PEOPLE'S
POET
Dr.
Arignar C.N.Annadurai, M.A. Delivered his first English
Speech in
All India Radio on "PEOPLE'S POET" (Year 1948)
PEOPLE'S
POET!
Charming and significant as the term is, it is a warm
tribute not only to the poet but also to the people -
for the people had their monarchs and ministers, their
warriors and saviours, their seers and saints, miracle
- mongers and priests, but had no poets - and from ages
past there were poets in abundance, poets who supplemented
the scriptures or who polished the palaces by their poetry,
but poets who sang for and about the people, in the people's
tongue, were very very rare. The poet's voice hid the
function of the temple bell or the palace drum but rarely
did that voice represent the innermost thoughts of the
people and when at times poets spoke about the people,
it was to point out to them, how greedy the world is,
how sinful is silver and how ungodly is gold and such
like sermons - sermons that supplemented the royal rod
and the whip of the aristocrat. Poets became in due course
one more important item in the Royal paraphernalia, one
more policeman, who filed the case here and asked the
high heavens to deliver the Judgment later on. These poets
spoke in a different tongue altogether and were far from
the people. They despised the crowd from where they rose,
and used their poetic genius to gain admission in the
royal palace, and when once there, they went on weaving
wordy wreaths for monarchs of all sorts, provided his
gold was pure. The poets of the Sangam period, are noble
exceptions to this sorry rule, and they are the poets
least known to the people of our days.
Poets either became vendors of virtue in verses or became
pleasure - merchants and they found it hard and unprofitable
to become the People's Poets. That is the reason why we
find no outstanding people's poet after the Sangam Age
in Tamil Nadu.
POETS OF YORE
Virtue itself came to be considered as an investment for
a happy life in another world. Hence, poets who came after
the advent of this false and pernicious theory began to
extol the particular bank of dispensation for which they
were the self appointed agents. Like the clever banker
or the active insurance agent, these poets began to pour
forth rhymes in abundance, about the soundness of their
Bank, about the delightful dividends and the bright prospects.
If one poet gave the people a sweet song about the powers
of Garuda of Maha Vishnu, up rose another to supply us
with a sacred sonnet about the stately bull of Siva, or
the beautiful peacock of Muruga or even the ugly buffalo
of the all powerful God of Death Yama. All these poems
were of the highest order, looked at from the artist's
point of view - there was rhythm, diction, smylies, metaphors,
parables, - all in abundance except reason. These poets
thought that the temple bell did not work well and thought
it their duty to lend their poetic strength to supplement
the sound - duty or no duty, it was such a paying job
that there was a rush in that direction. Poets assumed
an attitude of superiority - they enjoyed the common-man's
confusion, they tried to compromise contradictions and
beautify absurdities - they were loud in their denunciation
of things worldly; the worthlessness of human life, the
littleness of mankind and they presented a poetic picture
of the unknown world heaven up above the clouds, and the
hell underneath the earth - the telescope was in the womb
of science hence heaven existed, and the poets entertained
the people with imaginary descriptions about the theological
worlds! The ignorant stood amazed and the intelligent
adored the art and not the thought.
ROLE OF PEOPLE’S POET
It is not easy to take up the role of a people’s poet-Bharathi
rose equal to this stupendous task. It is easy to become
the poet of the classes, some sweet sonnets about the
silvery moon swimming in a sea of blue , some poems about
the twinkle of the stars, fine poems about the fragrance
of the flower , the rhythm in rivers, lyrics about love
and verses about valour - these are enough to secure a
place of honour in the poets gallery. But to discharge
the duties of a people’s poet, one has to cross hurdles
of hatred, take many a dive into dangers and should not
think about patronage and popularity. Though a selected
circle of friends Knew and spoke about the poetic genius
of Subramania Bharathi, the people as a whole were almost
unaware of their poet till at a later stage, and then
too, it was the poems of a political colour that was presented
to the people, and not the poems, which a people’s poet
alone can conceive and deliver. We had poets in abundance.
The shepherd sleeping inside a temple forgetful of his
home and vocation, the goddess returning after her midnight
supervision, the smile on her lips on seeing the simpleton,
her curious idea to make him a poet, a gentle pat and
the touch of the divine rod, the wonderful result-these
were known to the people. One becomes a poet, because
of the divine touch, and it is his duty to sing devotional
songs to a particular deity or to all this theory held
the ground so strongly , that he people were not prepared
to meet the people’s poet, even when one came forward.
The people will cast a look of contempt and suspicion
on one who says boldly, “I am the people’s poet, I sing
for them and about them, because I am one of them,” there
would be no recognition and the more radical his poems
are, the more vehement will be the opposition. And in
this dangerous ground, we find Subramania Bharathi taking
steady steps victoriously.
BHARATHI’S AGE
Bharathi was born on the frontier of two eras – the feudal
orders was in full force in his homeland, Ettayapuram
had a palace surrounded by huts, age-old castes were still
in power, he himself was a Brahmin by birth-but side by
side with feudalism and sanathanic order of society, modernism
was peeping new with sorrowful and scornful eyes, and
there was challenge in the look of the nee era, Bharathi
was born during that period and more could have imaged
that he will become the warrior in the duel between the
old order and the new –for in the old order of things
his was a comfortable place.
BHARATHIAR’S CLAIM TO GREATNESS
He was born moreover in this land of paradoxes a land
where arrogance and humility, cruelty and kindness march
together-where there is energy in abundance and absurd
contemplation strong enough to dissipate the energy, a
land of some dazzling ideas and millions of mute people,
a land where there is courage as well as fear, the land
of faith as well as despair. Byron and Bruke landed here
just then, only to meet Bharatam and Bagavatham. The booming
of the gun became familiar to the ears of the people and
the age-long temple drum was not silent in such a land
of paradoxes and perplexities Bharathi was born, and in
such a land history moves but slowly and it needs a strong
push if it should move at all,Bharathi’s claim to greatness
rests chiefly on those he gave the push, as the people’s
poet.
Bharathi was not merely the bard of Nationalism he was
certainly the morning star of reformation only because
he was the people’s poet. He was the angry with the foreigner,
and wanted his country to become free but that was not
his goal that was not to be his end. It was but the beginning-he
wanted to free his country-men from all shackles, wanted
them to rise up in the estimation of the world, wanted
to see, a new land peopled by men and women of a new type
altogether. He found the people enveloped in fear. Fear
was written on their very faces. They were afraid of anything
and everything, not only did they fear the foreigner and
his gun but their own brethren chanting some slogans-they
were afraid of ghosts and phantoms.
FIGHT FOR FREEDOM
Such a people, cannot become the standard bearers of freedom,
and a land peopled by such cannot lift its heap high,
and look straight at the world, even if the foreign power
is driven out. Hence Bharathi wanted his countrymen, to
drive out the fear from their mind –to shed off inferiority
complex. He instilled into their minds hope and courage,
he placed before them their own hidden powers and pointed
out to them, how that innate power is being wasted, the
slumber of the masses, their gross ignorance and superstition,
their inferiority complex and their caste prejudices Bharathi
saw clearly, and he determined to root out these evils,
and none but a people’s poet could have been so deeply
interested in these problems. But Bharathi knew full well,
that it was the age of the common man-the era of democracy-and
he wanted the people to fight for freedom-he did not deliver
more devotional hymns to the divinities, nor did he send
poetic appeals to the princes of the land-he addressed
the man with the plough, the woman at the cradle, and
even the children at the play-grounds, he did not, like
the poets of a bygone age, pointing out, ancient scripts
in support of freedom, but placed before the masses the
world events of importance, the freedom movements of distant
lands. He announced to the people, the dawn of freedom
in Italy through the marvelous resurrection of the masses;
thanks to Mazzini the patriot-he painted in glowing colours
the picture of France after the revolution, and placed
a brand new picture about Russia, free from the shackles
of Czardom. free Belgium, free France, Red Russia-these
were the pictures, he also presented them with a pen-picture
of countrymen at Fiji islands, and like Shakespeare he
asked, look at this picture and at that! That is the people’s
poet. One who is not afraid of pointing out the follies
and foibles of his own people, one who is not afraid of
showing to his own people, how slow they are in thought
and action whereas peoples of other lands were moving
fast and faster to a nobler sphere of activity amid life.
He was not afraid of the privileged class, and did not
falter to place the full facts before the people.
As the people’s poet it was his duty to unmask hypocrisy
wherever it was to be found, and he did that with remarkable
courage and enthusiasm.
CONVERSATION CONDEMNED
There is an attempt by interested parties to enlarge the
portrait of Bharathi the National Bard, not entirely because
they love that portrait but-because, they think that portrait’s
immensity will conceal from the public eye, the other
portrait of Bharathi that the people’s poet. Bharathi’s
poems are no mere hornets. The people’s poet, was not
afraid to lay bare the absurdities of ancient systems
and thoughts and in almost infuriated tone, he ask those
who champion the cause of conservation in very strong
words, ‘Fools! Do you argue that things ancient ought
on that from times immemorial, and dare you argue that
because these are ancient, these should prevail?’
LIVE IN THE PRESENT, SHAPE THE FUTURE
In ancient times, do you think that there was not the
ignorant and the shallow-minded! And why after all should
you embrace so fondly carcass-dead thoughts. Live in the
present and shape the future, do not caste lingering looks
to the distant past, for the past has passed away never
again to return so says Bharathi-and there-in we meet.
He gave a moral code for the masses, not unrelated to
life, as some of the ancient code were, he boldly differed
from the ancient codes and placed before the people, a
new vision altogether. He refused to allow the thought
of Maya philosophy to have a hold on the people- he ridiculed
that theory, strongly and infuriated the Asramites, but
he was not afraid of the consequences. A people immersed
in such a thought, Bharathi said, will become inactive,
unprogressive and such a people will become worth –less.
HIS RELIGION
Hunger and poverty and ignorance, he will not tolerate,
and he raises his powerful voice against the tyranny of
the rich, and threatens the whole world with dire consequence
even if a single individual is made to starve. He wants
the people to lead a full life develop their faculties
improve their commerce industrialize their land – and
enjoy all the benefits of the new era. His religion is
not to be priest-craft and slogan-shouting-his religion
is service to humanity and brotherhood in the broadest
sense.
TASK UNFINISHED WILL BE FINISHED
The task that lies before the people’s poet, is a mighty
one. It is his task to make the people realize new truth,
take a new path, and get a new process of valuation altogether.
It is his task to release the people from the clutches
of the Astrologer, and place before them the Astronomer,
his is the task to drive out the Alchemist from the people’s
mind so that the chemist can come in. His is the task
to push aside the priest so that the teacher can get a
place. The people’s poet has the mighty task of driving
out the influence of the miracle monger so that the medical
man can find a place in the order of things. Superstition
is to be fought out, so that science can flourish. In
short the people’s poet has the task of a revolutionary-and
more difficult than that of the revolutionary, for the
people are apt to mistake the tyrant for the saviour and
the saviour for the tyrant. He fought with courage, and
though the battle is not over yet, and though he is no
more alive, he has given an armoury of thought, enough
for the successful termination of the flight, and that
is the the best and lasting tribute that one can pay to
this people’s poet, in its fullest and noblest sense.
And there are men for the job and it will be finished.