Regret Poem By R Parthasarathy Hot!
End of a long day’s simple action, the fan’s ceaseless whirr: My life is a desert of stunted thorns.
Dry leaves of regret rustle in me, a sick animal’s breath: The bones of resolution lie scattered. regret poem by r parthasarathy
It is worth noting that “Regret” is often anthologized as a short lyric within the second section of Rough Passage , titled “Exile.” Unlike his long, sprawling lines elsewhere, “Regret” is tight, clenched like a fist. While the exact lineation varies by publication (Oxford University Press, 1977), the core of the poem revolves around the following essential imagery: End of a long day’s simple action, the
However, some argue that the poem is too quiet. Where is the rage? Where is the protest against the Empire? Parthasarathy refuses anger. Regret is colder than anger. Anger burns out; regret fossilizes. The poem’s weakness—its lack of action—is precisely its strength. It captures the inertia of the colonized intellectual who knows he is colonized but cannot claw the language out of his throat. While the exact lineation varies by publication (Oxford