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The “regret poem by R. Parthasarathy” remains a cornerstone of the Indian English canon because it refuses consolation. Most poems about regret offer a lesson or a redemption arc. Parthasarathy offers none.
Regret in his poems is often tied to the physical body and the ticking clock. He describes the process of aging not as gaining wisdom, but as a series of subtractions. He looks back at his younger self—full of Eurocentric dreams—with a weary, clinical eye, regretting the years spent chasing a "mirage" of Western sophistication. 3. Cultural Displacement regret poem by r parthasarathy
The juxtaposition is violent. “Anglo-Saxon angles” evokes the sharp, logical, Protestant geometry of English poetry (think John Donne’s metaphysical conceits or T.S. Eliot’s urban wastelands). In contrast, “Tamil tears” evokes the Dravidian classical tradition—fluid, Dravidian, erotic, and sorrowful. The “London rain” is indifferent. It washes away the tears before they are witnessed. The “regret poem by R
: The poet looks back at missed opportunities—including lost love and the inability to marry the woman he once loved—as part of the cumulative weight of regret he feels at reaching maturity. Mohanlal Sukhadia University - Udaipur Context within Rough Passage "Regret" is best understood as part of the section of Rough Passage ir.unishivaji.ac.in PowerPoint Presentation Parthasarathy offers none
The poem centers on a speaker reflecting on his past while observing a couple in a "wet and depressing" evening setting. It serves as a meditation on how the pursuit of adulthood—or the "scramble to be man"—often results in the forfeiture of one's "embarrassing gift" of innocence. Mohanlal Sukhadia University - Udaipur Key Themes & Analysis Loss of Innocence
To read this poem is to understand that regret is not the opposite of joy. It is the shadow of consciousness. And for Parthasarathy, standing in the London rain, wearing his borrowed tie, regret becomes the only honest furniture he owns.