Thursday, August 1, 2019
Night of the Scorpion Essay
The father of post Independence Indian English verse, Nissim Ezekiel, was a Mumbai born, Indian ââ¬â Jewish poet, playwright, editor and art-critic. His works are an important part of Indian literary history. His major themes are love, loneliness, creativity and human foibles. Via his works, he satirized evil practices, superstitions and ignorance of the Indian people, as he has in this poem. He made Indian English poetry digestible for the common man. He wanted simplicity of thought and language in modern poetry. He was awarded the Sahitya Akademi Award for his poetry collection ââ¬â ââ¬Å"Latter-Day Psalms.â⬠This poem, Night of the Scorpion, is one of his most famous poems. It has been written in ââ¬Ëfree verseââ¬â¢ which means that it is highly irregular in terms of line length and does not follow any rhyming pattern. The ââ¬ËNight of the Scorpionââ¬â¢ captures a scene in a rural Indian village where being bitten by a scorpion was a common fear. The narrator is a young child witnessing a horrific event in his life- his own mother writhing in agony of a scorpionââ¬â¢s sting. Along with the anguish of the family members, the poet describes the concern for the mother by the villagers. The child describes the scorpion as the Devil Himself by using adjectives like ââ¬Ëdiabolicââ¬â¢ and also refers to it as the metaphorical ââ¬ËEvil Oneââ¬â¢. However, the poet also says that the scorpion had been forced to ââ¬Å"crawl beneath a sack of riceâ⬠by the torrential rain and later had to ââ¬Å"risk the rain againâ⬠. This shows a subtle feeling of pity underlying the fact that the scorpion was the Devil Incarnate. Imagery is one of the main literary devices used in this poem. ââ¬Å"With candles and lanterns Throwing giant scorpion shadows On the sun-baked wallsâ⬠This aids us to visualize the scene of Villagers searching for the scorpion outside the cottage in the steady downpour amidst the sun-baked huts. In most rural Indian villages, the entire village is like a community. Each family shares in each otherââ¬â¢s joys and sorrows. This is evident since the poet uses the line ââ¬Å"the peasants came like swarms of flies.â⬠As a hyperbole, this line shows their immense numbers. It also shows that the people were more of a hindrance than a help like a ââ¬Ëswarm of fliesââ¬â¢. It also shows how, in close-knit communities, all news spreads like wildfire. The fruitless passing of time is also shown by the line, ââ¬Å"More candles, more lanterns, more neighbours, More insects and the endless rain.â⬠Another aspect of rural society, unfortunately, is their belief in baseless superstitions and beliefs. Having being denied proper education facilities, they remain unaware of the truth. These uneducated villagers are clueless about proper medication. In an effort to help, they pray to god to paralyze the scorpion so that, as their superstition states, the poison would also be paralyzed in the motherââ¬â¢s blood. The villagers also believe in the Karma philosophy. This philosophy was born in India and in certain cultures it is intertwined with the concept of reincarnation, or life after death. The villagers chant, ââ¬Å"May the sins of you previous birth Be burned away tonightâ⬠And, ââ¬Å"May the poison purify your flesh Of desire and your spirit of ambitionâ⬠Thus, they imply that the motherââ¬â¢s desires and ambitions are the sins that she is paying for. Finally, the motherââ¬â¢s ordeal comes to an end. In a display of motherââ¬â¢s unconditional love, the poem ends with the mother saying, ââ¬Å"Thank god the scorpion picked on me and spared my childrenââ¬
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