Thursday 26 January 2023

An Anatomy of Silence in K V Dominic’s “Silence! Silence!! Grave Silence!!!” Explication by Dr. Parthajit Ghosh

 

An Anatomy of Silence in K V Dominic’s

“Silence! Silence!! Grave Silence!!!”

Parthajit Ghosh

 

The Poem for Anatomy:

Mansion like house

Doors and windows closed

Past midnight, still lights inside

Sleep fears to enter

Three generations reside

Grandpa reads Bible

Grandma reads Bhagavatam

Grandchildren aged eight and twelve

write never ending homework

Their dad is drowned in Facebook

Mom buried in WhatsApp

No sound from anywhere

Seems like haunted house

Silence, silence, grave silence!

None speaks to none

No common prayers

No common dining

No sharing of ideas

If anyone breaks silence

Comes rebuke at once

“Don’t disturb me”

Goes to bed on one’s own time

What happens in one house

never known to neighbours:

both comedy and tragedy

Isn’t it part of evolution

from social being to antisocial?

(Cataracts of Compassion 59)

 

A Proem to the Poem

This non-metrical but visually a stichic in twenty seven lines, woven into the matrix of a free verse in a very easy constructional pattern with simple coherence and cohesion structure, is a “scriptible” narrative of an evolving suburban society of twenty first century India; which may have an effect of a monologue by the poet on the common readers. The poet in Dominic is found apprehended to the manner of living in his society, a part of which is presented through this poem in the form of storytelling captures a ‘mansion like house’ where ‘three generations reside’ a lifeless or mechanical life. And thus, Dominic posits himself at the place of social reformist thinker a poet, which can better be assessed by the prototype of contextual analysis.

Silence: A Brief Context

Space is not the only void. It is the significant extent for an object to have its relative position and direction. Similarly, silence is not merely the absence of sound; it is sounded to its own significant waves. Silence is spiritually significant. It is such a sublime which can only be attained through pure practice of meditation and through the process of enlightenment. It holds the ambiance to introspect or to communicate with the infinitude. In the Bhagavad Gita, Lord Krishna himself says: “of secret things I am silence” (Ch. 10, verse 38; Prabhupada 478). In Hinduism, there is a belief system that “it is only in the silence of your mind that you can hear the voice of God. Once that voice is heard, it is again the silence that helps you to enjoy that sound – to relive it again and again in the deepest depths of your inner being” (Kumar, Speakingtree.in). Even Lord Buddha maintained a long silence to get enlightened, who believed: “words end where truth begins”. To the context of silence and Buddha, the spiritual leader, Sri Ravi Shankar has nicely remarked: “The purpose of words is to create silence. If words create more noise, then they have not reached their goal. Buddha’s words would definitely create silence, because Buddha is the manifestation of silence. Silence is the source of life and is the cure for diseases” (Art of Living).Even in the Bible, the Psalm 46:10 says: “Be still and know that I am God.” Silence has thus a great spiritual connection.

Silence has a big space even in literature. Yeats yearns to live into the silence at the Lake Isle of Innisfree from which he claims to have peace: “And I shall have some peace there, for peace comes dropping slow” (“The Lake Isle of Innisfree”, Poetry Foundation). Even the great romantic poets like Wordsworth, Keats, Shelly and many others have transcendentalized silence in various significant occasion into their poetry. The metaphysical poet, John Donne craves for silence during love making: “For God’s sake hold your tongue, and let me love” (“The Canonization”, Poetry Foundation). But, in the literature of the marginalized and the subalterns, ‘silence’ is connoted with fear, suppression and voicelessness. However, “Silence is a tool that has been utilized in literature to heighten emotion, magnify suspense or drama, and let a character grow into their own being” (Das).

Silence has therefore multiple facets. It is spiritually sublime, poetically transcendental or metaphysical; sometimes, it symbolizes fear, suppression and voicelessness.Silence is often the word of protest. Lexically, it is an ambiance of absence of noise or sound. But in this poem, Dominic is in a bad mood to the silence. He intends to break the silence to bridge in human emotion what is laid out in the subsequent discussion.

From Text to Context

If any jargon like short story in poetry exists in literary criticism this poem is then the best example of that. Like a good short story, this poem too is arranged in a sequence of a beginning, middle and end; built up on a unified plot and narrated by the poet himself that resembles the heterodiegetic storytelling technique. The beginning explores the characters like Grandpa, Grandma, Dad, Mom and two children (three generations) in a ‘mansion like house’; the middle portrays their action, their daily habits and their practice of keeping silence to each other; and, the end brings in the poet’s prediction for the impending tragedy on a society evolving towards being ‘antisocial’.

 Silence is, however, personified as an antihero all through the narrative in this poem. The very title which is tangible to the poem and seems to be the beginning line is the repetition of the word, ‘silence’, of course, with an emphasis of negative exclamation. Here, an ambiguity lies in the use of the word ‘grave’ before silence. Is it simply a lexical alternative for ‘serious’ or ‘crucial’ or ‘dangerous’ to personify ‘silence’; or, a desperate attempt to signify silence as death since the word, ‘grave’, is often used as an allusive term for ‘death’? But, irrespective to this ambiguity, the title clearly captures the negative emotion of the poet who refuses silence spoiling the bond in a family.

The family projected in this poem lives in a ‘mansion like house’. The simile of house here implies the snobbery of the affluent class which is addicted to live a life of showing off than the life of necessity. Dominic has, as if, revived the essence of ‘comedy of manners’ to depict the artificial life of a section in his society. A house is a necessity; a ‘mansion like house’ is the pretention of the high economic class to that necessity. On the other hand, this expression, ‘mansion like house’, may be used to juxtapose the contradiction between the wideness of the periphery of the house and the miseries of the people who dwell inside that house completely ignorant or disconnected to each other. Probably, it is a tactful attempt of Dominic to represent the triviality of the material world. No material gain is significant unless it is purposefully utilised.

The first four lines however portray a visual image of a gloomy and ghoulish house where the doors and the windows are closed. The closed ‘doors’ and ‘windows’ here insinuates an extended metaphor linking up various intertextual references. However, ‘Doors’ and ‘windows’ are frequently used as metaphorical elements in the literature dealing with the human body mystery. The nine openings in a human body (the two eyes, two nostrils, mouth, two ears, the anus, and the opening of the generative organ and for urination) are mentioned asnava-dwara-pura (nine doors) in The Bhagavad Gita. The great Bengali mystic poet, Fakir Lalon Shah composes his folk song on the mystery of human body by comparing it with a cage and assuming its structure built with eight cells and nine doors:

How does the strange bird

flit in and out of the cage.

If I could catch the bird

I would put it under the fetters of my heart.

The cage has eight cells and nine doors

with latticed openings here and there,

Above it is the main hall

with a mirror-chamber? (Songs of Lalon Shah 36)

If Dominic’s this ‘mansion like house’ is perceived as a human body then also it is a dead body, a morbid land what Dominic himself confirms by saying it as ‘haunted house’. The openings in a human body are the means of input and output of the body; the body is alive till the openings are open or functioning properly. Doors and windows are the means of exit and entrance. The closed doors and windows here highlight the detached, stagnant and decaying life of the people in this house where sleep fears to enter till mid night. ‘Sleep’ is here personified to show the restlessness of the residents of the house for almost no significant reason.

The subsequent lines till the last five ones capture the three generation residing under the same roof without the subtle bond of living. They are so self-engrossed that they do not have any common space, any common prayers, any common delicacies to enjoy and any thoughts to share.  

Keeping silence to each other is here the only rule of living what is not at all a bliss. Dominic has drawn three devastated generations. The childhood does not have any space; it is under the threat of ‘never ending homework’. The parenthood is under the threat of social media addiction and the grandparenthood under the search of religious knowledge. Although the characters in this poem narrative are ignorant and less sensitive to their family members Dominic holds the continuum approach in portraying them. Among the growing nuclear family culture in India this family in Dominic’s poem is an exception where three generation at least reside under the same roof. Dominic is an Indian poet who has written this poem at such a time when religious nationalism heads up into the narrative of power politics. But, Dominic has discreetly built up a secular ambience through the grandfather reading Bible and grandmother reading Bhagavatam. The poet has made a balance in characterization; and thus, has made his poetic intention loud and clear.

            Dominic passes his own judgement through the concluding five lines of this poem. He finds it comic the way of living as depicted in this poem and this erroneous habit will surely bring tragedy in their life. The transition of human life from animal to the civilized one is the matter of huge evolution through the centuries. This hard earned human civilization can only be sustained through the best practices of being human with the feelings of community culture, empathy, sensitivity, caring, compassion, kindness, sacrifice and many more such positive attributes. The way of living depicted in this poem is the threat to those basic human attributes; and therefore, the poet apprehends for a sure downfall in civilized culture. The poet concludes with a question to his fellow beings to analyse; and thus, warns them for an impending disaster from the unexpected evolution ‘from social being to antisocial’, from human to inhuman, from the light to the darkness. 

A Portrayal of Social Crisis

A house of four walls does not make a home. A house becomes a home in love, care and affection of the people who reside in. A healthy home is important for a healthy human society. The way of living captured in this poem is definitely a threat to the man as social being in the pursuit of the sustainability of hard earned human civilization. The technological advancement may replace many manual efforts but not the human emotions. It is human emotion and dialogue which makes human a social being. In the absence of the practice of which the man as social being turns into antisocial. Dominic has entered the epicenter of the crisis by depicting a family practicing silence for no significant reason, and thus, damaging the family bond. A damaged relationship in a family is the bigger cause of crisis in a society since home is the breeding ground of sociality.

Dominic tries to put an emphasis on the issue of generation gap, one of the major social crises today. In this age of rat race, all are running behind but reaching nowhere. People are so busy that they don’t have any family time. If the family time is compromised there will definitely be a lack of understanding among the persons in a family. This lack of understanding indulges man being nonreciprocal, insensitive, disrespectful, and most importantly, inhumane. A society collapses when a domestic ambience of a house is damaged by such practice of living. Dominic magnifies the issue through his poetic observation to warn his fellow beings.

Dominic’s Attempt in Breaking Silence

A wizard can foresee the future; a doctor can save life with his medical knowledge; a scientist can discover something to solve problems in his society; likewise, every professional does for one’s society as per one’s expertise and acquired skills. Dominic is skilled in poetry and his purpose of writing is the weal from the crisis in his society. Through his fine observation, he captures a part (a family) to replicate the bigger issues like growing damaged family relationship and its consequence, generation gap, indulgence of stand-offish nature and more a like fretting malignantly in his society. It is said that ‘charity begins at home’. A bigger social change starts at the threshold of a little family. The last two lines of this poem are just clear enough to understand Dominic’s endeavour for bringing change in perception.

If this poem is symbolically interpreted, then also, Dominic is found significant in advocating for religious harmony in his nation. ‘Themansion like house’ symbolizes Dominic’s country, India; the characters in this poem are the different cultural provinces of the country; the context of reading Bible and Bhagavatam is the indication of different religious practices in the country; whereas, ‘silence’ stands for the lack of interreligious talk for national integrity and cultural prosperity. The act of silence is the act of practicing hatred and anger for each other. Dominic probably attempts to break that silence for a peaceful and an integrated nation.

An Extractive

Dominic tries to find out rational solution of problem in his society through this simple poem narrative. If the great romantics find solution in ‘back to nature’, Dominic’s call definitely be then ‘back to humanity’. This poem in free verse is undoubtedly a piece of art by a postmodern humanist in Dominic who is very sincere and careful about his society and has consciously played his role by showing his concerns for the impending tragedy on a society evolving towards being ‘antisocial’. This poem can set the best canonical relevance with the studies like Posthumanism and Anthropocentrism with an undercurrent of the poet’s urge for a humanitarian society. If poetry preserves power this poem is definitely then an embedding vector into the hearts of introspective readers.

 

Works Cited

Das, Dee. “Words Left Unsaid: The Role of Silence in Literary Fiction.” BOOK RIOT, 28 Jan. 2022, https://bookriot.com/silence-in-literary-fiction/#:~:text=Silence%20is%20a%20tool%20that,a%20thousand%20words%20ever%20can.

Dominic, K. V. “Silence! Silence!! Grave Silence!!!” in Cataracts of Compassion. By Dominic. Authorspress, 2018, p. 59.

Donne, John. “The Canonization.” Poetry Foundation, Poetry Foundation, https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44097/the-canonization.

Kumar, Vivek. “Some Loud Thoughts about Silence.” Speakingtree.in, https://www.speakingtree.in/allslides/some-loud-thoughts-about-silence.

Prabhupada, A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami. Bhagavad Gita. The Bhaktivedanta Book Trust, rpt. 2016.

“Psalm 46.” The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/scriptures/ot/ps/46?lang=eng.

Rushd, Abu. Songs of Lalon Shah. Bangla Academy Dhaka, 1990.

Shankar, Ravi. “Buddha Is the Manifestation of Silence.” Art of Living, https://wisdom.srisriravishankar.org/buddha-is-the-manifestation-of-silence/.

Yeats, William Butler. “The Lake Isle of Innisfree.” Poetry Foundation, Poetry Foundation, https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/43281/the-lake-isle-of-innisfree.

 

Dr. Parthajit Ghosh teaches English at a government school in the State of Chhattisgarh for living. He is passionate for Indian English Poetry. He tries to contribute in that field with his research works and writings. His poems and research articles have been featured in various national and international series and numbers. He believes in poetry which speaks for cure, love and peace. He is a review editor of both Writers Editors Critics (WEC) & International Journal on Multicultural Literature (IJML). Email: parthajitg@gmail.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                

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