Saturday, 30 April 2005

RUINS OF A GREAT HOUSE - Derek Walcott

"though our longest sun sets at right Declensions andmakes but winter Arches, it cannot be long before we Lie down in darkness, and have our Light in ashes . . ."
- Browne, 'Urn Burial'

Introduction:


"Ruins of a Great House" by Derek Walcott is both a patriotic and a humanistic poem. Here, the poet compares Africa to a great house in ruins. The poet is sad that the long African day is over and that winter and night will soon envelope their lives. The light is now expended and only the ashes remain.


Browne's "Urn Burial" and Its Relationship with Africa:


Thomas Browne wrote his "Urn Burial" when some urns were discovered. Walcott feels that Africa is full of urns carrying dead bodies. The Great House (Africa) is now in ruins. The British lizard with dragon-like claws has swallowed the moth-like girls of Africa. The Guardians (gate-cherubs) of the gates had been slaughtered (streaked with strain). The African coach wheel could not move as the axle had been clogged (like a cart immobilised by cattle droppings).


The Poet's Farewell to the Fields and Groves of Africa: His Reminiscences of Africa:


The country has only eucalyptus trees. Crows are its only birds. Its lime trees are dead and stinking. The British Empire is leprous and contaminated. The poet sadly bids farewell to the green fields and the happy groves of Africa, which are no more.


Africa was once beautiful. It was polished like marble, but now it was a symbol of struggle, like Faulkner's South (of America, where the haves and the have nots clash). Its temporary deciduous beauty is gone. The trees near the lawn are diseased (rashes). They have already shed their leaves. These leaves cover dead animals or human beings. Obviously the colonial rulers have robbed Africa of its wealth and destroyed its people.


The Moral Death of the Great British Empire:


Now, it appears as if Africa has only lime trees, which grow in the silt, not in pure waters (corrosive and corrupt people). The British imperious rakes have carried away the African beauties. The African life (river) flows and the past hurt is slowly forgotten. The great artists of Africa, the craftsmen, have been banished. Now, the great house is worm-eaten ... ...


[For the complete, free essay via email, reach the blogger at rufusonline@gmail.com]

8 comments:

  1. great patriot expressed his feeling to the world

    ReplyDelete
  2. feeling of colonized peoples express by this poem

    ReplyDelete
  3. Does the poem state that the Great House is in Africa? The colonial "empire" is alluded to having created the destruction which has left the Great House pilfered. However, the tools for empire expansion- "Bible and...sword", have been used to colonise the colonisers of Africa. For example, England has been colonised by the sword and with the aid of discursive narratives' truths. Rather than Africa, the Great House may be any land whose people, "girls" and landscape, "trees", have suffered.

    ReplyDelete
  4. The Great House in this poem is the Caribbean Island and not Africa. Derek Walcott, the poet, was born in St. Lucia. The pains and destruction of colonization experienced in the Caribbean Islands were similar to what the African continent experienced.

    Great work.

    ReplyDelete
  5. The poem is most definitely not set in Africa. Such an egregious error leads me to doubt the usefulness of the rest of the essay. There is indeed death and decay, just as there is a nod to former glories and a hint of the "strange fruit" of Southern trees (Billie Halliday). But Walcott is too concerned with teasing out what West Indians can make of being modern/invented to glorify or vilify either our African/Indian/Indigenous ancestors or our European ancestors. /I'll give you a hint of our quandary; neither the lime tree nor the eucalyptus is "native" to the Caribbean but both now grow here and both are used here. Walcott is interested, among other things with the question, 'is there something beyond the binary non/european?'. Please read the poem carefully.

    ReplyDelete
  6. In this poem "Ruins of a Great House", the words "Great House" denotes Britain or the Caribbean?

    ReplyDelete