ON VIKRAM SETH’S ‘THE GOLDEN GATE’

 

Dr. T. Vasudeva Reddy

 

The Golden Gate is a kind of book

that leads you by force to the iron gate

or miry life mowed down by fate

that loudly laughs with a quizzical look

It gives a faint feel of American life

full of shallow show and mental strife

wretched results of the reeking riches

more dreadful than Macbeth’s witches

Does it portray life or depict death

or death in life or life in death

Still it shows the flow of birth

through love or lust inspite of dearth

The Golden Gate presents squalor

There is neither a tinge of glittering gold

nor a streak of shining silver to behold

it is packed with rusty iron and pallor

 

John’s life is a sombre journey

from a sordid state of neurosis

to the pathetic plight of psychosis

punctuated by fluctuating agony

By the time he becomes a man

he is deprived of the proper woman

His youth ends with no ray of hope

but in distressed darkness to grope.

Liz is neither a cool manovuering minx

nor a wise imperturbable sphinx

She is calm, warm and vivacious

bold, cold, dynamic and tenacious

while Jan’s love for John deserves a pat

Liz loves him as much as she loves her cat.

 

Jan’s short span is one of intense love

and loving kindness, herself a dove;

her determined dedication to sculpture

wills our hearts with ringing rapture

The short circuit of her life, her fate,

is charged with pathos at any rate

She is granted posthumous success futile

in the proud fields of art and love fertile

though the writer, her Brahma, chills her heart

and thrills in cutting her career short.

Phil with all his intellect is a homeosexual

satiates his lust by making to Ed love unusual

and wisely turns to his sister Liz to wed

whom John likes as she is a dynamite in bed.

 

The Golden Gate opens the gazing gate

to make free play of homosexuality

gives a versified version of sensuality

exhibitionism and perversion and its fate

The rhyme dryly sounds for sound’s sake

while the lines limp and move sense to make

His verse hardly enters the realm of

feeling nor does it convey any emotion peeling

Even a fatal accident fails to move

nor does the anti-nuclear speech prove

effective in bringing a radical change

even in the Lungless city of narrow range

 

Drawing dimly there are lines and lines

for something else the reader pines.

In fact it will be more apt

to rechristen The Golden Gate

as Cat’s Victory or The Golden Cat

that pleads for our attention rapt.

Often the author pokes his nose,

and proudly intrudes with a heavy dose

The constant authorial interference

is meant to be a pointer of reference

In fact it neither explains nor edifies

but often the norms of decency it defies

Is this work a poem or a novel or an epic

a parody or a mimicry or a mock-epic

Indeed it is a queer patch-work quilt

with flimsy threads it is loosely built

 

 

Back