Academy of the Punjab in North America

Poetic Olympia Revisited

By Dr. Jaspal Singh

Date:15-11-06

Source: South Asia Post: Issue 27 Vol II

SOM P. Ranchan is a notable literary figure in north-west India. By now he has penned over four dozen of books in different genres that include poetry, fiction, folklore, literary criticism and mythcartography. As a poet he is recognised all over the country and most of his collections of poems have been commented upon in many well-known journals, both in India and abroad. As a Punjabi settled in Shimla he is known for his zeal and zest as also his celebratory existential outbursts that some times surprise. Years ago he was a professor of comparative literature at California University for about a decade before returning to India to join as professor and head of the English Department at Himachal Pradesh University Shimla. As a popular teacher, Ranchan is remembered by generations of students and even now in his old age, as a retired teacher he is surrounded by many young students. Almost every day he visits the Mall and is a regular at the Ashiana eating joint on the Ridge. Very few poets in the subcontinent can match Ranchan`s verse and vigour. He can sing and dance in the company of the young even at the crowded places like Shimla`s famous Ridge.

PANRanchan`s poetic range is imminence a very strong Jungian influence that binds them rare universality pertaining to the archetypes of the collective unconscious of the human race. Ranchan`s 21st volume of poetry has just appeared. This latest collection is in celebration of the lesser known Greek god Pan who is supposed to be the god offlocks and shepherds. His figure is a condensation of many animalistic traits though partly he puts up a goat like form. He is a lover of music and usually plays a pipe. He is a great love maker also chasing the nymphs. The Olympian gods despised him because of his appearance though Apollo is supposed have obtained the art of prophecy by coaxing him and Hermes copied his pipe and sold it to Apollo. Ranchan, the poet introduces the god thus:

Pan is the Lord Liege

All-love

grooves with leaf, bole, root

Loves women

Chases them alone or with him fauns

It`s a spectacle, grandiloquent, serious

mock and mirth-provoking

Lets the loath and unwilling to escape

In to tree, rock, river

Sits under a canopy crown

in the shadow of a dingle

Or by the water`s edge

Strums his lyre

Pours the diapason of his soul

Tapping the irregular beat with his goat feet

It’s strange though he causes panic

because he merges his ontology

in to another

To fuse into greater teleos

Such his alchemy

Lady

the auto-erotic, lapsed, lonesome

Must come to Pan

 to be whole[from Pan]

The name of the god is Pan supposedly derived from paein which means pasture. That is why he is associated with plants, forests, and valleys. Herds of sheep and goat are supposed to be grazing there. As a god of the shepherds Pan represents the pastoral stage of human development. Olympian gods appeared much later when Greek city states had struck roots along the Ionian Sea.

The poet says:

Prior to Olympians,

He cannot dig Apollo`s paranoia with Mercury

Poseidon being cross with Ares

Children hiding in corners¦

Zeus disguises in pursuance

of extra-mural dalliance with Leda

 in Crete¦

When the pagans got tired

of Eros¦

They went to Pan

Bathed the rock on the water`s edge

with goat milk

To be natural and whole

They talked to the faeries once again

to see themselves

In the chiaroscuro of their subliminal

And Pan rose from the coves from the

other bank

And gave a glimpse with his splashing

Fauns

Of the luminous self for a split second Pan is the only god who is supposed have died. His death was reported to the Olympian gods. Ranchan gives a poetic touch to his disappearance:

When Pan fell into gloom and grief

with the fault-lines

With the fissures and cracks

appearing from nowhere in the tectonic shift¦

The natural knowing of Pan was displaced

Fauns disappeared

Faeries went to sheep or took flight

Pan hid in his lair to nurse his wounds¦.

The poet asks him:

“How did you die Pal?

He replied from a dingle

 deep as doom;

“Faeries left for fresh woods and

pastures new

My fauns grieved, shrieked

themselves to nichil

I lost my raison detre

I went boom

Just like that said I, stunned

with amaze

Don`t despairâ€, he added as Holy Ghost

“Dying be entry into deeper caritas

The dead are well somewhere

The living remain and suffer …

The fact of the matter is

That the dead mutate and return

The living draw too sharp a line

between the dead and the living

in Avidya, in rank ego-bound ignorance

This is how Ranchan delineates the versified biography of a Greek god who for the Olympians has always remained a caricature. All the poems in this collection are archaic yet extremely modern. The poet goes back and forth on the time scale. The ancient symbols radiate modern meanings. The Freudian technique of condensation and displacement has been skillfully utilized along with the Jungian analytical psychology. He forty two poems in this anthology are rich in philosophical and mythological references. These offer a peep into the functioning of the human psyche.

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