Ironical Elements in Nissim Ezekiel’s Poetry

Irony is the device used by Nissim Ezekiel most prominently in his poetry from Background, Casually, an early poem, which is an excellent example of this. He describes himself as a “poet, rascal clown”. As a student in a Roman Catholic school he was

 

“A mugging Jew among the wolves. 
They told me I had killed the Christ.”


Ironical Elements in Nissim Ezekiel’s Poetry



Ironically though, he won the scripture prize the same year. He not only describes his Christian, Muslim and Hindu school - fellows ironically, but also himself when he tells us that at home, on Friday nights the prayers were said as the family felt that his morals were declining. He wondered whether he would become a Jewish rabbi when he grew up; he searched for an answer but couldn't find it. His family was too poor to pay for his passage to England when he won a scholarship; a friend had to pay his fare. In his basement room in London, his only companions were “philosophy, poverty and poetry”.

 

The irony becomes more pungent when he tells us that he returned to India working on an English cargo - ship which carried French guns to be used in the Indo - China war. He cleaned and scrubbed the decks of the ship in order to pay for his passage back home. When he returned,

 

“Married, 
Changed jobs, and saw myself a fool.”

 

In spite of his alienation from and his dislike of his ethos and environment, the poet describes India as a remote and backward place but, ironically, he is committed to living and working here: “My backward place is where I am.”

 

Ezekiel depicts a typical situation in the superstitious - ridden and orthodox country with a touch of irony in Night of the Scorpion. His mother has been stung by a scorpion hidden beneath a sack of rice in the darkroom. The peasants descend on the house like a swarm of flies and “buzz” the name of God in order to paralyse and exorcise the Evil One. They come with candles and lanterns casting their giant shadows on the mud - baked walls. They pray that the scorpion remain still where it is, that the sins committed by the mother be all burned away, and that the sun of evil in this unreal world should be “diminished” by her pain. The irony continues with the poet speaking about his father, a sceptic and rationalist, who uses all kinds of powders and herbs to allay her suffering.

 

Ezekiel here pokes fun at the superstitions prevalent among the simple peasants in the village and even at his father's scepticism. He mocks at the holy man who is confident that the mother's pain will go away with his rites and incantations. The only serious element in the poem is the mother's solicitude about the well - being of her children:

 

“My mother only said 
Thank God the scorpion picked on me 
and spared my children."

 

In The Visitor again, Ezekiel treats another prevalent superstition ironically. A crow caws three times at the poet's window, with its baleful eyes fixed, with its wings slightly raised in a sinister pose, and its neck craned like a nagging woman’s. It seems to fill the poet's room with its voice and its presence. The cawing of a crow early in the morning is an indication of a visitor, and the poet prepares himself to effectively deal with the visitor whose arrival has been conveyed to him by the cawing of the crow.


The poet wonders whether the visitor would be an angel or a devil in disguise. If a devil, he would ruin the poet's sleep. But when the visitor arrives his good intentions and the poet's sympathy, the smoke coming from their cigarettes proves to be more substantial than their talk.

 

Ezekiel ironically depicts (but without any comment) the way so called “educated” Indians use the English language in Goodbye Party for Miss Pushpa T.S., The Railway Clerk and the other poems in the series, Very Indian Poems in Indian English - the way we confuse the subject - object relationship, use present - past continuous tense in place of simple present - past and the other liberties we take with grammar and syntax while speaking or writing the language.

 

Even the Poem of the Separation is not free of a few touches of irony, even though the general tone is that of sadness. There is irony when the speaker says that any man may be a whirlwind and woman lightning, but that they have to be taken to their meeting place by buses or by trains; their passion has to be kept in check by the need of taking a bus or a train. Also, how the poet’s “city of birth and re-birth” is squalid and his beloved is a source of comfort to him by her new way of laughing at the truth. In the last two lines, there is mention of the beloved's decision to play with fire and get burnt.

 

Irony is also a marked feature of Ezekiel's poems dealing with sex and marriage. In The Couple, for instance, the hypocrisy and deceitfulness of both the man and the woman engaged in the sexual act has been depicted ironically. In Two Nights of Love, the poet speaks about his craving to make love to his beloved soon after he has already made love to her. In an ironical vein, he speaks about the “threshing things” and the “singing breasts” of the woman. In Marriage, irony has been employed to expose the fleeting nature of the love which had brought the lovers together in marriage. Irony is most conspicuous in Nudes, where the poet tells us about a “shy” woman who has come with gifts and who, though pretending to take the initiative so far as the sex act is concerned, is actually craving for sexual satisfaction. She has assumed a touch - me - not expression on her face indicating that she is not available, and yet she tells the eager lover that she has come because she wanted to know this kind of man (in bed). Ezekiel's irony, says a critic, is that of a highly educated, cultured, and polished man not belonging to any extreme of society, and that such a standpoint is conducive to the development of an ironic attitude; this is how wise individuals survive by playing the fool.