The Song of the Evacuees

 

BY PROF. V. K. GOKAK

(A rendering of the author’s Kannada poem)

 

In a soulless sea of tears

Near a skeletoned harbour of bones

Pillared and arched with fears

And groans instead of stones,–

There sail the poor evacuees

With little ones on their knees.

What they own is little:

Claypots, all that’s brittle.

They drift both day and night

And they know no mate but sorrow.

Give them, earth mother, give them

The hope of a sweet tomorrow.

 

Why did the millions madly

Forsake the town for the village?

Why did they leave so sadly

Their homes for the gangster to pillage?

Why ran they helter-skelter

Only for an air-raid shelter?

They merely rushed from the devil

To the deep sea of evil.

Better to die in the city,

Of a bomb or bursting shell,

Than to live as if ’twere a pity

And face both hunger and hell!

 

At the time of the breaking of nations

How the millions surge and crowd

In the trains and railway stations

Sneered at by the proud!

Ground-nuts they eat and sleep

On the platooned platforms and weep.

The poor,–they have no charter;

No help from any quarter.

The look of the child that sucked

Its mother’s blood and cried,–

Took by the roots and plucked

The heart that ached at my side!

 

On! not to me the glory

Of the song of sunset and dawn

And not to me the story

Of the nymphs that dance and are gone.

Mine be the song of sorrow

And its everlasting morrow.

Not the song of Apollo

(Today it ringeth hollow)

But the song of the self same god

When he came in a golden shower

And sowed on the earth which he trod

The seeds of love and power.

 

Oh! this ocean of tears

Shed by the sons of the poor

How it engulfs the spheres

And drowns the deed and the doer!

May the rails that mingle

Till they become single,

Empty beyond the skies

Their load that’s born and dies,

The farther away from earth

The nearer is it to heaven.

Is the only song that is worth

The while of the man who has striven.

 

And yet a hope there twinkles

In the eyes of the great earth-maiden,

Though her fair face wrinkles

And her heart is sorrow-laden.

In the maze of the musing stars,

When men are jesting at scars,

She spins her daily round

And in her hands are found

The dice which, thrown, might strengthen

And saint the human race

Or else our long rope lengthen

And taint us with disgrace.

 

The tyrants and dictators

Who wade through blood to glory,

The caverned meditators

With unused wisdom hoary,

The men of pelf and power

Who make agony tower

And the mutinous men of science

With the Devil in alliance.

Ungrateful sons of earth,–

On them the word’s fate hangs.

They are the cause of our dearth

And the pain of all our pangs.

 

On this the world’s fate hinges

As to whether the great earth-maiden

Bows to them and cringes

Or lifts her sorrow-laden

Face to heav’n lamenting

The wrongs that are dementing

Her very self and cries

Till all the Furies rise

And carry fire and sword

Midst those that trusted them,

And keep, undimmed by the horde,

Her eternal diadem.

 

Back