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Romantic Rhapsody

A profile of Hari Barkakati
by Kuntal Sharma Pathak


        You come, my beloved
        This is time, love,
        Let the world disintegrate, love
        For it is the union today of
                you and I.

Thus flows the romanticism and sensuality from Hari Barkakati’s pen, the most riveting and beguiling poet of the present era. A perfect icon of a transcendentally romantic era, his poems reflect his spirit of art, clarity of thoughts and magnanimity of his mind. After a long chat with him on a Sunday morning at his residence at Guwahati, he completely overwhelmed me with his urbane and genial approach.

Born in 1927 in the midst of exhilarating and idyllic surroundings of tea estates of Doomdooma, he was educated at Seniram High School, Tinsukia and then went to St Paul’s College, Calcutta, but had to return after one year due to communal violence at Calcutta and completed his graduation from Cotton College, Guwahati. He obtained his MA (1st class) degree from Gauhati University in 1951. During 1952-53, he worked as a sub-editor of Natun Assamiya and also as a lecturer in B Borooah College, Guwahati, but later joined the Assam Civil Service in 1954. He was posted as Extra Assistant Commissioner in Golaghat and later worked in various departments till he retired as Joint Secretary Education in 1984. He even invented ‘keyboard’ for typewriter in Assamese in 1964. Sri Barkakati was fortunate to be born in a family which had deep inclination towards the fine arts and he was greatly influenced by the writings of Bengali writers like Buddhadev Basu, Jibananda Das, Sukanto Bhattacharjee and also different Assamese poets like Ganesh Gogoi, Amulya Baruah, Jatin Narayan Sarma, Jatin Dowerah and others during his schooldays. His very first poem Sri Sri Sankardev was published in his school magazine at Tinsukia. But in 1948 his predilection towards poetry took a serious turn when he got the first prize in the fine arts competition in Cotton College for his poem Shihot Ki. Author of six outstanding poetic anthologies namely -- Xagar Balir Khoj, Konoba Shitar Eta Boga Xandhiya, Chinaki Chinaki Gondh, Man Kagazar Nao, Hari Barkakatir Kabita and Swanirbaashita Kabita (both Assamese and English version), he is a true devotee and lover of art and beauty.

The poetical works of Hari Barkakati take us back to the romantic and golden era of Keats, Byron and Milton with multiple qualities of his poetry like touching exuberance, mellifluous articulation and wonderful capacity of concentrated and unembellished ways of narration. In his poem Ek Abhavaniya Amantran, he has wonderfully lifted the curtains to expose the mentality of a newly married bride of the high class rotten modernised society when she invites her old lover to satisfy her carnal desires during the absence of her husband, thus making the sanctity of marriage a mockery. The writings of Sri Barkakati touches the strings of human heart like a seraphic bliss and resuscitates complete serenity and placidity to a perturbed mind. In his panegyrical poem Dristipat, the poet has magnificently depicted the futile endeavours of the vagabonds trying to free themselves from the fetters of earthly desires in search of eternal peace and tranquility but ultimately surrendering to the manacle or bond of irresistible, alluring and winsome qualities of feminine love.

Hari Barkakati’s perspicacity and sagacity in the literary field are very well reflected in his notable poem Kunuba Shitar Ek Boga Shandhiya, where the poet appeals to his beloved to recollect those passionate reminiscences and tender moments of love shared together during their youthful days and further aspires to live in the mind of his lover even after his death, at the same time sanguine that his beloved will one day surely go in search of him and of those treasured and reinvigorating memories of love and youthful vigour. A man of demure deportment, arresting personality and altruistic character he is a glittering sapphire in the diadem of Assamese literature. His appeal lies in his expressions which are really copacetic and unmatched. In his laudatory poem Amar Sobi, he has eloquently portrayed the illusory picture drawn by the people in this barren and arid world with stains of their blood, dreaming about conquering the inevitable death and then experiencing a heavenly joy of flying across the cosmos. But the poem ends with a pessimistic and melancholic note when the poet unveils the other fact of this illusory and hallucinatory sketch to which the people do not try to visualise, where the lives of the people are valueless like the shephalika (Shewali phool) and even compares our blood as anaemic and pallid like the thin and penetrable curtains of a girls’ hostel and leading a rodderless voyage, thus upholding the ultimate and bare truth of life.

An erudite writer, his elysian poems clearly indicates his true love for beauty, glamour, passion and sometimes the ache of a lovelorn soul. In his mesmerising poem Mor Bigot Jaubonor Prayoshir Prati, the romantic and amorous aspect of unrequited love has found graceful and revealing expressions, when the poet expresses his dissatisfaction at his failure to get his beloved, but at the same time sceptical about his fate on unfulfilment of his dreams by saying that though his lady-love radiated charm, alluring and erotic qualities but was bereft of appealing, passionate and captivating the reflections of those appealing qualities in the face of his beloved’s daughter which made a perpetual impact on his mind and motivate him in times of solitariness.

Regarding the present generation writers he says that he is happy to see promising talents blooming but categorically remarks that "poets are the mirrors of the society. Poetry should be able to reflect the true picture of a society and a poet who deviates his thoughts from such basic features is not a poet in the true sense." On his thoughts on the present political scenerio he says, &#quot;we do not know where we are heading for" and further laments over such violent events of the state and states that such turbulent conditions can never form a stairway to success. Hari Barkakati is a silent conqueror of the hearts of his readers and exhibits complete dexterity and dominance over the art of sensuousness and romanticism in his poems with an enthralling and spellbinding effect. A man of youthful energy he is still at the gateway of rejuvenation with his eternal creations of literature when he says –

        Walking soft footed you
                went afar.
        Following you at
                breakneck speed.
        I saw an uncrossable charm
                Lying in my path
        You too had gone out of sight.

Courtesy: The Assam Tribune

Read Hari Barkakati’s poems.

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