Her account of her love
for her treatment of the sexual love and the human body is free, frank
social norms carries with it its own punishment. One has to pay the
melancholy that mark the life and poetry of Das. Revolt against the
male-oriented world has given her an individuality, a gusto, a
courage, and above all, poetry, but deep down there are also the dark
eternal”, and that “we are born with great hollows that need to be
Kamala Das has the urge to withdraw from the world of quotidian
expressed than in some of the love poems. In poems like „Love‟ „In
And again,
dealing with her lover for she has understood „what is love‟:
in you...6
still show, my night of love? /You look pale, he said. Not pale, not
really / Pale. It‟s the lipstick‟s / anemia. Out in the street, we heard /
the sirens go, and I paused in to talk to / weave their wail with the
sound of his mirthless / laughter. he said / they are testing the sirens
just being with you. But you... / you love another, / I know, he said,
said. / ... I want your photo, lying down, he said,! against those rusty
nineteen-thirty four guns, / will you? Sure. Just arrange my limbs and
tell / me- when to smile. I / shut my eyes, but inside eye lids, there
was / no more night, no more love, or -peace, only / the white, white
sun burning, burning, burning, burning ... / Ah, why does love come
During her severe illness she remembers her lover and then frames
sarcastic:
similar to each other that she fails to distinguish one from the other, to
The two main themes of Kamala Das‟s poetry are love and the
woman‟s identity and through them comes the woman‟s voice. Dove
from that of other poets as she thinks that the basis of ideal love is in
dis ageing body in its pride needing the need for mine And
She remembers one of her childhood incidents when she learnt for
the first time that love was a deep emotion from her aunt Ammini
who had idealised love as a tapasya. Again she recollects Ammalu her
But she got herself separated from him. Because she felt physical
relationship with this man was becoming a prison for her Years after
all of it had ended, I asked myself why I took him as my lover, fully
aware of his incapacity to love and I groped in my mind for the right
answer. Love has a beginning and an end, but lust has no such faults. I
integrity must carry with it a certain pride that is a burden to the soul.
that the soul turned humble for a change. ... He said you are a mad
just dead.11
into a bitter lament. However vain and egotistical the lover, his
than freedom. In the „Sunshine Cat‟, the husband locks his wife in „a
room of books‟ and in the poem „I shall some Day, where she wishes
to take a wing from the cocoon he has built around her with morning
tea and tired lust, she threatens to take flight into a freedom not unlike
that afforded by the dancing shoe, only to return one day seeking
tone, like Hardy, she sardonically hints at the rotten love in this
restle: soul, nor with the formulation of any theory of poetry. She WI
ces almost invariably about the power of love and the appeal of the
body. She confesses that spe wrote the poems in the book Bummer in
honest poet of love, she looks very frank and naive, without the
intellectual pride and domestic air. She has more to say about the
discovering and asserting her individual liberty and identity. The love
poems of Kamala Das usually breathe are air of unconventionality,
poetry. The poetess celebrates it in one poem after the other. Her
more nakedly than any other Indian woman poet with the possible
like all rebels against the accepted social norms, frustration and
Images drawn from the human body are used most frequently by
and the teeth are „Teaming and uneven‟. Her reactions against male
but its raging lustfulness disgusts her and hence the use of images like
the above. She is also conscious of disease and decay to which human
flesh is heir to, and this awareness colours her imagery. In the lines
from „The Looking Glass‟, she ironically suggests the weak women
details. They express adequately her abiding love for the human body
as also her aversion to it. Indeed, images are her themes as well as
modes or expression. They dramatise her passion and impart certain
depth and resonance to her feelings. She seem to be in love with pain,
roles, subject turned oppressor, furious with lack, and scoruful of „that
at night.17
Not only in her verse, but in prose narratives also Das describes
youth:
that I was not told what would happen when a girl entered puberty.
Then one day while the blood flowed between my thighs I wept out of
fear, assuming that some internal organ had ruptured and that I was
for the first time and was shocked. It was so horribly menacing like a
snake about to strike. I envied then the nuns, their security, the
privacy of their genitalia. Of course I had no courage then to talk of
the exercise in bed. Or of the sourness between the legs which burned
love, it finds love invariably petering out into lust, and lust merely
created a new ethos, new heritage and of coure a lot of criticisms for
remembered sins that flows and I peats itself over and again. Her
encounters in her search for love fail and she feels forced back to a
failure to understand her psychic and emotional needs that she could
not get peace in his arms. Her restlessness to be loved and valued for
her won sake let her run to others. So she justifies herself:
nothing better than death and burial under a man‟s six-feet frame. She
urges herself to come alive and find true happiness in the world
lines maturer:
that we always get in the poetry of Kamala Das, Her frank admissions
them and are perfectly in keeping with the nature and themes of
she rises to the general and the universal. She transforms her intense
personal experiences into general truth. Her own predicament,
personal and universal, tonfesses of a life lull of lust, yet asks for a
antipathies, caprices. She does not feel shy of exhibiting her frailties
“closer to the soul; and the bone‟s; supreme indifference.” She boldly
confesses “As the convict studies; His prison‟s geography; I study the
trappings I of your body my dear love; For I must some day find I An
escape from its snare” („The Old Playhouse!). Her poetry is replete
with a powerful force of catharsis and protest. While dealing with the
pity and fear. And Kamala Das‟s poetry attains Cathartic effect due to
Kamala Das‟s poetry mingles the physical with the spiritual. She
love. She questions and probes what kind of woman she is-frigid,
anyone, not even the husband, the answer must come from within
She admits, the quest for fulfilment takes her to others‟ house. The
facade of social norms breaks down and she “runs up forty‟ roisy
watch” („The Stone Age‟). But for all this promiscuity she accuses her
husband for it is he who could not satisfy her heart‟s hungers, and
granted her the freedom which she had never asked for. Like Auden,
Graves and Yeats, she does not keep a privacy in her writings. Her
can be seen in the context of her relation with her husband and with
And then,
After that love became a swivel-door,
lands into the golden world of her memories and the sufferings of the
volume begins with the expression of death wish and thereafter takes
always wrangles her, but all this was unavoidable. This schism in her
fact, promiscuity seems to horrify her. The substitute thus assumes the
function of a leitmotif, quintessentially „reflective of the lost woman‟s
removes skin after skin from over her psyche. Even many Indian
Saxton who has been compared with Kamala Das, took to writing
the “blind kindness of his of lips‟ and admitting that her peace lay
only in her “betrayer‟s arms”. She changes her tone in some poems
about the male who does not see woman with his eyes, “but with
her most recent lover, “so long so long sweet I slavery”, but she is
question, because her “mind in an old playhouse with all its light put
out”.
spiritual. She has brought the forbidden fruit right at the centre of the
intensity and athletic strength under her touch, The stortling qualities
memory, redeem her aching soul and supply her with enough critical
its best. She feels that women experience the similar blight, they are
Kamala Das has always felt herself alone, even amid a crowd, and
descent...33
her, yet the poetess questions whether memory, and reflections over
same vein she protests against rape. Her My Story, her poems and
icy, stony and dark images, she succeeds in projecting the feelings of
But pile them up / and / let them tell / By their shell That
expression she exploits various images drawn from nature, and from
ail dimensions of life. The images are not limited only to the scenic
flow of life, a flow which is running through the veins of every mortal
being. Her love is not just a spiritual love, but a vital life-force, a
beautiful and painful experience. It appeals to the heart more than the
order, which always goes to the mind and never to the heart. Her love
progressive artist. She has revived and modernised the old concept of
love.
private fear and dream, can become a gesture for an entire sex, a
the „Fall‟ and living is the original sin. In her, innocence and bliss,
in bold and defiant, voice is clear and direct. Courage, and conviction
and truthfulness are the hallmarks of her poetry. She experiments with
love and life from a woman‟s point of view, for which the candidly
admits that leer scope of writing is narrow like that of Jane Austen.
country are her stuff. She writes as an Indian speaks and understands,
It is in this sense that she is the greatest modern Indian English poet to
In „The Sunshine Cat‟, the poetess grows old and becomes “a cold
body grows „drab and destitute‟ and in „The Invitation‟ the poetess is
presents it:
Life‟s obscure parallel is death. Quite often
or dying.39
quite mediocre:
It effortlessly.40
less turbulent than life. The dead people seem quiet, tranquilised. She
So she too prayed the sun God to grant her a heroic son like Kama.
purity, from body to soul, from matter to spirit, Tom mediocre ideas
blosstled like a blue totes in the waters „or my creams. It was to get
closer to the bodyless one that I approached other forms and lost my
way.”60 The breaking of local ties through adultery could also signify
the soul‟s readiness to abandon all social considerations for the sake
of God. In her poem „The Maggots‟, she again uses the Krishna
Writing about her last lover, she refers to the 18 mirrors in his
room as if they were 18 ponds into which she dipped her hot brown
body. In the thousand reflection of herself and her lover while
thousand bodies to satisfy each gopi. She searches for her ideal lover
spreading leafy trees under which Radha and Krishna reaffirm their
love every evening. The poems also operate at a deeper level. The
river where Krishna makes love to Radha, its ceaseless flow of life
and Krishna had for each other, The Kadamba tree, a symbol of the h
man body, into which homeless souls are reborn, is also the
love.
these poems, her „Self has gave historical and political implications:
love, unaccustomed
The „Anamalai Poems‟ are different from her earlier poems in the
sense that the poet now overcomes her anxieties, and a11ows herself
to luxuriate, even amid a crisis for the self. And the poems have a
deep undertone of nostalgia for her entire life, rather the poems are an
asked why she chose to write in English, she replied that English
being the tongue most familiar to her, she used it to express herself.
of English.
says, “If poetry comes not as naturally as leaves come to a tree, better
language of her emotions, and she speaks to her readers as one human
being to another. In this lies her originality and her distinction. There
familiar and the commonplace. Often her images are symbolic and
She chose to write because she wanted to falsify the male view
that women are incapable of intelligent tasks, that all that they can
produce is a body and that too not without male contribution. So she
irrationality of women.
Kamala Das‟s poetry is controversial and ,at the same time
spiritual. She has brought the forbidden fruit right at the centre of the
intensity and athletic strength under her touch, The strolling qualities
memory, redeem her aching soul and supply her with enough critical
2. Ibid., p. 25.
4. Ibid., p. 56.
6. Ibid., p. 65.
15. Ibid., p. 32
*********