Magazine 2014
- Journal 2014
- Journal 2014 – Index
- A Comparative Study on the Buying Behavior of Policy Holder’s of LIC and Other Private Companies in Mumbai (11)
- Role of Political Governance in Economic Conflict Prevention in India (17)
- Water Pricing- A Method of Long Term Sustainability of Water (22)
- An Analytical Study on the Significance of Route in the Flow of Offshore Funds and its Impact on Indian Economic Policy (26)
- Reverse Mortgage Scheme– A Financial Tool (33)
- Forging Direct Investment Opportunities and Challenges in Aviation Sector (38)
- Mid Day Meals: What, Why and How (44)
- The Regional Irrigation Scenario in Maharashtra (51)
- Women in Unorganized Sector With Reference to Lijjat Papad in Amareli District (56)
- Micro Credit: Provision for Security, Prosperity and Empowerment (63)
- Farmer’s Knowledge, Attitude & Adoption towards Mass Media Exposure (70)
- Sexual Harassment at The Workplace in Urban India (78)
- Construction Sector Management: Status of Construction Workers in Mumbai (86)
- Indictement of Caste Consciousness in the Roman Catholic Church in India in Bama’s “ Karukku” (95)
- Detachment to Involvement – A Psychological Odyssey of Arun Joshi’s “The Foreigner” (100)
- Teaching Reading to “Babel’s Children”: Two Case Studies (104)
- The Past, Present and Beyond in “Human Chain” By Seamus Heaney (111)
- “Other” Communities, Cultures and Literatures : Minority Discourse in India (117)
- Arundhati Roy’s “The God of Small Things” : Multiplicity of Narrative in the Postcolonial (122)
- Growth Status of Street Children – Beneficiaries of Feeding Programme in Mumbai (127)
- U-Shaped Curve of Marital Satisfaction: An Indian Scenario (176)
- Yoga as an Intervention Method in the Reduction of Anxiety in College Girls (184)
- Financial Literacy With Special Reference to Insurance (188)
- Social (in) Security in India : Some Reflections (195)
- Violence Against Dalit Women (199)
- Emerging New Patterns of Medical Travel and Health Care: A Case Study of Kerala (205)
International Peer-Reviewed Journal
RESEARCH HORIZONS, VOL. 4 JULY 2014
THE PAST, PRESENT AND BEYOND
IN “HUMAN CHAIN” BY SEAMUS HEANEY
Rajshree Trivedi
ABSTRACT
I plan to discuss the interplay of temporal shifts between the spatial and the spiritual / incorporeal
or psychological patterns, artistically and aesthetically blended with the Irish pastoralism in Human
Chain , the last collection of poems by Seamus Heaney. Time is a liquid entity in Heaney’s poems that
blends intricately with the functions of the mind of the entities “I/me,” and at times, the “We/us.” This
paper will confirm the proposed premises by re-reading the images intertwined with the poet’s
constant consciousness of the time- “In illo tempore” (in that time), “in the years to come” and in “all the
dynasties /of the dead.” It will also study the role of the Classical and Irish myths in connecting the
three temporal phases while drawing analogies between the human and environment . Simultaneously,
the paper will make quite a few allusions to ‘Wraiths’, ‘Sidhe and other existing and non-existing
entities in County Derry in Northern Ireland. The poems are catalogued into two types in this essay- the
family poems and the County Derry poems in order to explore the timeline concomitant to the
psychological movements of the poet/speaker in the poems.
Keywords : temporality, space, psyche, family poems, County Derry poems , afterlife.
Everywhere plants
Flourish among graves,
Sinking their roots
In all the dynasties
Of the dead.
*
**
The dead here are borne
Towards the future. (‘A Herbal’, 35 & 38)
Presenting Ireland live, throbbing with her human chain, struggling to survive in the “sepulchral
version of [a] paradise”( Lordon, n.p.) within the spatial and temporal grids calls for an unstinted
effort to weave a web of words, especially when the poet chooses to structure his poems predominantly
in his favourite crisp tercet -stanza patterns. A close analysis of each of the poems in the collection
Human Chain (2010) reveal that Seamus Heaney(1939-2013) artistically blends the past and the present
moments set in the County Derry in Ireland, with frequent shifts into a time zone that belongs to
neither of the two phases, but somewhere in the “elsewhere world, beyond / Maps and atlases,/
Where all is woven into/And of itself,”( ‘A Herbal’, 43). Not that it has been one of the unpremeditated
styles of Heaney to tilt, balance and raise the lever of his time machine so as to capture the glorious
past of the Celtic culture of the pre-Christian times, or the civic disturbance of the pre and post
Troubled Times or the ‘living breath’ (Toibin, n. p.) of the present Ireland, but the metaphysical
broodings into these terrains come with a fresh fervour and imagination especially, in the group of
poems titled under ‘Loughanure’, ‘Route 110’, ‘A Herbal’ and ‘The Riverbank Field’ in Human Chain.
A maiden reading of Heaney’s poems without sufficient understanding of the cultural, political,
social, historical elements or for that matter the physical anthropology of Ireland certainly leaves the
reader with an experience of ‘Hush, backwash and echo” (‘Canopy’, 44) The readings of the poems
that apparently appear to be short, crispy and slightly incomprehensible promise the reader a journey
across the County Derry as well as to the mythopoeic worlds of Virgil, Guillievic, David Ward, Colin
Middleton and other artists whom the poet celebrates in his “Elysium”( Album,’8). While a few of the
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RESEARCH HORIZONS, VOL. 4 JULY 2014
poems are written in memory of his parents, artist friends and mentors , many of them are reminiscences
of the plain, simple beings with ‘a kind of empty- handedness/Transpired….” or at times, “the
disregarded” ones or “the up close” ones from the community around him. Amidst the rich texture
of words taken from the register of the local natural order, there is a resonant presence of the ‘ineluctable’
and the ‘indelible’ whose ‘ embrace’, the speaker/ poet is fervently waiting for – a theme recurring in
many of the poems.
The poems in Death of a Naturalist (1966), Heaney’s first collection announced the heralding of a
new poet who will contribute extensively to the world of English poetry for the next forty five years to
come. ‘Digging’, the first poem in the collection has the speaker/ poet contemplating on his ‘would
be’ profession of writing- “the squat pen rests” - as against the strenuous job of digging the potato
farm- the familial profession. The resting pen slips into the past while looking down at the “gravelly
ground” as he remembers the father and the grand father digging “to cut more turf in a day” and his
inability to do so – “ But I’ve no spade to follow men like them.” However, the commitment towards
the end- “The squat pen rests/ But I’ll dig with it.”- is a promise that was seriously fulfilled in the coming
years of the Nobel Laureate’s career. A similar kind of experiential situation resonates in the epiphany
in Human Chain (2010). It is the pen again in ‘The Conway Stewart’( a branded pen) gifted by the
parents – “Guttery, snootery,/ Letting it rest then at an angle/ To ingest……To my longhand/ ‘Dear’/ To
them, next day.” Close to the end of the Human Chain, there seems to be a fulfillment of a mission
long undertaken that finds its further destination- the “Wisdom keeps welling in streams” - in the
poem ‘Colum Cillle Cecinit. The process of demystification nevertheless, ends on a more, concluding,
positive and maturity note that appeared to be more constrained in the first collection.
A macroscopic overview of the recurring images, metaphors, places- the roads of County Derry- or
the mythic patterns may sound to be repetitive and at times, more of the plodding ones in Human
Chain. However, John Wilson Foster has a different argument on this observation. While commenting
on Heaney’s poetic marvels achieved at the age of fifty and thereafter, Foster argues :
The incidence of marvels apart, a good deal of Heaney’s recent poetry has been a revisitation of what
he has already versified. But the revisitation is also a revision, made necessary, it would appear
through a recent accession of love or affection and what can ever seem like late middle aged nostalgia
(
207).
The ‘“revision” exercise that began in the early fifties and continued to remain till the next two and
more decades again took interesting turns with the poems that now talk about death, existence,
solidarities and union. Politics, a subject that has always been secondary but prevalent in Heaney’s
earlier collections faintly appears in the backdrop. The present that has entered the advanced stage
of life has attained the lightheadedness” as that of a cabin boy who feels “rapturous” on his first sea
voyage- the voyage representing the journey to the unknown world after death (‘In The Attic’, 84)
For the present paper I intend to classify the poems in Human Chain into two catalogues: the family
poems memorializing the past and the County Derry poems glorifying the present, but at the same
time demystifying and deconstructing the “afterlife” of its inhabitants by traversing into the unknown
terrains -beyond the realms of death and graveyard. The purpose behind cataloguing the poems into
two sections is to examine the poems and to group them thematically in order to avoid any overlapping
of critical concepts.
The poems belonging to the catalogue of family poems are ‘Album’, “The Conway Stewart’, ‘The
Butts,’ ‘Uncoupled,’ and ‘A Kite For Aibhin’. ‘Chanson d’ Aventure’ is a poem that certainly falls into
this category but it exceptionally operates on two other levels apart from its major thrust on the conjugal
relationship - the worldly/ physical journey viz-a-viz the spiritual/ metaphysical journey. I shall discuss
these aspects further in the article.
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RESEARCH HORIZONS, VOL. 4 JULY 2014
The family poems (except ‘Chanson d’Aventure’) oscillate across three generations – the speaker’s
parents, son and the grand daughters Rose and Aibhin. The past is ubiquitously present in the world
that does not any longer inhabit the dear ones but their memories do. Hitherto, driven around the
repetitive turns , the retroscopic caravan travels further to future towards the end of the collection. A
symbiotic view of place, people, objects and events that found a way in the earlier poems make an
indelible mark again thereby, creating a poetic synergy’ in the five poems grouped under the title
‘
Album’ – the Grove Hill in Derry, the parents and the “airy Sundays (‘Album’, 4). The overpowering
elegiac tone fills the “summer season” redefining “the apt quotation/ About a love that’s proved by
steady gazing/ Not at each other but in the same direction” (4), thereby, seemingly referring to the
solidarity that the family shared without being too expressive about it. The enchanted moments spent
together by the trio – the speaker and his parents “Shin-deep in hilltop bluebells, looking out/ At
Magherafelt’s four spires in the distance”- travel back to an earlier “winter at the seaside.” The mood
is that of celebration - the clinking of dishes, chandeliers, the smell of cooking fish and “ a skirl of
gulls” at “the wedding meal”- tantalizing the senses thereby, forming a “synesthesia,” a term borrowed
from David Fawbert’s critical views on Heaney (Connecting with Seamus Heaney, n.p.). The sudden
shift of mood to “Stranded silence. Tears.” brings him back to the present world from where he started
the journey to the past, amidst the noise of the boiler at home “Too late, alas” in life- referring to may
be, the later part of his life while convalescing on his bed after a mild paralytic attack in 2006.
Quite essentially, the “ pain of loss” of the parents, especially that of the figure of the father augment
the family poems with a recurring mode of sentimentality, not much propounded in the earlier poems.
In an otherwise difficult or rather detached father-son relationship, atypical of the Irish culture- “the
paperiness”- the poems express autobiographical elements –his reminiscences of the farm house
where he and his father were brought up in “a place where the style was undemonstrative and
stoical” (Heaney, Interview, 1997). In yet another interview when asked by the interviewer whether he
had actually expressed his feelings to his father, Heaney responded,” That kind of language would
have been much suspect. We knew love. It wasn’t a matter of declaring it. It was proven (Heaney, 2008)
The fourth and the fifth poem in ‘ Album’ move ahead from the possibility of having “embraced him
(
father) anywhere” and his failed maiden attempt to do so, to the second and the third successful
events and eventually to the grandson’s unhesitant “snatch raid” on his neck. The transition is
suggested metaphorically by comparing it with the use of the English adverbial that originates from
the Lain word ‘Verus” which means ‘true’ and has lost its actual lexical connotation over the period
of long usage. The father is compared to the “Latin stem” – the Latin noun or verb that remains
unchanged when inflections are added to it. The crisis is resolved in the poem ‘The Butts’ where the
speaker honestly admits “ And we must learn to reach well in beneath/ Each meagre armpit / To lift
and sponge him.” (13)
While the father is “Working his way towards (the son) through the pen” in the poem ‘Uncoupled’ the
exercise of “waving and calling” him once again seems to go futile in the twin poem ‘Uncoupled’. The
voice goes unheard amidst the “lowing and roaring’ of the lorry drivers and dealers resulting into a
gradual disappearance of the figure from the visible periphery. Contradictory to the description of the
father, the mother is majestically silent - “Walking tall, as if in a procession” (10). Losing the sight of
the mother is what the speaker along with his siblings -”we”- feels whereas the loss of the father is
experienced by the speaker alone, an emotion circumventing around the ‘antiphonal’ responses
existing between the heard and the unheard sounds of father in the second poem.
Time floats backward and forth in the family poems. In ‘Album I’, the sound of the boiler heard “now”
is compared to that of the “timed collapse / Of a sawn down tree.” The time zone shifts to the “summer
season” in past “before the oaks were cut”. The temporal zone is connected with the word “dawns”,
an internal rhyme. The calendar is narrowed down to “Sundays” and leaps to the present with at regret
“
Too late, alas, now’ bringing him back to where the poem began with “Now.” The “oak” reappears in
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Album II with the time element now shifted to his school days when Heaney was about to enter the
Junior House. The parting parents and the future possibility “A grey eye will look back” of sorrow soon
shift to the present where he stands “Seeing them as a couple, I now see” where the intensity of the
“
loss of pain” is still as much it was felt then – the time when he “had to turn and walk away” for
entering into his secondary school.
Quite contradictory to the visual effect of “Seeing them (the parents) as a couple, is the diptych –
“
Uncoupled.’ The twin poems begin with the common phrase- “Who is this” and proceed to drift to
different ways. Both the parents walk into the present from the past and leave the scene quickly
leaving a timeless effect. The mother- “proceeds until we have lost sight of her” - and the father – “his
eyes leave mine’ – emerge as floating figures and are lost forever in the “lowing and roaring” laser-fast
humdrums of the world. The lack of emotionality and communication is a result of the psychological
barrier that has been reflected in the ‘Album’ poems but gets reconciled in ‘The Butts’ in the “sniffs”,
“
lifts” and “sponges” that he offers to the ailing father from which what emerges is a “kind of empty-
handedness / Transpired.” However, the reconciliation does not end there; there is a promise at the
end of the poem “To keep working” for him.
Locations and moments once again interplay on the spatial-temporal grid in ‘Chanson d’Aventure’.
The past is recalled. The trigger word is “Apart” which the poet feels –”The very word is like a bell”(17)
and then the memories shift to the times of illo tempore in the location of the cemetery where the
knoll was rung by a sexton in Bellaghy, to the college in Derry where he offered his services as the
bellman, to the ambulance drive through Dungloe and Glendoan, the midway halt at the museum in
Delphi in Greece where the statue of Heniokos (410 BC) is preserved with one of its hands lopped.
The stream of consciousness get folded at the corridor of the hospital where the physiotherapist is
trying to bring back the sensation into the hand that “lay flop-heavy as a bellpull” (17). The physical
journey by ambulance on “Sunday morning” is silent yet, eloquent of not only the fulfillment of the
conjugal promises but also the spiritual union of the “body and soul.” The regret that the couple could
have otherwise, on a Sunday morning “quote Donne/ On love on hold” seems to be compensated by
the “gaze ecstatic” and their “eyebeams threaded laser-fast” while on their way speedily to the hospital
for the treatment of Heaney’s paralytic attack in 2006.
Quintessentially apart, one of the poems in Human Chain that may not be catalogued as a family
poem – ‘Miracle’, could very well be treated as a poem that conveys universal feelings of brotherhood,
care and solidarity. The title ‘Miracle’ and the word “healing” does not signify divinity but accentuates
the solidarity shown by “those ones who have known him all along”- “Their shoulders numb, the ache
and stoop deeplocked / In their backs.” The tone is imperative and beholden -”Be mindful of them as
they stand and wait/ For the burn of the paid-out ropes to cool”- so as to underline the cooperation
extended by the fellow beings.
Often labeled as a ‘regionalist’, the catalogue of County Derry poems celebrate the locations such as
Grove Hill, The Wood Road, Long Rigs, Back Park, Smithfield Market or Anahorish Hill. Webbed with
the wefts of personal , spiritual or the political experiences and events, these locations weave around
the “universe…..[B]etween heather and marigold/ Between sphagnum and butter-cup/ Between
dandelion and broom” (‘A Herbal’, 43) that is alive, eloquent and personified as speaking the “Compliant
dialect” that makes them “keep going”. The ‘ peaceful homes’ at Upper Broagh and the River Moyola
in County Derry are mythologized as Virgil’s Elysium and the River Lithe in the poem ‘The Riverbank
Field.’ Moths, midge, willow leaves and the “ grass so fully fledged” fill the “sequestered grove” as
he sees the “spirits” passing by. Each of them are as if summoned here after one thousand years
“
to drink river water/ so that the memories of this underworld are shed.” The magic of the place is so
enchanting that the “soul is longing to dwell in flesh and blood/ Under the dome of the sky” ( 47)
reminiscent of the Wordsworthian vision- “Our birth is but a sleep and forgetting.”
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Lythe is replaced by Styx and the “spirits” by the men compared to the newly deceased lot of souls
boarded on ‘Charon’s barge” in the poems grouped under the title ‘Route 110.’ The Smithfield
Market held on Saturdays are crowded, flooded and fetid with the domestic and utility wares. The
mechanical qualities of the marketers are modeled on the Greek mythological allusions of the souls
ferried by the Man of Hades on Charon’s barge, thus transforming the mundane or ordinary into
mystical. Alternatively, Venus’ doves are localized as Mr. McNicholls’ pigeons; and Aeneas’ journey
into the underworld in search of his lost father in the Aeneid is contemporized as a journey from County
Derry to Cookstown in County Tyrone, five to six miles away from Derry by bus. Although physically
en route to Cookstown via Toome and Magherafelt, the journey transposes to temporal and
psychological shifts in which the destination in the twelfth or the last poem is not Cookstown but the
birth of the grand daughter. The interiors of the mind are unfolded on the way with two varied experiences
–
”
the one of the coarseness of the tarpaulin coat in harsh winters in Ireland as against the the coat –
a wedding guest’s bargain suit/ Of “finest weave, loose-fitting, summery, grey. “
The fifth poem in ‘Route 110’ reveals a state of “silvered smattering”- gaining superficial knowledge
but in this case offering “the wee alter a bit of shine”. Old Mrs. Nick’s handing over a flicker of light is
not only a torch to reach home at night but an awakening of the self, the enlightenment that reappears
in the last poem where he arrives with his “bunch of stalks and silvered heads like tapers that won’t dim
.
” Thus the journey that began on “an isle/ Smelling of dry rot and disinfectant” ends in “Virgil’s happy
shades in pure blanched raiment.”
Being one with the universe by way of connecting with nature is the major concern of the nineteen
poems grouped under the title ‘A Herbal’. The poems are written after the French poet Eugene Guillevic’s
long poem Herbier de Bretagne. If “Brittany acts as a centre of gravitation in his (Guillevic’s)
oeuvre”(Harvey, 2), County Derry does the same in case of Heaney. Although celebrating their respective
regions in their works, both of them transgress beyond the elements of nature, topography and the
inhabitants- ancestral as well as the contemporaries. There are political, spiritual and personal
connotations to each poem. The juxtaposition of death-birth, decay-growth, inner-outer consciousness,
universe-rat’s hole, graveyard grass-field grass creates a picture of omnipresence of self-”I had my
existence, I was there,/ Me in place and the place in me.”(43). Nature possesses the quality of
renewability:
Not that the grass itself
Ever rests in peace.
It too takes issue,
Now sets its face
To the wind,
Now turns its back (36)
So does the soul in its process of birth, death and reincarnation found in the II Parking Lot in the
sequence titled ‘Wraiths’. The timeline framed is that of the White night when the sky is completely not
dark but twilit with “weird brightness” when the couple climb into a bus –”reboarded/ And were
reincarnated seat by seat” (67). Again the couple referred to is formed by a man and “sidhe”- an
unreal figure turned into reality. The cycle however, forms a complete chain in the last poem ‘A Kite
For Aibhin’ that ends with the birth of Heaney’s second grand daughter. The kite is a metaphor of soul
that glides from “Air from another life and time and place” (85). The struggle or the journey it undergoes
before being born is expressed by the lines “And now it hovers, tugs, veers, dives askew/ Lifts itself,
goes with the wind until/ It rises to loud cheers from us below.”(85). The cycle is complete, full and
towards the real.
Commenting upon how his personal experiences, be that of the regional, ancestral, temporal or
historical transmute into a poetic or creative experience, Heaney quotes one of his poems- ‘A
Shiver’- from the collection District And Circle. He states:
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In my last book I did a poem about a sledgehammer hitting a post, but I think it wasn’t just a physical
sensation I was trying to get at. It was about the full exercise of merciless, violent power. It was a poem
written after Iraq. There were no Iraq references in it, but it is about the sense of transgression you have
when you utterly, mercilessly use a sledgehammer, even when hitting a dead post. There’s a kind of
unrestrained fury, an unforgiving brutality to it that I wanted to get. So I think that you can transmit
sensation but hopefully suggest and effect a consequence as well (Heaney, 2008)
Heaney’s poems can be read as “meta-poem(s)” ( Ozawa, 100). The sudden realization or enlightenment
that “lapsed ordinary” was electrifying in the first poem ‘ Had I Not Been Awake’ in Human Chain.
Announcing the breakthrough – “A wind that rise and whirled” (3), Heaney seems to ascertain that the
rest of the poems were a result of the trigger point that was pulled - “And almost it seemed dangerously/
Returning like an animal to the house”(3). There is a sense of narrow escape- “Had I not been awake
I would have missed it” (3). The poetical emancipation of that experience results into what Heaney
says in ‘ Colum Cille Cecinit’ (72):
My small runny pen keeps going
Through books, through thick and thin,
To enrich the scholars’ holdings-
Penwork that cramps my hand. (72).
Heaney’s vast repertoire of poetry collections as well as prose works may offer varied research prospects
for his readers. Nevertheless, one enjoys the simplicity and frequent conversational quality of his
poems that may be read as independent readings but a plunge into the deeper realms of their registers
would surely open up what could be borrowed from Human Chain as “a wind freshened and the
anchor weighed” (‘In The Attic’, 84) for embarking on to a poetic journey to the “Poet’s imaginings/
And memories of love” ( ‘Hermit Songs’,79).
References
Fawbert, David. Connecting with Seamus Heaney at the blog on fawbie.com. Web.
Foster, John Wilson. ‘Creating Marvels: Heaney After 50" in The Cambridge Companion to Seamus
Heaney. ed. Bernard O’Donoghue. Oxford University Press: UK, 2009. Print,
Harvey, Stella. Myth And The Sacred In The Poetry of Guillevic . Faux Titre, The Netherlands, 1997.
Print
Heaney, Seamus. Human Chain. Faber and Faber: London, 2011. Print.
Interviewed by Henri Cole in ‘The Art of Poetry No. 75’ in The Paris Review . Fall No. 1997, No. 144.
Web.
Interviewed by Eleanor Watchtel for Brick 81, Summer 2008. This interview took place before just
before the publication of Human Chain in 2010. Web.
Lordon, Dave. ‘Book Review of Human Chain By Seamus Heaney’ in The Stinging Fly. Issue 18, vol.
Two/ Spring 2011. Web.
Ozawa, Shigeru. The Poetics Of Symbiosis: Reading Seamus Heaney’s Major Works. Sankeisha 2-
2
4-1: Japan, 2009. Print
Toibin. Colm. ‘Book Review of Human Chain By Seamus Heaney’ in The Guardian . August 21,
010. Web.
2
Rajshree Trivedi : Associate Professor, of English, Maniben Nanavati Women’s College, Mumbai
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