Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
India

Varun Gandhi's Immature Offering Butchers Poetry

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 May, 2015 10:31 AM
  • Varun Gandhi's Immature Offering Butchers Poetry
Title: Stillness;
 
Author: Feroze Varun Gandhi;
 
Publisher: Harper Collins; Pages: 206;
 
Price: Rs.399
 
In today's day and age, it wouldn't be wrong to say that every other individual is either an author or wants to become one - and that everyone has a dormant poet within him or her, waiting to be published by a publisher who "believes" or sees "promise" in his or her verses.
 
But the same rules might not be applicable if you come from a heavyweight political background and are lucky to have a publisher waiting to publish your "amateur" poems.
 
This is how lucky BJP MP Varun Gandhi is as he has managed to get published "Stillness", a book of poems that seemingly take the reader on a nostalgic trip to relive college days when the struggles of life offered unlimited fodder for thought, everyday drudgery was tiresome, the battle for love was lonesome and silence was golden.
 
There are 51 poems in the offering that touch upon themes of guilt, love, control, dreams, illusion, hope and want, among others. The intention is that through Gandhi's words, readers would attempt to read his mind.
 
While trying to do so, it was the poem "Inside" that got me wondering whether I was reading a poem by a 35-year-old and not someone who is in college.
 
Sample this: "... I've taken off my mask/It was starting to bleed/ Without message/ Without protection/I sit alone in this room/Night after night/Calming myself against a nothingness/Which refuses to show its face..."
 
Similarly, "Slow Days" is meant to bring to mind a dreary day in parliament when the house is in session and MPs are making efforts to be heard amid the din. "Ending in an open door/Watching people perform/Preparing for the abyss/Choices are ladders/Moral codes/Schems/Avenging the wrong word..."
 
The inference drawn from these lines might be wrong, but given the liberty of open interpretations, I have made my own judgment.
 
The beauty of a poem lies in its layered message that doesn't only reflect a writer's state of mind but also examines his manner of perceiving reality. Poetry, in many ways, has been a powerful social critique to address issues in a few, yet powerful lines.
 
However, this power punch is lacking in Gandhi's poems, which are more of a reflection of his inner self than a reflection of the outside world. They deprive a reader of a social commentary one would expect from a young politician whose work allows him to interact with the real India and its issues.
 
The grandson of former prime minister Indira Gandhi had published his first poetry book "The Otherness of Self" in his early 20s but it seems his writings have refused to grow up and are stuck somewhere in between the bubble that reeks of immaturity.
 
If there is something that really stands out in this book, it has to be the images, contributed by different photographers, to complement the poems. They are the real heroes of this hurriedly-planned book, which does nothing to take forward the publisher or the poet.

MORE India ARTICLES

Delhi Polls: AAP Mps Raise Punjab's Drugs Menace To Prevent Redux

Delhi Polls: AAP Mps Raise Punjab's Drugs Menace To Prevent Redux
They are just four of them but the AAP quartet in parliament is determined to make Punjab's festering problem of drugs an issue for the Delhi assembly polls with an eye on the large Punjabi population in the national capital - and to prevent the worrying problem from spilling over into Delhi.

Delhi Polls: AAP Mps Raise Punjab's Drugs Menace To Prevent Redux

Akali Candidate With Rs.239 Crore Is Richest In Delhi Polls

Akali Candidate With Rs.239 Crore Is Richest In Delhi Polls
Shiromani Akali Dal's Manjinder Singh Sirsa with assets worth Rs.239 crore is the richest among the 673 candidates in the fray for the Delhi assembly polls, a think-tank said Friday.

Akali Candidate With Rs.239 Crore Is Richest In Delhi Polls

Jayanthi Natarajan Quits Congress, Attacks Rahul Gandhi

Jayanthi Natarajan Quits Congress, Attacks Rahul Gandhi
Senior Congress leader Jayanthi Natarajan, a onetime party spokesperson who was considered quite close to former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, Friday quit the party, sending shock waves through its political establishment. 

Jayanthi Natarajan Quits Congress, Attacks Rahul Gandhi

Don't Frame A Scheme If You Can't Implement It: Supreme Court Tells Government

Don't Frame A Scheme If You Can't Implement It: Supreme Court Tells Government
The Supreme Court Friday pulled up the central government for framing schemes and them not monitoring their implementation as it frowned at the leisurely pace at which the scheme for providing hostels facilities to SC/ST students was moving.

Don't Frame A Scheme If You Can't Implement It: Supreme Court Tells Government

Now No VAT Assesment For Punjab Traders With Under Rs.1 Crore Turnover

Punjab Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal Friday announced the abolition of the e-trip system for major categories besides exempting traders having a turnover less than Rs.1 crore from filing VAT (value added tax) assessment.

Now No VAT Assesment For Punjab Traders With Under Rs.1 Crore Turnover

RJD, JD-U Will Merge, Say Lalu And Nitish

RJD, JD-U Will Merge, Say Lalu And Nitish
Six "Janata Parivar" parties will certainly merge soon as there is no hurdle, former Bihar chief ministers Nitish Kumar and Lalu Prasad announced Friday.

RJD, JD-U Will Merge, Say Lalu And Nitish