MAHAKAVI VALLATHOL
A
Cosmopolitan Poet
Vallathol is universally
acknowledged as the man who rescued Kathakali from
oblivion. He is also known and acknowledged as a Mahakavi,
a great poet. But there was another side to him. He was a cosmopolitan to his
finger-tips.
Vallathol was a patriot, but his
patriotism was not of the kind which Dr. Johnson called “the last
refuge of a scoundrel.” He was no politician, though he adored Mahatma Gandhi.
But Gandhiji
was more than a politician. In his noble poem, “My Master”, Vallathol
has described Gandhiji as a compound of Jesus
Christ’s self-sacrifice, Sree Krishna’s
righteousness, Gautama Buddha’s non-violence, Sankaracharya’s intellect, Harischandra’s
truthfulness and Mohammad’s integrity.
It
was at the Vaikom Satyagraha that Vallathol
met Gandhiji first. Gandhiji
asked him whether he had taken to spinning. He said no.
“Why
not?” asked Gandhiji.
“Because
a poet lives in a world of his own, the world of imagination. Not for him
manual work. It is through his writings that he influences the people.”
“Tagore said so to me, too”, said Gandhiji
gently. “Do you believe in Khadi?” asked Gandhiji.
“Not
only in Khadi, but in everyone
of your teachings”, said Vallathol. And Vallathol’s poem, “Bapuji”, dealing
with the last hours of Mahatma Gandhi and his funeral, is excruciating in its
pathos.
Vallathol was a socialist, not
in any dogmatic sense but in the sense that he had a social sense. He observed
the discards of society and used his gift of poetry as an instrument for
healing them. In his poem, “The Purest of the Pure”, he showed how bizarre
could be the working of the evil of untouchability
which had crept into Hindu society. A house is on fire;
its inmates run hither and thither and rush to draw water from a well to put
out the fire; but the high-caste owner of the well prevents them on the ground
that at their touch the well might get polluted.
Vallathol’s vision
penetrated beyond the borders of
Vallathol was distressed
by the inequality, injustice and oppression in the wor1d, which reached their
climax; or had their Nemesis, in the two world wars. He took an interest in the
World Peace Movement and attended its first session at
A
tall lanky man in his ’Seventies, an out-and-out “native” in his manners and
mannerisms, completely deaf (Vallathol lost his
hearing at the age of 30 and has written a poem called “Badhira
Vilapam” or “Lament of the Deaf”, reminiscent of
It
was, so to say, a proletarian song, but it was proletarianism
with a difference. It was a typical Indian compound in which vehemence and
non-violence, proletarianism and patriotism, were
equally mixed. The essence of patriotism is pride in one’s own country and
faith in its mission. In his “Song of the Peasants” this element is
harmonious1y blended with burning indignation at the lot of the peasant. For
example:
To
weave one’s live1ihood out of other people’s woes,
To
erect lofty arches with others’ backbones,
To
build a flight of steps to heaven with others’ corpses,
This,
the
This
tusker, that is
Not
to run amuck, trampling the world under foot,
But
to lift up with its devoted trunk
The
suffering kindred trapped in pits.
With
all his fervent nationalism and internationalism, Vallathol
remained at heart a Keralite. He was not afraid to
be, or behave like, a simple Keralite even while
entertaining sophisticated foreigers. When a
delegation of Russian writers, headed by Surkov, came
to
“Let
our minds thrill with pride at the name of
Immortals
come but rarely to earth,
And
he was one of the Immortal Band.