Portrait of Lady (poem) explained

"Portrait of a Lady" is a poem by the Indian English poet and art critic Ranjit Hoskote. The poem won First Prize in the Seventh All India Poetry Competition conducted by The Poetry Society (India) in 1995.[1] The poem brought the second major literary award for Hoskote, who also won the Sanskriti Award for Literature in 1996 and the Sahitya Akademi Golden Jubilee Award for lifetime achievement in 2005.

Excerpts from the poem

Objects are lesson: from bowls, hairpins, brooches,

you learn of forgotten lives. The stories say

my grandmother was a fever tree:

two birds sat on her branches, one pecking

at a grape, the other singing an aria.

*****

What history's bookkeepers do not show

is the tremor down the spine she felt,

the tendril of blood that coiled in her nose

when the whistle of a train announced

her husband's return from a tour of duty.

*****

In the stories, she's an actor, a pilgrim:

shadow-boxing with a thunderstorm,

she slips through brick walls,

treads a theatre of scrubbed floors

and ember beds. She leaves me

a loaf of shortbread in the oven,

a page of couplets in a script I cannot read

and wrapped in a peel of green appleskin,

a tea cup glazed with a Dutch windmill,

the last one of the set.

*****

The urchin-cut waif in the vignette above

is the child she was. Voyeur, clairvoyant,

she stares in at windows, her head a gourd

hollowed by the age she never reached

in life, her hair a silver floss.

*****

Objects are lessons: the light seeps

through the slats, sets off a shimmer

on her lace. She's crocheted the evening

and its creatures: the silken thread

that she pulls from her pattern

knots tight around my neck.

Comments and criticism

The poem has received critical acclaim since its first publication in 1997 in the book Emerging Voices[2] and has since been widely anthologised.[3] The poem has been frequently quoted in scholarly analysis of contemporary Indian English poetry.[4]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Award Winning Poems – AIPC 1997 . 2014-04-09 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150317101541/http://indianpoetry.org/comp7.htm . 2015-03-17 . dead .
  2. Poetry India – Emerging Voices by H K Kaul, Virgo Publications, 1997
  3. Contemporary Indian Poets by Jeet Thayil, Fulcrum, Bloodaxe Books, 1996
  4. Web site: Fourteen Contemporary Indian Poets – Rana Nayar in The Tribune.