In
Gardening in the Tropic, repetition is the most important feature of Olive
Senior’s craft.
With
reference to at least 3 poems, discuss the validity of this statement.
“Jamaican poet, Olive
Senior is one of the most lucid Caribbean poets writing today. It is through
her finest Gardening in the Tropics, we are able to see her clarity of thought
as well as her capacity to construct the clean precise language that make this
collection such a welcome addition to West Indian writing,” Kwame Dawes 1995. Meditation on Yellow, Caribbean Basin Initiative and Stowaway carry the readers
back in time where our Caribbean ancestors resided, exploring their pains and
pleasures of immigration thus validating the subtitle “Travellers’ Tale.”
Many readers would agree
that Senior’s use of repetition, imagery and conversational tone are the most
outstanding features in her art of monologue poetry that evokes the horrific
journey of our Caribbean ancestors in addition to the brutality they faced by
their colonizers. The opening lines of Meditation on yellow, “At three in the
afternoon you landed here at El Dorado,” quickly introduce the audience to the
setting of the poem, creating a sense of development at the start. It also
signals an involvement of a new set of people in the Caribbean who can either
have a positive or negative impact on the lives of the settlers. However, the
Amerindians being calm and welcoming gave the settlers the Caribbean island and
two continents in return for friendship and peace however they received
worthless glass beads and hawk’s bells. Already Senior makes the readers aware
of the Native Indians cordial attitude towards the white Europeans who took
advantage of this, claiming the most valuable asset. Senior, then goes on to
introduce the arrival of a new set of migrants, the black Africans who replaced
the dwindling Amerindian population, however they were thoroughly dehumanized
by the whites due to their colour and race, "skin burnt black as toast,
for which management apologizes". Her craft of repetition, “want” and
“give” describes to her readers her strong disapproval of the exploitation
process, “five hundred years of solitude” carried out by the Europeans to the
African population revealing the nature of the whites as discontented, materialistic,
and supercilious. It is through this device that Senior evokes feelings of
sympathy and pity for the African slaves and Amerindian tribe while the
readers' develop detestation for the Europeans. Nevertheless, the poet sheds
light on the humorous line, “our piss the same shade of yellow” highlighting
the persona’s mockery, frustration and belittling of the Europeans. In that, it
is ridiculous to feel superior to another race just because their skin tone is
different however they fail to understand that our bodies function the same
hence we are all equal human beings. Consequently, the use of repetition
reinforces the hardship of our Caribbean ancestors and the insatiable whites,
" Just when I thought I could rest pour my own fever grass and lemon, cut
my ten in the kitchen take five."
The title “Caribbean
Basin Initiative” is a play on the words as this area was officially unveiled
by the United States President Ronald Reagan in 1982 as a means for economy
growth in the Caribbean through increased trade in the USA. In Senior’s poetry
however, she describes the terrifying journey of the Haitian people who chose
the dangerous route of migration in small open boats. The beginning lines of
this poem tell a short story of Haitian residents who are migrating from their
mother country in search of a new place to settle and better their standard of
living for them and their family, “these waters where our dreams lie.” They
have full hope that one day their dreams will become a reality and their
hardships and sufferings will come to an end. However, their journey was
everlasting and soon members in the boat started dying due to malnutrition.
Despite this, the persona never gave up on his dream and continued to sail to
the USA however, he was caught and captured by the USA coast guards and taken
to a cell in Guantanamo Bay. Subsequently, he was set free but continued to
hope for better things to come. Through Senior’s powerful use of imagery,
“limpets we cling” the readers are able to visualize and compare the limpets,
marine creatures (gastropods) that cling to rocks and the hulls of ships to
that of the Haitian people trying their best to fit on board the boat as there
were many passengers. Senior engages the audience to witness the desperation of
these Haitians to look for a better life and a higher standard of living,
evoking feeling of sympathy and pity. Additionally, Olive Senior uses her
technique of repetition, “past” and “though” to indicate the intensification of
the reality of the situation in that there is no sense of direction to where
the persona is going as his family have all died and left him alone. Also the
repetition of the first and last stanza, “like limpets we’ll cling on craft
that ply in these waters where our dreams lie” reinforces the fact that in
spite of the persona’s hardships, there is hope that this dream in these
passing waters will take him somewhere and become a reality. Senior
continuously evoke to the readers that despite the struggles and suffering of
our ancestors there will always be hope for a better future.
In Senior's Stowaway, she
starts her poem with the craft of conversational tone which quickly link the
readers to the persona whereby making them a part of the story she’s telling.
“I feel it, though I cannot see to hold my thoughts together” this quote,
illustrates to her readers that the persona is on a secret sea journey hoping
that he would not be found but his instincts tell him otherwise. This quickly
links the readers back to the title of the poem "stowaway" which defines
a person who secretly boards a mode of transport without being detected. Senior
then further goes on to briefly describe the emotions of the persona during his
sea journey as he's portrayed as being blinded, unable to think soundly,
mentally. In other words, his thoughts are out of control as he knows it will
not be long before he’s discovered on the boat. According to Senior, Stowaway
is symbolic for the negative thoughts in the persona's mind that could lead to
depression or a mental breakdown, "my thoughts together-they're running
loose all over, someone's bound to trip." Furthermore, it is believed that
the main reason behind the persona's emotions is mainly because he has
experienced the ill treatment aboard the voyage of the middle passage from Africa
which confirms his identity as an enslaved individual. This is evident with
reference to the imagery Senior implements “one day light will enter this
grave” hints on the past experiences the persona suffered during the middle
passage. Senior thus, evokes feeling of hope that the persona is not found by
the European merchants as he would be severely tortured. Moreover, the closing
lines “that my eyes be blinded only by the promise land” refer to the land
promised by God which is rewarded to that person who has lived a faithful life
of hope, according to the Hebrew Bible.
Ultimately, through
Senior's poem, she makes the readers aware of the torture and psychological
impact the Europeans had on our Caribbean ancestors. Gardening in the Tropics
by Olive Senior, specifically Traveller's Tale focuses on the evocative ways
and forms in which the lives of our Caribbean ancestors were circumscribed,
influenced and molded by the Europeans that had a dramatic effect on the entire
region. However, it is through her techniques of writing mainly repetition,
conversational tone together with imagery in her poetry that serves to portray
issues of migration and colonization. “Poetry matters because it is a tool for
helping us to discover who we are. As individuals, as Caribbean peoples, as
citizens of the world” according to Olive Senior.
Hi miss
ReplyDeleteCan you post 1 for drama or prose?