SUMMARY- FATHER RETURNING HOME
Stanza 1: The first stanza of Father Returning Home describes the
train journey of his father while returning home one evening. The father stands
among commuters in the yellow light of a local compartment. The poet describes
his father’s reaction against the sights of the suburbs that pass by. His
father remains unmoved by the sights because they are too familiar to him. That
is quite normal, isn’t it? We hardly pay attention to those places where we
travel every day, unless the place has something interesting to offer. Same was
with the poet’s father.
The poet then describes his father’s
pathetic condition, as he travels during the rainy season. His clothes become
damp and dirty. The black raincoat that he wears becomes stained with mud. His
bag crumbles with the heavy load of the books. Due to old age, the poet’s
father’s eyesight has become poor and therefore he finds difficulty to move
about in the dark.
The poet says that he can see his father
getting down the train ‘like a word dropped from a long sentence.’ The sentence
is highly unique and it provides an evocative image of an old man who gets down
from the train as if he is no longer relevant to it. The poet then sees his
father hurrying through the long, grey platform.
The man seems to be as old as the
platform, who has been using it as a part of his routine. He crosses the
railway tracks and hurries home through muddy lanes on a rainy day. This is
indicated by his chappals which are sticky with mud. This stanza portrays the
monotonousness of the old man, who sustains the vagaries of weather as well as
the estrangement from the man-made.
Stanza 2: The second stanza, the poet represents the alienation of
his father that he experiences in his own dwelling. The poet tells us that his
father drinks a weak tea and eats a stale chapatti when he comes back home.
This shows that the even his basic requirements are not properly carried out by
his family. A sense of pity for the poet’s father arises in us, what do you
think?
The father is then seen going into a
contemplative mood after reading some kind of a philosophical book. He goes to
the toilet and contemplates over man’s alienation from the man-made world. This
exhibits that the man is visibly upset with his predicament. He is terribly
shaken when he comes out of the toilet and trembles while he washes his hands
at the wash basin. It seems that he trembled not only because of the cold water
but also due to the thoughts that came into his mind while he was thinking in
the toilet.
The father finds himself all alone in his room as he is written off by his children.
The father finds himself all alone in his room as he is written off by his children.
The children do not interact with
their father; they do not share their joys or sorrows with him. To compensate
their company, the father listens to the radio. Then he goes to sleep. In his
sleep, he dreams about his ancestors and grandchildren.
It seems that he is trying to
communicate with his ancestors who had entered the subcontinent through the
Khyber Pass in the Himalayas in the past. The dream mirrors that the old man is
either thinking about his past (his ancestors) or his future (his
grandchildren). It is a kind of relief to him from his mundane routine, devoid
of any human contact.
Have you ever felt so alienated like
this old man in Father Returning Home?
Theme: The poem, Father Returning Home focuses on the theme
of alienation or estrangement experienced by the aged in their twilight years.
Dilip Chitre talks about his own father and through the poem, we get to know
the alienation, isolation and misery experienced by elderly people, especially
in cities.
Style: Dilip Chitre’s poetry follows the tradition of dramatic
monologue. In the poem Father Returning Home, the poet talks about his father’s
loneliness and alienation from the man-made world. He has brought out the
emotions of his father, who is isolated from his family as well as from the
outside world. He has painted the mundane and fatiguing routine of his father
in order to highlight the darkness and misery lurking inside his father’s soul.
Imagery in the poem: The poet uses some fine imagery to describe the
lurking loneliness in the man’s soul as he travels in the local train. To
convey the ‘twilight atmosphere’ the poet has used a number of descriptive
words in the poem, like evening train, yellow light, unseeing eyes, his eyes
dimmed by age, fade homeward and gray platform.
An example of imagery is found in
the following lines describing the father’s routine of travelling by a local
train,-
“My father travels on the late
evening train
Standing among silent commuters in the yellow light
Suburbs slide past his unseeing eyes
His shirt and pants are soggy and his black raincoat
Stained with mud and his bag stuffed with books
Is falling apart.”
Standing among silent commuters in the yellow light
Suburbs slide past his unseeing eyes
His shirt and pants are soggy and his black raincoat
Stained with mud and his bag stuffed with books
Is falling apart.”
In the above mentioned lines, the
pathos of an old father, returning to his mundane home late in the evening, is
highlighted. A wonderful image is used to describe poet’s father getting down
the train. The poet says that he can see his father getting down the train
‘like a word dropped from a long sentence.’ The sentence is highly unique and
it provides an evocative image of an old man who gets down from the train as if
he is no longer relevant to it. This imagery is used to depict the
monotonousness and meaninglessness in the father’s life.
The imagery of dream has been used
to show the connection the poet’s father has with his past and his future. He
dreams about his ancestors and his grandchildren. Thus, it signifies his
feelings that he has suppressed in himself and cannot express openly.
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