Friday, May 31, 2019

SAVE ME FROM SUMMER

                                                                           
                       




       
       1)       The air is cool with fresh dew-drops of rain

                  Nature has smiled now green again

                  The summer’s raging passion, spent;

                  The sky, fresh-washed and clear as a crystal blue;

                   Whose heart will not be thrilled

                   By such cool weather as this?


     2)         Yet flames of agony as hot as May

                  No drops of peace have soothed this fray;

                   I pine with flames beyond my control

                   I can’t curb this volcanic roar;

                   I wish not for drowsy pleasures to contain

                   These innate flames, oh Mother divine!


     3)           Let me bloom once again

                   Fresh as the lotus of the lake

                   With Thy sweet showers let me slake

                   My thirst; a new flight let me take

                   Into the new horizons; let me awake

                   To see Thy mercy pour in plenty for my sake.


                           ***********************


        1st June, 2019                                 Somaseshu Gutala
  
      
                  

Saturday, May 25, 2019

ODE TO MILTON

Milton's statue at Westminster Abbey



Milton's statue at St. Giles Church, Cripplegate.
                                    

1)          Thou, brightest star of English firmament!
             Thy quill enriched the Albion’s tongue
             Another Homer on this island sprung;
             Freedom through thy dauntless voice found vent
             Alone you struggled like an African lion
             None dared to enter thy dominion.

2)          Immersed in classics right from schooling time
             You mastered the Greek and Roman authors great
             So soon you did attain their sublime state;
             Thy Latin odes showed perfect rhythm and rhyme
             A cynosure to all well-versed in so many tongues
             An Aeolian lyre with many melodies strung.


3)         Thy youthful days at college did not bear
             Rigid religious rules by prelates bound;
             Protested thou with thy writings profound
             Selfish intercession you could not care;
             You parted ways from chosen priestly line
             With strict obedience to forces divine.



4)        Thy poetic heart in melancholy found
           Serene Contemplation and contentment
           In moon-lit seclusion, in night-bird’s sound
           Watching buskined stage with noble content;
           In Arcadian songs praising the rural queen
           A glowing tribute with pastoral scene.


5)       Sweet feelings blent with sweet lyrical verse
          Composed by thee in colorful masque form;
          The cup of vile pleasures with tempting charm
          To cheat the chaste virgin by cunning Comus
          Rescued by brothers and god’s justice upright
          A fitting tribute to virtue and moral sprite.


6)       Of normal height with light brown luxuriant hair
          Grown up to shoulders with smooth silky touch
          Other students’ notice attracted much;
          Famed as Lady of Christ’s College; Your fair
          Countenance blushed though none could ever see
          Thy heroic heart that yearned to be honest and free.


7)       Thy trips abroad provided a chance rare
           To meet the Tuscan scientist confined and blind;
           In Florence, Rome and Paris you did find
           Artists who praised thy skills and views did share;
           The simmering civil conflict upset thy heart
           Returned thou to England to take an active part.


8)        In pastoral vein you did bemoan the death
           Of Edward King and the poets’ thankless toil
           Of selfish prelates who wantonly spoil
           Their sheep misleading them to their death;
           True fame one earns by virtues from God above
           True virtue wends to newer realms of Love.


9)       Thy simple Puritan life did not suit
          Thy young Royalist spouse who left thy abode
          You never strayed from thy strict moral code;
          Justifying divorce, old rules you did refute
          Your forgiving nature let her soon return
          Along with her family to sojourn.


10)      Oppressive powers of kings you did censure
           Defending nation’s freedom in your tracts;
           Equally you condemned the flattering acts
           Of priests who crave for wealth and pleasures impure;
           Your vast store of knowledge stood in good stead
           For Commonwealth to run with no sense of dread.


11)      Thy incessant studies deprived thy sight
            Exposed to royal wrath with your life at risk;
            Yet still you lost no faith, composed epics
            Upholding your strong views with inner light
            Dictating lines to your daughters and friends
            In writing noble works time you did spend.


12)       Pondering over many legends and themes
            You chose the loss of Paradise and Adam’s fall
            Man’s disobedience to God’s warning call
            Yielding to Satan, he lost his powers supreme;
            Along with Eve cast out from garden of bliss
            Direct communion with God he did miss.


13)       Like a skilled architect with wisdom and care
            An epic unique you wrote with inner vision
            Justifying God’s fairness and His mission;
            Like rushing Oxus or Nile your lines declare
            A noble theme well matched with noble style
            Enriched with imagination versatile.


14)       Thy passion for freedom and for free will
             Seen in rebel angels with perverted intent;
             Lucifer, the arch-angel enviously spent
             His noble strength to become a devil
             Making other rebels suffer in fiery hell
             Like storm-driven dry leaves they fell.


15)        The heathen gods in vile degraded state
             As Satan’s rebel army thrown in hell
             For their bloodthirsty rituals and rites fell;
             Cruel Moloch, Baal and Belial met their fate
             Chemosh, Dagon, Mammon and Beelzebub strong
             Just punishment thy got for doing wrong.


16)        The loose tottering verse of Jacobean plays
             Strengthened by Thee with regular majestic pace
             With varying pauses linked in harmonious ways
             Adding charm with rich imagery and grace;
             A noble epic surpassing the Hellenic song
             Divine Dante’s and Virgil’s heroics long.


17)        Urged by thy friend another epic you wrote
             A fitting sequel to Paradise Lost;
             Of Christ’s conquest of Satan in the desert vast
             In majestic style with didactic note;
             This song supreme you valued as the best
             These two crown jewels show thy devotion and zest.


18)        Oppressed by adverse conditions and fate
              Deserted by thy daughters, helpless and blind
              In poetic effusions solace you did find;
              Reflected in Samson’s miserable state
              Like Thee, he trusted in God’s grace and got
              Lost strength and killed his foes with heroic heart.


19)        Though many strove to scale thy level sublime
             None touched thy epic grandeur’s style and flow
             Like grand cathedrals your works shine and glow;
             Thy voice like ocean echoes through every clime
             Like shining Hesperus shining ethereal bright
             With wondrous surprise we view thy heavenly light.


20)        You never compromised your ideals for gold
             You worked for a noble cause with support divine
             You spouse and admirers helped thee sustain;
             Your goal you did attain with conscience bold
             A noble dedication thy works to English muse
             Embellished with classic allusions profuse.

                          *************************************

Reference :

 1)  Albion --- literary term for “Britain” or “England”.

  2)  Aeolian harp --- A stringed musical instrument which vibrates
       when wind passes over it. Here it represents Milton’s command 
       over many languages.

 3)  Cynosure --- the bright northern star (center of attraction).

 4)  Prelates ----- Bishops and other higher religious authorities.

5)  Intercession ---- priest praying to a deity on behalf of others to               
     absolve their sins.

6)  Night-bird ---- nightingale which sings at night time.

7)  Buskined stage--tragic plays. The actors used to wear high boots
     made of leather to show their heroic stature.

8)  Arcadian song ---- A pastoral masque written by Milton in 1634
     to honor the Countess Dowager of Darby during her 75th birthday
     at Harefield.

9)  Rural queen --- The countess Alice Spencer was shown as the
     queen of the pastoral kingdom.

10) Masque--a festive courtly entertainment with music, rich scenery
      and dance

11)  Comus --- A Greek god of festivity and revels. Milton showed
       him as a person who represents sexual pleasure and
       intemperance.

12)  Tuscan scientist --- Galileo whom Milton met in Italy in 1639.

13)  Pastoral vein --- ideal life related to shepherds and country scenes.

14) Edward King ---- (1613—1637)--- friend of Milton at Cambridge. 
      He was drowned when his ship struck on a rock near the
      Welsh coast and he was drowned.

15  Royalist spouse --- Mary Powell, Milton’s first wife, whose family
      supported the king’s party.

16) Justifying Divorce ----  Soon after his first wife left him, Milton 
       wrote four pamphlets justifying divorce :  “The Doctrine and  
       Discipline of  Divorce", “The Judgment of Martin Bucer”,
      "Tetrachordon"and "Colasterion" between 1643 and 1645.

17  Rushing Oxus --a river (now called “Amu Darya” that flows           
      through Central Asian countries like Uzebekistan, Turkmenistan 
      and Tajikistan.

18)  Nile – a major river that flows through northeastern Africa.

19)  Moloch --- the chief God of Ammonites.

20)  Baul --- the god of Philistines.

21)  Belial --- a wicked demon

22)  Chemosh --- god of the Moabites

23)   Dagon --- God of Philistines

24)   Mammon --- Heathen God of wealth and material prosperity.

25)   Beelzebub --- God of Philistines.

26)   Hellenic song --- Grecian epics "Iliad" and "Odyssey" by Homer.

27)  Divine Dante - an Italian poet and moral philosopher
       (1265-1321) Well-known for his epic poem "Divine Comedy”.

28)  Virgil --a famous Roman poet (70 B.C. – 19 B.C.) who wrote the 
        the epic poem "Aeneid". heroics -- heroic verse used in epics.
             

29)  Hesperus ----  the evening star “Venus”

30) Rites and rituals fell -- vicious and cruel ceremonies.

31) Loose tottering verse--the dramatists of this period (1603-1625)
      used blank verse in a loose and irregular way. Milton made it a
      fit medium for his noble epic.

                   ******************************************************

        26th May, 2019                                 Somaseshu Gutala


Friday, May 17, 2019

A Note On Milton's Life and Works


John Milton (1608--1674)







                     
The garden House in Pretty France,Westminster (Milton lived here from 1651 to 1660)
  later it became No. 19, York street.
                   
Milton's Cottage at Chalfont St. Giles where Milton completed "Paradise Lost."


St. Giles Church, Without Cripplegate , London
                                       


St.Giles' Church, Without Cripplegate


John Milton acknowledged as the greatest poet of grand poetry was born on 9th December, 1608 to senior John Milton and Sarah Jeffrey in Bread Street, Cheapside in London. His father was very much fond of music and his mother was known for her charities. His father followed his own convictions and ideals and converted himself from a Roman catholic to a protestant and consequently he was disowned by his father Richard. Milton Sr. started his life as a solicitor and prospered well. In 1632 he retired from his profession and settled in countryside. Milton’s brother, Christopher, a lawyer, was a Catholic by faith and was a Royalist. Yet he maintained cordial relations with his brother. Milton, after his preliminary education in a non-conformist school in Essex, took up private tuition from Thomas Young who taught Milton to write Latin verse. Thomas Young, a Scottish Presbyterian, might have influenced Milton in religion and politics as they had correspondence in later decades. 

In 1625 Milton joined Christ’s College, Cambridge, where he stayed for seven years to procure his Master’s degree. Milton’s intention was to become a priest after completing his degree. He was rusticated temporarily for quarreling with his tutor, William Chappell. He was reinstated under another tutor, Nathaniel Tovey. Though he was not popular, he was “loved and admired by the whole university particularly by the Fellows and most ingenious persons”for his erudition and disciplined behavior. His genius was beginning to be known. Before he left Cambridge in 1632, he wrote several poems Like “On the death of a fair infant”,” ode on the Nativity”, “Song on May Morning’, and “Epitaph on the marchioness of Winchester”. Milton disliked the rigid control of the established church and refused to work as teaching faculty in Cambridge University. He lost interest in priesthood and decided to be a poet. He spent the next six years of his life in Horton, Buckingham shire, immersed in study of great works on various subjects.

In 1632 after his stay in Cambridge for seven years Milton returned to his family in Hammersmith. After three years the family shifted to Horton, Buckinghamshire. During the six years of his stay at Horton Milton studied various subjects and classical authors. His mother died on 3rd of April, 1637. He wrote poems like “A Sonnet to the Nightingale’, “L’Allegro, IL Penseroso in 1633. ‘Comus” was written in 1634 and “Lycidas’ in 1637. These poems written during six years in Horton surely show his rank as one of the greatest poets of England. Milton cherished the ideal of becoming an immortal poet by writing some great work of universal significance. His stay at Horton gave him an opportunity to enrich his knowledge. 

He was on his grand tour to Europe in April, 1638. He went to Paris and was entertained by Grotius, Swedish ambassador at that time and by Lord Scudamore, the English ambassador. In August he went to Florence and was welcomed by the literary circles and academic clubs. He met the great famous Italian Physicist, mathematician, astronomer and Philosopher, Galileo.  In Rome Milton spent two months  and there he was entertained well by the distinguished scholars .At Naples he was welcomed by Giovanni Manso, a wealthy patron of arts, who had supported poets like Tasso and Marini. Milton cancelled his visit to Greece as he wished to go back to England which was in great turmoil due to Civil war. After spending a few months at Florence, Bologna, Ferrara, Venice and Geneva he returned to England at the end of July, 1639 when he heard about the news of his close friend, Charles Didodati who was buried in Black friars on August 27, 1638.

Milton learnt many languages such as Greek, Latin, Italian, French, Spanish and Hebrew and wrote poems and tracts in Latin and Italian. During his stay in Cambridge he wrote academic treatises proclusions(oratorical performances blending logic and rhetoric) and he published seven of them in his later in 1674. At the age of fifteen he translated psalms from original Hebrew into English and Greek.He wrote his first elegy in Latin on the death of his college friend, Charles Didati under the title “Epitaphium Damonis’. Between 1648 and 1653 he composed pamphlets against the Church of England and monarchy. He also composed letters in Latin Elegiac metre. In 1628 he wrote a sonnet “on the death of a fair infant dying of cough’ about the death of his sister’s daughter. The nativity ode written in 1629 shows Milton’s deft handling of the ode with varying rhythm and meter. His sonnet ‘On Shakespeare’ written 1630 first appeared anonymously as one of the tributes in the second Folio of Shakespeare’s plays. The two poems “L’allegro” (the happy man in Italian) and “Il penseroso”(the melancholy man) show the lyrical skills of Milton who employed varying lengths of lines with change in meter to bring out the merry mood of the youth and his activities in spring time in one poem and the serious and calm mood of contemplation in twilight time in the other poem. Both these poems are later included in his 1645 collection of poems.


“Arcades” is a masque ( a courtly entertainment with rich costumes combined with acting, singing and dancing) written by John Milton and performed on 4th may, 1634 at the Harefield Estate to celebrate the seventy-fifth birthday of Alice Spencer, Countess Dowager of Derby and widow of Ferdinando Stanley, the fifth Earl of Derby. This masque served as a basis for Milton’s later masque   ”Comus.


In 1634 Milton wrote a masque in honor of chastity and it was presented on Michelmas Night (29th September) at Ludlow castle before the Earl of Bridgewater, Viscount Brackly, who was promoted as the Lord President of Wales. He was also one of the members of the Royal Privy Council. Bridgewater’s own children were the principal actors in this masque. Unlike other courtly masques which dealt with flattery, sensuous love and jokes, Milton used this form for a moral purpose glorifying chastity. Though Comus was printed anonymously in 1637, Milton included the work in his poems of 1645 and 1673. “Lycidas” is a pastoral elegy written in 1637 on the death of his friend, Edward King, shows Milton attitude towards death, fame, clergy, church and immortality of soul. Following the tradition of pastoral poetry he describes the happy state of shepherds feeding their in sheep amidst nature; he uses many allusions and names of many Greek gods to enrich the theme of his elegy and also to glorify the noble personality of his friend.


 He married Mary Powell, a seventeen-year old girl hailing from a Royalist family in 1642 when was thirty four years of age. She suddenly left him as she was not able to adjust with the frugal and Puritan mode of life. Milton waited patiently for three years. During this period he wrote essays in support of divorce; “The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce’(1643) and “The Judgment of Martin Bucer concerning Divorce”(1644). Milton wrote a treatise on the ideal of education in “of Education’(1644). He took a house and garden in Aldergate Street to teach his nephews(Edward and John Philips) and some other pupils interested in classical subjects.The same year he wrote “Areopagitica” protesting against the licensing order of 1643 which required the every written document had to be approved by the government before it could be printed. This speech was addressed to the Parliament of England. In Milton’s view “A good book is the precious life-blood of a master-spirit embalmed and treasured up on purpose to a life beyond life.” This speech was modelled on the classical oration of the same title addressed to Areopagus, the Athenian Council by Isocrates(436 B.C.—338 B.C.). 


 After the execution of King Charles on 25th October, 1648 the Commonwealth of England led by Oliver Cromwell ruled the nation. On 13th February Milton’s pamphlet called “Tenure of Kings and Magistrates’ was published in which he justified the execution of a wicked tyrant. On 15th march, 1649 Milton was appointed as the secretary of foreign tongues to the council of state. He was paid a handsome salary with a lavish accommodation at the Whitehall Palace. He wrote “Eikonoklastes” as a counter reply to “Eikon Basilike’ written by Royalists defending the king. He worked hard for one year to write a fitting reply to the pamphlet “Defensio Regia Carolo I” written by Salmasius, one of the greatest Latin scholars of the time commissioned by Charles II, son of King Charles I. Milton lost his vision owing to his studious work in writing the his work “Pro Populo Anglicano defensio’ which  claimed much applause from all over Europe. By March 1652 he became completely blind.


 Milton’s first wife died leaving three daughters behind. In 1656 he married Katherine Woodcock who died soon in February, 1658. Her infant child also died in March, 1658. Busily involved in his secretarial duties Milton had no time to devote for his wife, daughters and nephews. Milton still wrote many speeches for Cromwell and as the secretary of the Commonwealth his work included censoring the books that were against his party’s interests. In April 1655 his salary was greatly reduced. In May 1659 he left his job. In Feb.1659 Milton’s pamphlet “Civil Power in ecclesiastical causes” was published. In August a sequel “Considerations on the likeliest means to remove hirelings out of the church’ was published. He advocated many church reforms in these two articles. On 3rd March, 1660 he wrote the pamphlet “The ready and easy way to establish a free commonwealth” advocating that the family of Charles I should be permanently excluded from the royal power. In May, 1660. The publisher was arrested and Milton went into hiding for the next few months. 

In May, 1660 Charles II regained his throne and rebels against the king were arrested. His friends and pupils saved him from death by hanging. His books were burnt in public and he was imprisoned. He was later released due to the interference of his friends . Milton was also suffering from gout by this time. Milton was deprived of his power, position and wealth. 

 His rigid notion about inferior status of women estranged his daughters from him. He thought that one language was enough for a woman and he did not heed to educate his daughters ( Anne, Mary and Deborah). He forced them to learn only the alphabets of different languages so that they could read to him various books but without understanding a single word.  His daughters became unkind and used to sell some of his precious books to rag pickers. He lost two thousand pounds invested in government securities and another great sum given to his nephew in, Philip was also lost in business. For the last twelve years of his life Milton lived in Bunhill Row, Finsbury. In his own words “I dark in light exposed to daily fraud, contempt, abuse and wrong. / Within doors, or without, still as a fool/ In power of others, never in my own.” It was here he started his epic “Paradise Lost” and the sequel “Paradise Regained”. During the great plague he shifted to a cottage at Chalfont St.Giles in Buckinghamshire.

 In 1663 he married Elizabeth Minshull thirty years younger to him. She, like Milton, was interested in Music and arts. He spent his last years happily in her company.  He followed a systematic daily routine in his work schedule.  In his book “Daily Rituals” Mason Currey described John Milton’s daily routine.  He used to get up at 4.00 a.m every morning and at 5.00 a.m. in winter season. His aide used to read from the Hebrew Bible for half an hour. Then he was left alone to compose as many lines as he could retain in his memory. At 7.00 a.m. he used to dictate the lines. Later his aide used to read to him until lunch was served at noon. Then he would spend some time walking in the garden. Later he used to play on the organ and sing. he used spend time in study till 6.00 p.m. In the evening he spent his time in the company of his friends. He ate a light supper, smoked a pipe and went to bed at about 9.00 p.m. He found time to compose his long cherished dream of writing an epic. He published the epic in ten books containing nearly ten thousand lines of verse on 27th April, 1667 though he completed it in 1665. The sole copy rights of the book were sold for five pounds. A second edition followed in 1674 arranged in twelve books (in the manner of Virgil’s Aeneid) with minor revisions and a note on versification. Dryden, on reading this epic said, “This man cuts us all out and the ancients too.” He praised the epic poem “Paradise Lost” as “one of the greatest, most noble, and most sublime poems which either this age or nation has produced.”  On his friend’s suggestion (Thomas Ellwood, a Quaker) Milton wrote a sequel ‘Paradise regained’ in 1666 and published it in 1671.

Samson Agonistes, in the form of Greek tragedy, was published in 1671. We find many similarities between Samson, the tragic hero and Milton. Samson was also old, blind, helpless and miserable in failure of his ideals and faced his destiny with his strong faith in God and by his own unconquerable spirit. In 1670 he sent his daughters away to learn some work and make a living of their own. He went on writing several little works which were not so significant. In 1670 he published ‘History of Britain”.

 Surrounded by his friends and admirers Milton led a peaceful and contented life in spite of severe gout. On 8th November late at night he passed away peacefully in his home.  He was buried beside the pulpit near his father’s grave at St.Giles Church without Cripplegate within the modern Barbican. In 1790 when the repairs were carried out to the church, it was rumored that his grave was desecrated. William Cowper in his poem ‘stanzas on the late indecent liberties taken with the remains of Milton dealt with this theme. There is also a commemorative window to Milton in St.Margaret’s Church in Westminster Abbey.

 Milton elevated the English language to a sublime level and made it a fit vehicle to write an epic surpassing the other epics written in Greek and Italian languages. For this purpose he used a flowing complex sentence structure (verse paragraph) expressing a series of thoughts in a grand manner with many allusions and lengthy similes. He used many Latin words in their original sense and coined many words (nearly 630) to enrich the English language. He made the blank verse a fit instrument by using a flowing marching rhythm with a variety of pauses and substitution of classical metrical feet. He combined words in such a manner that a sense of musical delight is felt on reading his verse. 

He revived the old sonnet form and wrote 23 sonnets in Petrarchan form extending the range of themes. Previously the sonnet was used mostly to express love and appreciation of beauty. Milton wrote on political, religious and personal feelings and his lines flow without any break between the octave (first eight lines) and the sestet (next six lines). Milton kept the distinction between the octave and the sestet in terms of function but merged them into one 14-line stanza. Many later poets like Wordsworth, Keats and Shelley were inspired by Miltonic sonnet and composed sonnets in their characteristic style. In Wordsworth’s words, the sonnet became “a trumpet; whence he blew soul-animating strains” in Milton’s hands.  “On His being Arrived to the age of twenty-three” , “On His Blindness”, “On the late massacre in Piedmont’, ‘On His Diseases Wife” ‘To the Lord General Cromwell”, are some of the most memorable sonnets. And as the author of "Lycidas," "L'Allegro" and "Il Penseroso" he established himself as a master of the shorter poem. 


The two epics of Milton will inspire as holy books the readers of Milton to understand his devotion, love of freedom and concepts of  divine justice and mercy  to man. One should have patience and careful attention to delve deep into his treasure of knowledge, wisdom, verbal harmony and enchanting charm of his poetry. None equaled him in any age to write with such grandeur, diction and style.Samuel Johnson,  in spite of viewing poetry as too learned and artificial, admired his creative ability and mastery of the grand style.
"Whatever be the faults of his diction he cannot want the praise of copiousness and variety; he was master of his language in its full extent, and has selected the melodious words with such diligence that from his book alone the Art of English Poetry might be learned."Samuel Johnson  

                **********************************


    17th May, 2019                    Somaseshu Gutala