THE LAST OF THE PRINCES: SUMMARY-506 WORDS
A.
K. Ramanujan’s celebrated poem, “The
Last of the Princes” is a tragic commentary on the pathetic pen-picture
of present plight of once-powerful princes. The law of history ever walks in
its own way. In the ongoing flux of time many vast empires and many mighty
emperors come and go. But few princes belonging to the royal dynasty still
survive. They lead their lives amidst dire poverty and utter wretchedness. Once
they were sitting at the zenith of power, pelf and pomp. But now they have
nothing to cheer about. A sense of nostalgia of their ancient majesty pervades
them. They now, only boost for their ancestral titles and half-dilapidated
buildings. Under the debris of history, they search for a few pebbles of their
past princely glory.
The
poet takes the most powerful emperor, the Mughal Dynasty to exhibit the pathos
in the mind of the readers. After the death of Aurangzeb, the last celebrated
prince of the Mughal Dynasty, this mighty empire begun to decline. All the past
glory was faded. The empire was divided into small regions. Gradually the
British started overpowering on innocent Indians and on the then rulers. Their
financial condition became worse. Some of the princes died of bone tuberculosis
other of cold climate while they led their life in utter luxury in London. Some
of them died of addiction of imported foreign liquor. They got married with the
foreign girls. The native rulers considered it a status symbol to have white
women as wife. There were quite a few rulers who met heroic death fighting
against the British. Ballads have been written in praising their deeds. The
princes lost their fathers, brothers, sisters, wives and their children.
Sometimes
their charming sisters committed suicide hanging them on the ceiling unable to
bear the molestations of some rogues. The women used to keep mynahs and parrots
in the harem. Every one of them died and remained as a historical memory.
But
the last of the princes still survives. The poet now nicely paints the physical
conditions of them. He inherits long fingers, painting-like face and blind
belief in snakes. He constantly coughs and sneezes. Phlegm comes out his mouth.
His liver is not functioning well. Sometimes he suffers from loose motion and
sometimes constipation. Now he is so poor that he finds it difficult to provide
formal education to his daughters, Honey and Bunny. They go to school only on
half fees. His wife puts on a pearl nose-ring as a symbol of their past glory. All her heirlooms except the nose-ring
have been sold to make ends meet. His eldest son is forced to take low-paid job
as a trainee in the telegraph office. He has already telegraphed his father
thrice for money. But his poor father is incapable to provide the demand for
his dead-end condition.
An
undercurrent of pathos runs through the entire poem. Ramanujan has ironically
attacked the snobbish mentality of the last princes, their bad habits, their intoxication
to imported wine and wife and their unpatriotic fervor.
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