Poetry - Module 2
Poetry - Module 2
LESSON - 5
A Dollar
A play in one-act by David Pinski
Characters
The Comedian
The Villain
The Tragedian
The Old Man
The Heroine
The Ingenue
The Old Woman
The Stranger
[A cross-roads at the edge of a forest. One road extends from left to right; the
other crosses the first diagonally, disappearing into the forest. The roadside is
bordered with grass. On the right, at the crossing, stands a signpost, to which are
nailed two boards giving directions and distances.]
COMEDIAN: Stand on your head, then, and let your perspiration water a
more fruitful soil.
VILLAIN: Oh!
[He drops his arms, the bundles fall down. He then sinks down onto one of
them and wipes off the perspiration, moving his hand wearily over his face. The
TRAGEDIAN and the OLD MAN approach the post and read the signs.]
OLD MAN: (lets go his end of the trunk) Mmmm. Another stop.
COMEDIAN: It’s an outrage how far people move their towns away from us.
VILLAIN: And the old women are still far behind us. Crawling!
OLD MAN: They want the vote and they can’t even walk.
COMEDIAN: We won’t give them votes, that’s settled. Down with votes for
women!
VILLAIN: It seems the Devil himself can’t take you! Neither your tongue nor
your feet ever get tired. You get on my nerves. Sit down and shut up for a
moment.
General English 55
COMEDIAN: Me? Ha--ha! I’m going back there to the lady of my heart. I’ll
meet her and fetch her hither in my arms.
[He spits on his hands, turns up his sleeves, and strides rapidly off towards the
left.]
VILLAIN: Clown!
OLD MAN: How can he laugh and play his pranks even now? We haven’t
a cent to our souls, our supply of food is running low and our shoes are
dilapidated.
[From the left is heard the laughter of a woman. Enter the COMEDIAN
carrying in his arms the HEROINE, who has her hands around his neck and
holds a satchel in both hands behind his back.]
COMEDIAN: (letting his burden down upon the grass) Sit down, my love,
and rest up. We go no further today. Your feet, your tender little feet must
ache you. How unhappy that makes me! At the first opportunity I shall buy
you an automobile.
[Enter the INGENUE and the actress who plays the OLD WOMAN each
carrying a small satchel.]
[The COMEDIAN stretches himself out at the feet of the HEROINE and emits
the bray of a donkey. The OLD WOMAN sits down on the grass to the left of the
HEROINE.]
COMEDIAN: Don’t you like our night’s lodgings? (Turning over toward the
OLD WOMAN) See, the bed is broad and wide, and certainly without vermin.
Just feel the high grass. Such a soft bed you never slept in. And you shall have
a cover embroidered with the moon and stars, a cover such as no royal bride
ever possessed.
COMEDIAN: Crying? You should be ashamed of the sun which favors you
with its setting splendor. Look, and be inspired!
COMEDIAN: (turning over to the INGENUE) What. You are crying? Aren’t
you ashamed of yourself?
[The COMEDIAN springs to his knees and looks quickly from one woman to
the other.]
General English 57
COMEDIAN: (jumps up abruptly without the aid of his hands) Ladies and
Gentlemen, I have it! (in a measured singing voice) Ladies and Gentlemen, I
have it!
COMEDIAN: Cheerfulness.
[General commotion. The women stop crying and look up to the COMEDIAN
in amazement; the TRAGEDIAN straightens himself out and casts a surprised
look at the COMEDIAN; the OLD MAN, rubbing his hands, jumps to his feet;
the VILLAIN looks suspiciously at the COMEDIAN.]
VILLAIN: Hum--whiskey.
COMEDIAN: You bet! A bottle of whiskey, hidden and preserved for such
moments as this, a moment of masculine depression and feminine tears.
(Taking the flask from his hip pocket. The expression on the faces of all
changes from hope to disappointment.)
COMEDIAN: (letting the flask sparkle in the sun) But it’s whiskey, my
children. (opening the flask and smelling it) U-u-u-m! That’s whiskey for you.
The saloonkeeper from whom I hooked it will become a teetotaler from sheer
despair.
[The TRAGEDIAN rises heavily and slowly proceeds towards the flask. The
VILLAIN, still skeptical, rises as if unwilling. The OLD MAN chuckles and rubs
his hands. The OLD WOMAN gets up indifferently and moves apathetically
toward the flask. The HEROINE and INGENUE hold each other by the hand
and take ballet steps in waltz time. All approach the COMEDIAN with necks
eagerly stretched out and smell the flask, which the COMEDIAN holds firmly
in both hands.]
TRAGEDIAN: Ho-ho-ho--Fine!
COMEDIAN: Cheer up; there will be enough for us all. Cheer up. Here, smell
it again.
[They smell again and cheerfulness reappears. They join hands and dance and
sing, forming a circle, the COMEDIAN applauding.]
General English 59
COMEDIAN: Good! If you are so cheered after a mere smell of it, what won’t
you feel like after a drink? Wait, I’ll join you.(He hides the whiskey flask in
his pocket.) I’ll show you a new roundel which we will perform in our next
presentation of Hamlet, to the great edification of our esteemed audience.
(Kicking the VILLAIN’S bundles out of the way.) The place is clear, now for
dance and play. Join hands and form a circle, but you, Villain, stay on the
outside of it. You are to try to get in and we dance and are not to let you in,
without getting out of step. Understand? Now then!
[On the last word of the refrain they stop as if dumbfounded, and stand
transfixed, with eyes directed on one spot inside of the ring. The VILLAIN leans
over the arms of the COMEDIAN and the HEROINE; gradually the circle draws
closer till their heads almost touch. They attempt to free their hands but each
holds on to the other and all seven whispers in great astonishment.]
ALL: A dollar!
[The circle opens up again; they look each at the other and shout in wonder.]
ALL: A dollar!
[Once more they close in and the struggle to free their hands grows wilder;
the VILLAIN tries to climb over and then under the hands into the circle and
stretches out his hand toward the dollar, but instinctively he is stopped by the
couple he tries to pass between, even when he is not seen but only felt. Again
all lean their heads over the dollar, quite lost in the contemplation of it, and
whispering, enraptured.]
All: A dollar!
[Separating once again they look at each other with exultation and at the same
time try to free their hands, once more exclaiming in ecstasy.]
ALL: A dollar!
[Then the struggle to get free grows wilder and wilder. The hand that is perchance
freed is quickly grasped again by the one who held it.]
INGENUE: (in pain) Oh, my hands, my hands! You’ll break them. Let go of
my hands!
OLD WOMAN: If you don’t let go of my hands I’ll bite. (Attempting to bite
the hands of the TRAGEDIAN and the OLD MAN, while they try to prevent it.)
OLD MAN: (trying to free his hands from the hold of the HEROINE and the
OLD WOMAN) Let go of me. (Pulling at both his hands) These women’s
hands that--seem so frail, just look at them now.
General English 61
HEROINE: Why should I be holding you? If you pick up the dollar, what is
yours is mine, you know.
OLD MAN: (Dropping on his knees and dragging the OLD WOMAN with
him.) He-He-He.
COMEDIAN: (to TRAGEDIAN) You are not worthy of the serious mask you
wear. You don’t appreciate true Divine Majesty. On your knees, or you’ll get
no whiskey. (TRAGEDIAN sinks heavily on his knees.) Oh holy dollar, oh
almighty ruler of the universe, before thee we kneel in the dust and send
toward thee our most tearful and heartfelt prayers. Our hands are bound, but
our hearts strive toward thee and our souls yearn for thee. Oh great king of
kings, thou who bringest together those who are separated, and separatest
those who are near, thou who—
62 General English
[The VILLAIN, who is standing aside, takes a full jump, clears the INGENUE
and grasps the dollar. All let go of one another and fall upon him, shouting,
screaming, pushing and fighting. Finally the VILLAIN manages to free himself,
holding the dollar in his right fist. The others follow him with clenched fists,
glaring eyes and foaming mouths, wildly shouting.]
ALL: The dollar! The dollar! The dollar! Return the dollar!
VILLAIN: (retreating) You can’t take it away from me, it’s mine. It was lying
under my bundle.
VILLAIN: (in great rage) No, no. (A moment during which the opposing sides
look at each other in hatred. Quietly but with malice.) Moreover, whom should
I give it to? To you--you--you--you?
HEROINE: (whispering in rage) That’s because you would not let go of me.
COMEDIAN: Ha-ha-ha-ha.
TRAGEDIAN: (shaking his fist in the face of the VILLAIN) Heaven and hell, I
feel like crushing you!
[He steps aside toward the trunk and sits down in his former pose. INGENUE,
lying down on the grass, starts to cry.]
COMEDIAN: Ha-ha-ha. Now we will drink, and the first drink is the Villain’s.
with a serious expression on his face. The COMEDIAN hands him a small glass
of whiskey.]
[The VILLAIN, shutting the dollar in his fist, takes the whiskey glass gravely and
quickly drinks the contents, returning the glass. He then starts to smooth and
caress the dollar again. The COMEDIAN, still laughing, passes the whiskey glass
from one to the other of the company, who drink sullenly. The whiskey fails to
cheer them. After drinking, the INGENUE begins to sob again. The HEROINE
who is served last throws the empty whiskey glass towards the COMEDIAN.]
COMEDIAN: Good shot. Now I’ll drink up all that’s left in the bottle.
[He puts the flask to his lips and drinks. The HEROINE tries to knock it away
from him but he skillfully evades her. The VILLAIN continues to smooth and
caress the dollar.]
COMEDIAN: (after throwing away the empty flask lies down on the grass)
Well roared, lion, but you forgot to hide your jackass’s ears.
VILLAIN: Yes, to the last drop. This evening you shall have bread and sausage.
Very small portions too, for tomorrow is another day. (INGENUE sobbing
more frequently.) Not till the day after tomorrow shall we reach town and that
doesn’t mean that you get anything to eat there either, but I--I--I--he-he-he.
Oh holy dollar, almighty dollar. (Gravely) He who does my bidding shall not
be without food.
HEROINE: (To COMEDIAN) I hate you, traitor. (To the VILLAIN) I have
always loved--genius. You are now the wisest of the wise. I adore you.
OLD WOMAN: (approaching the VILLAIN from behind and embracing him)
Find a little spot on your bosom for me. I play the “Old Woman,” but you
know I’m not really old.
VILLAIN: (freeing himself from the women) But now I have something more
General English 65
important to carry out. My vassals--I mean you all--I have decided we will
not stay here over night. We will proceed further.
VILLAIN: I have so decided, and that in itself should be enough for you; but
due to an old habit I shall explain to you why I have so decided.
VILLAIN: I’ll put you down on the blacklist. It will go ill with you for your
speeches against me. Now then, without an explanation, we will go--and at
once. (Nobody stirs.) Very well then, I go alone.
HEROINE: And I.
OLD MAN: (who is sitting apathetically upon the trunk) What the deuce is
urging you to go?
VILLAIN: Still another on the blacklist. I’ll tell you this much--I have
decided—
VILLAIN: We start at once, but if I am to pay for your food I will not carry
any baggage. You shall divide my bundles among you and of course those
who are on the blacklist will get the heaviest share. You heard me. Now move
on. I’m going now. We will proceed to the nearest town which is thirty miles
away. Now then, I am off.
VILLAIN: And with me fare His Majesty the Dollar and your meals for
tomorrow.
[He turns to right. The women take their satchels and follow him.]
OLD MAN: (to the TRAGEDIAN) Get up and take the trunk. We will settle
the score with him some other time. It is he who has the dollar now.
TRAGEDIAN: (rising and shaking his fist) I’ll get him yet. (He takes his side
of the trunk.)
General English 67
VILLAIN: Oh, for all I care you can put it on your head, or between your
teeth.
COMEDIAN: (sitting up) Look here, are you joking or are you in earnest?
COMEDIAN: Do you really think that because you have the dollar—
VILLAIN: The holy dollar, the almighty dollar, the king of kings.
VILLAIN: You just get up, take the baggage and follow me.
TRAGEDIAN: (dropping his end of the trunk and advancing with a bellicose
68 General English
attitude toward the VILLAIN) And I shall be the first to let your blood, you
scoundrel.
VILLAIN: If that’s the case I have nothing to say to you. Those who wish,
come along.
COMEDIAN: (getting in his way) No, you shall not go until you give up the
dollar.
VILLAIN: He-he-he.
OLD MAN: (dropping his end of the trunk) I’m not going to keep out of a fight.
COMEDIAN: This argument will not work anymore. You are to give the
dollar up to all of us. At the first opportunity we’ll get change and divide it
into equal parts.
COMEDIAN: (to VILLAIN) And I will even be so good as to give you a share.
INGENUE: (to the VILLAIN) I’m sick of you. Give up the dollar.
COMEDIAN: (pushing the HEROINE aside) You better step aside or else you
may get the punch I aim at the master and bread giver. (To the VILLAIN.)
Come up with the dollar!
COMEDIAN: Then we shall tear out what little hair you have left on your
head. The dollar, quick!
[They surround the VILLAIN; the women pull his hair; the TRAGEDIAN grabs
him by the collar and shakes him; the OLD MAN strikes him on his bald pate;
the COMEDIAN struggles with him and finally grasps the dollar.]
TRAGEDIAN: Silence or I’ll shut your mouth. (Goes back to the trunk and
assumes his heroic pose.)
COMEDIAN: (putting the dollar into his pocket) That what I call a successful
and a bloodless revolution, except for a little fright and heart palpitation
on the part of the late master and bread giver.-- Listen, someone is coming.
Perhaps he’ll be able to change the dollar and then we can divide it at once.
OLD MAN: I am puzzled how we can change it into equal parts. (Starts to
calculate with the INGENUE and the OLD WOMAN.)
HEROINE: (tenderly attentive to the COMEDIAN) You are angry with me,
but I was only playing with him so as to wheedle the dollar out of him.
70 General English
[The STRANGER enters from the Right, perceives the company, greets it and
continues his way to left. COMEDIAN stops him.]
COMEDIAN: I beg your pardon, sir; perhaps you have change of a dollar in
dimes, nickels, and pennies. (Showing the dollar. The OLD MAN and women
step forward.)
WOMEN: Hurrah!
STRANGER: (turns so that no one is behind him and pulls his revolver) Hands
up!
COMEDIAN: (in a gentle tone of voice) My dear sir, we are altogether peaceful
folk.
[The STRANGER takes the dollar from the Comedian’s hand and walks
backwards to left with the pistol pointed at the group.]
[He disappears; the actors remain dumb with fear, with their hands up, mouths
wide-open and staring into space.]
CURTAIN
General English 71
Glossary
• Valise: A small travelling bag or suitcase
• Servility: An excessive willingness to serve or please others
• Dilapidated: In a state of disrepair or ruin as a result of age or
neglect
• Contemptuous: Showing contempt; scornful
• Bellicose: Demonstrating aggression and willingness to fight
• Palpitation: A noticeably rapid, strong, or irregular heartbeat due
to agitation
• Earnest: Resulting from or showing sincere and intense conviction
72 General English
Comprehension questions
1. Where is the one act play ‘A Dollar’ set?
2. What drink did the Comedian use to cheer up the characters in
the play?
3. What astonished seven characters in the play?
4. Comment on the ironical end of the story.
5. Discuss the character of Heroine and other female characters.
6. Write the significance of the title.
7. The play portrays the life of actors in the 19th and 20th centuries,
contextualize the play by referring to the historical and socio-
economic status of people of that era.
General English 73
LESSON - 6
A Dog Has Died
-Pablo Neruda
García Márquez once called him “the greatest poet of the 20th century in any
language.”
Glossary:
• Shaggy- Having long, thick, unkempt hair or fur
• Dogdom- The world of dogs or of dog fanciers
• Porcupine- A large rodent with defensive spines or quills on the
body and tail
• Servile- Having or showing an excessive willingness to serve or
please others
• Isla Negra- Is a coastal area in El Quisco commune in central
Chile
Comprehension questions
1. What is the tone of the poem?
2. Where does the speaker bury his dog in the poem?
3. Who is the materialist in the poem?
4. Who waits for the speaker’s arrival in heaven in the poem?
5. Comment on the imagery used in this poem
6. Comment on the theme of the poem.
7. “A dog will teach you unconditional love. If you can have that in
your life, things won’t be too bad” Substantiate.
General English 77
LESSON - 7
Ode To A Grasshopper
-Pedro Pietri
(I hope)
The only reason
That I am this pre-autumn
Afternoon in the privacy
Of my suspicious living room
Grant myself permission
To believe in god once again
Is solely because I saw
An unexpected grasshopper
Staring at my thoughts
On the table that keeps
The telephone from having
A mind of its very own
At first I was startled
And then I was startled less
At the sight of this insect
Put together in green details
To pay me an afternoon visit
39 floors above floor level
In my High Rise Hobo apartment
Miracle on 53rd street
Grasshopper hopped all the way
39 floors above floor level
To deliberately invade my privacy
And I didn’t mind at all
After grasshopper assured me
It didn’t speak English or Spanish
Or Chinese with an Italian accent
So we hit it off right away
You mind your own business
And I will not ask you
Any personal questions aside
78 General English
Notes on poem
This poem is an example of urbanisation and its influences on one’s belief in
the Almighty. The grasshopper’s ‘unexpected visit’ makes the speaker wonder
in the capacities of the Almighty to have sent a grasshopper to the 39th floor
of the apartment. A sharp satire lurks throughout the poem which points out
at an individual’s privacy being invaded by an insect.
Comprehension questions
1. What is the time and season mentioned in the poem?
2. How does the speaker describe his living room and why?
3. What is the significance of the expression ‘To believe in God once
again’ mean?
4. What made the speaker ‘to believe in God once again’?
5. Why is the speaker ‘startled’ in the poem?
6. Mention the significance of the phrase ‘deliberately invade my
privacy.
7. Which is the ‘only grass’ the speaker mentions in the poem? Why
is it used by the poet?
8. Pick out the words and phrases in the poem which mean the
grasshopper’s arrival is unexpected and uninvited.
9. Which are the different languages that the speaker mentions in
the poem and why?
10. Where does the speaker stay?
11. Comment on the speaker’s surprise on seeing a grasshopper.
12. How does the speaker describe the grasshopper’s arrival?
13. Write a note on speaker’s abode.
14. Is the speaker an atheist? Discuss.
15. Why is the speaker surprised to see the grasshopper in his room?
16. Comment on the conclusion the speaker arrives at after seeing
the grasshopper.
17. Which are the two mysteries that the speaker talks about in the
poem? Why are they considered mysteries?
18. Write a note on the satirical tone used in the poem.
General English 81
LESSON - 8
To Autumn
-John Keats
Glossary
• Abroad: Outdoor
• Gleaner: Someone who picks up the grains left in the field by the
harvesters
• Bourn: A boundary, a distant place
• Sallow: A shrubby broad leaved willows having large and
cylindrical like inflorescence
Comprehension questions
1. Who are the bosom friends? What do they do ‘conspiring’ with
each other?
2. Why would the bees think that the warm days will never end?
General English 83
3. Pick out the lines from the poem that describe the images of
blossoming and ripening.
4. Why is the woman sound asleep on a half reaped furrow?
5. How is the gleaner described in the poem?
6. What does the phrase ‘barred clouds bloom the soft dying day’
imply?
7. Why does the poet call autumn as ‘seasons of mist and mellow
fruitfulness’?
8. Describe the agricultural work scenes in the poem ‘To Autumn’.
9. How do animals react to the soft-dying day?
10. Autumn is personified throughout the poem. Justify.
11. The poem is a progression from morning to noon and then to
evening. Explain.
General English 85
LESSON - 9
The Patriot
- Nissim Ezekiel
He was awarded the Sahitya Akademi Award in 1983 for his Poetry collection,
Latter-Day Psalms, by the Sahitya Akademi, India’s National Academy of
Letters. Ezekiel is universally recognized and appreciated as being one of
the most notable and accomplished Indian English language poets of the
20th century, applauded for his subtle, restrained and well-crafted diction,
dealing with common and mundane themes in a manner that manifests
both cognitive profundity, as well as an unsentimental, realistic sensibility,
that has been influential on the course of succeeding Indian English poetry.
Ezekiel enriched and established Indian English language poetry through
General English 87
Glossary
1. Goonda fellow – Rogue element
2. Regeneration - The action or process of regenerating or being
regenerated
3. Remuneration - Money paid for work or a service
4. Contraception - The deliberate use of artificial methods or other
techniques to prevent pregnancy
5. Lassi - A sweet or savoury Indian drink made from a yogurt or
buttermilk base with water
6. Teetotaller - A person who never drinks alcohol
7. Ram Rajya - The rule of righteousness
88 General English
Comprehension questions:
1. What has speeded up the process of change?
2. Whom does the narrator want the people to follow in the second
stanza?
3. On which things is the modern generation focusing in the second
srtanza?
4. Who is a teetotaler in the poem?
5. Write a note on the significance of the title of the poem.
6. What kind of patriotism does the narrator dislike?
7. What efforts does the narrator make in order to become a ‘good’
English speaker?
8. What suggestion does the narrator offer for the ethnic tensions
amongst Indians?
9. Critically evaluate The Patriot.
10. The Patriot can be read in at least two conflicting ways: as a satire
and mockery of the speaker of the poem, and as an affectionate
portrayal of the poem’s speaker. Elucidate.
General English 89
LESSON - 10
The Mad
(Translated from Malayalam by the poet)
- K. Satchidanandan
The mad have no caste
nor religion. They transcend
gender, live outside
ideologies. We do not deserve
their innocence.
Note on poet
Koyamparambath Satchidanandan was born in 1946 in Pulloot, a village in
Kodungallur in the Thrissur District of Kerala. After his early education in
the village school, he studied biology at Christ College, Irinjalakuda and had
his Masters in English from Maharaja’s College, Ernakulam. He obtained his
PhD in post-structuralist poetics from the University of Calicut. He joined
as a lecturer in English at K.K.T.M. College, Pulloot in 1968, and moved to
Christ College in 1970 where he became a Professor of English. He voluntarily
retired from this post in 1992 to take up the editorship of Indian Literature,
the English journal of the Indian National Academy in Delhi. In 1996 he was
nominated Secretary, the chief executive, of the Academy, a post from which
he retired in 2006. Later he served as a Consultant to the Indian Government’s
Department of Higher Education and to the National Translation Mission.
He also worked as Director, School of Translation Studies and Training at the
Indira Gandhi Open University, Delhi. He edited ‘The Katha Library of Indian
Literature’, ‘The Library of South Asian ‘Literature’ and Beyond Borders, a
journal of South Asian literature and ideas.
Note on poem
The poem is all about the unique people on this earth called MAD - ‘The
Mentally Challenged Ones’. He says they have no caste, no creed or no religion
and they are different not like us. They go beyond the gender and live outside
their thinking. We do not deserve their innocence and their language is not to
do with dreams but of the different reality as their love is something like the
moonlight and it happens to flow on the full moon night called POURNAMI.
Their illusions are such that we have not heard of their gods deities; they
are happy and gay shaking their wings like the angels do shrugging their
shoulders in innocence. They feel that even flies have souls and so does the
grasshopper, and also sometimes feel as if they see the trees bleed, lions roar
on the street, heaven gleaming in a kitten’s eyes, just as we do and ants sing
a chorus. They feel like they calm the cyclone over a Mediterranean sea with
their walk sounding a pounding that would calm the sea. The best part is
when it comes to time. Our century is their second and in twenty seconds,
they reach Jesus Christ and give another six they are with Lord Buddha. They
walk restless as if the earth is boiling but remember ‘ The mad are not mad
like us’.
Glossary
• Transcend : Go beyond the range or limits of
• Ideologies: An ideology is a set of opinions or beliefs of a group or
an individual
• Gleaming: Shine brightly, especially with reflected light.
• Patting: Touch quickly and gently with the flat of the hand.
• Taming: To subdue, to calm or to control.
92 General English
Comprehension questions
1. Who is the speaker? Who is he talking about?
2. What does the speaker mean when he says ‘they transcend gender
and live outside ideologies’?
3. What does the phrase ‘another reality’ mean?
4. Explain the phrase ‘Big Bang’ in the sixth stanza.
5. Do you think the speaker dislikes mad people? Justify your
answer.