Michael Madhusudan Dutt

Michael Madhusudan Dutt
Native name মাইকেল মধুসূদন দত্ত
Born (1824-01-25)25 January 1824
Sagardari, Jessore District, Bengal Presidency, British India
Died 29 June 1873(1873-06-29) (aged 49)
Calcutta, Bengal Presidency, British India
Resting place Lower Circular Road Cemetery
Occupation Writer
Nationality British Indian
Ethnicity Bengali
Genre Poet, playwright
Subject Literature
Literary movement Bengal Renaissance
Spouse Rebecca Thompson McTavish (m. 1848–1873)
Partner Emilia Henrietta Sophie White (Partner 1855?–1873)
Children
  • McTavish Dutt
  • Henrietta Elizabeth Sermista (1859-February 15, 1879)
  • Frederick Michael Milton (July 23, 1861- June 11, 1875)
  • Albert Napoleon (1869- August 22, 1909)
Relatives
  • Rajnarayan Dutt (father)
  • Jahnabi Devi (mother)

Michael Madhusudan Dutt, or Michael Madhusudan Dutta (Bengali: মাইকেল মধুসূদন দত্ত ( Maikel Modhushudôn Dôtto ); 25 January 1824 – 29 June 1873) was a popular 19th-century Bengali poet and dramatist.[1] He was a pioneer of Bengali drama.[2] His famous work Meghnad Bodh Kavya, is a tragic epic. It consists of nine cantos and is exceptional in Bengali literature both in terms of style and content. He also wrote poems about the sorrows and afflictions of love as spoken by women.

Dutta is widely considered to be one of the greatest poets in Bengali literature and the father of the Bengali sonnet. He pioneered what came to be called Amitrakshar chhanda (blank verse). Although his first love remained poetry, Dutt showed prodigious skill as a playwright. He was the first to write Bengali plays in the English style, segregating the play into acts and scenes. He was also the pioneer of the first satirical plays in Bengali – Buro Shaliker Ghare Ron (Bengali - বুড়ো শালিকের ঘাড়ে রো) and Ekei Ki Boley Sabyota (Bengali - একেই কি বলে সভ্যতা?)".[3]

Early life and education

He was born in Sagordari, a village in Keshabpur Upazila, Jessore District of Undivided Bengal (now Bangladesh). His father was Rajnarayan Dutt, a pleader in the Sudder court,[4] and his mother was Jahnabi Devi. His childhood education started in a village named Shekpura, at an old mosque, where he went to learn Persian. He was an exceptionally talented student. Since his childhood, Dutt was recognised by his teachers and professors as being a precocious child with a gift of literary expression. He was very imaginative. Early exposure to English education and European literature at home and in Kolkata inspired him to emulate the English in taste, manners and intellect. An early influence was his teacher at Hindu College, Calcutta, David Lester Richardson. Richardson was a poet and inspired in Dutt a love of English poetry, particularly Byron.

Dutt began writing English poetry aged around 17 years, sending his works to publications in England, including Blackwood's Magazine and Bentley's Miscellany. They were however, were never published.[5] It was also the time he began correspondence with his friend, Gour Das Bysack, which today form the bulk of the source on his life.

As a young student, Dutt was influenced by the thoughts and actions of the Young Bengal - a movement by a group of illustrious former students of the Hindu College (now Presidency College) in Calcutta (now Kolkata) against the atrocities, blind beliefs and customs they held as illogical, prevalent in the Hindu society of 19th century Bengal. Dutta, a student of Hindu College himself, aspired to be an English poet and longed to travel to England to gain fame. When his father, concerned by these trends, arranged his marriage, he rebelled. One aspect of his rebellion involved conversion to Christianity.

In his own words

Where man in all his truest glory lives,
And nature's face is exquisitely sweet;
For those fair climes I heave impatient sigh,
There let me live and there let me die.[1]

  1. ^ Dipesh Chakrabarty (15 February 2001). Provincializing Europe: Postcolonial Thought and Historical Difference (New Edition). Princeton University Press. pp. 33–. ISBN 978-0-691-13001-9. Retrieved 9 October 2012. 

Madhusudan embraced Christianity[6] at the Old Mission Church in spite of the objections of his parents and relatives on 9 February 1843. He did not take the name Michael until his marriage in 1848.[5]

He describes the day as:

Long sunk in superstition's night,
By Sin and Satan driven,
I saw not, cared not for the light
That leads the blind to Heaven.
But now, at length thy grace, O Lord!
Birds all around me shine;
I drink thy sweet, thy precious word,
I kneel before thy shrine![1]

  1. ^ Mitra, Zinia, ed. (2012). Indian Poetry in English: Critical Essays. PHI Learning Pvt. Ltd. p. 32. ISBN 8120345711. 

He had to leave Hindu College on account of being a convert. In 1844, he resumed his education at Bishop's College, where he stayed for three years.[5]

In 1847, he moved to Madras due to severe family tensions and economic hardship, having been disinherited by his father.[7] While in Madras, he stayed in the Black Town neighbourhood,[5] and began working as an "usher" at the Madras Male Orphan Asylum. Four years later, in 1851, he became a Second Tutor in the Madras University High School.[7] In addition, he edited and assisted in editing the periodicals, Madras Circulator and General Chronicle, Athenaeum, Spectator and Hindoo Chronicle.[5]

Literary life

Early works (1849-1855)[5][7]

Dutt was greatly influenced by the works of William Wordsworth and John Milton. Dutt was a spirited bohemian and Romantic.

During his stay in Madras, he published such works as King Porus, The Captive Ladie (1849) - centered around King Prithviraj's elopement with the princess of Kannuaj- and Visions of the Past. The Hurkaru, a prominent periodical at the time gave the self-published The Captive Ladie unfavaorable reviews, and was in Madhusudan's own words, "was somewhat severe". John Elliot Drinkwater Bethune, the then President of the Council of Education, was full of praise for the octosyllabic in his letter to Bysack, and advised Dutt to "employ the taste and talents, which he has cultivated by the study of English, in improving the standard, and adding to the stock of the poetry of his own language."

Under the pseudonym, Timothy Penpoem, he published his poems in the periodicals he edited.

Calcutta Years (1858-1862)[5][7]

The period during which he worked as a head clerk and later as the Chief Interpreter in the court, marked his transition to writing in his native Bengali, following the advice of Bethune and Bysack. He wrote 5 plays: Sermista (1859), Padmavati (1859), Ekei Ki Boley Sabyata (1860), Krishna Kumari (1860) and Buro Shaliker Ghare Ron (1860). Then followed the narrative poems: Tilottama Sambhava Kavya (1861), Meghnad Badh Kavya (1861), Brajagana Kavya (1861) and Veerangana Kavya (1861). He also translated three plays from Bangla to English, including his own Sermista.

Meghnad Badh Kavya, The Slaying of Meghnad, the story of the final fight and demise of Meghnad, the eldest son of Ravana, is unanimously hailed as his magnum opus, although his journey to publication and recognition was far from smooth. However, with its publication, he distinguished himself as a serious composer of an entirely new genre of heroic poetry, that was Homeric and Dantesque in technique and style, and yet so fundamentally native in theme. To cite the poet himself: "I awoke one morning and found myself famous." Nevertheless, it took a few years for this epic to win recognition all over the country.

Final years (1866-1873)[5][7]

A volume of his Bangla sonnets was published in 1866. His final play, Maya Kannan, was written in 1872. The Slaying of Hector, his prose version of the Iliad remains incomplete.

Linguistic abilities

Madhusudan was a gifted linguist[8] and polyglot.[9] He studied Hebrew, Latin, Greek, Tamil, Telugu, and Sanskrit.[5][10]

Work with the sonnet

He dedicated his first sonnet to his friend Rajnarayan Basu, which he accompanied with a letter: "What say you to this, my good friend? In my humble opinion, if cultivated by men of genius, our sonnet in time would rival the Italian."[11] His most famous sonnet is Kapatakkha River.

Always, o river, you peep in my mind.
Always I think you in this loneliness.
Always I soothe my ears with the murmur
Of your waters in illusion, the way
Men hear songs of illusion in a dream.
Many a river I have seen on earth;
But which can quench my thirst the way you do?
You’re the flow of milk in my homeland’s breasts.
Will I meet you ever? As long as you
Go to kinglike ocean to pay the tax
Of water, I beg to you, sing my name
Into the ears of people of Bengal,
Sing his name, o dear, who in this far land
Sings your name in all his songs for Bengal.

When Dutt later stayed in Versailles, the sixth centenary of the Italian poet Dante Alighieri was being celebrated all over Europe. He composed a poem in honour of the poet, translated it into French and Italian, and sent it to the king of Italy. Victor Emmanuel II, then monarch, liked the poem and wrote to Dutt, saying, "It will be a ring which will connect the Orient with the Occident."[12]

Work in blank verse

Sharmistha (spelt as Sermista in English) was Dutt's first attempt at blank verse in Bengali literature. Kaliprasanna Singha organised a felicitation ceremony to Madhusudan to mark the introduction of blank verse in Bengali poetry.

Praising Dutt's blank verse, Sir Ashutosh Mukherjee, observed: "As long as the Bengali race and Bengali literature would exist, the sweet lyre of Madhusudan would never cease playing."[13] He added: "Ordinarily, reading of poetry causes a soporific effect, but the intoxicating vigour of Madhusudan's poems makes even a sick man sit up on his bed."[13]

In his The Autobiography of an Unknown Indian, Nirad C. Chaudhuri has remarked that during his childhood days in Kishoreganj, a common standard for testing guests' erudition in the Bengali language during family gatherings was to require them to recite the poetry of Dutt, without an accent.

The street where M Dutt used to live in Versailles, France

Barrister-at-Law

12 Rue Des Chantiers, 78000 Versailles, France – the apartment building where M. Dutt dwelled (photo taken on July 2011)
Residence of Micheal Madhusudhan Dutt in Khidirpur, Kolkata, India

Dutt went to England in 1862 to become a Barrister-at-Law, and enrolled at the Gray's Inn.[5]

On the eve of his departure to England:

Forget me not, O Mother,
Should I fail to return
To thy hallowed bosom.
Make not the lotus of thy memory
Void of its nectar Madhu.[1]
(Translated from the original Bengali by the poet.)

  1. ^ Sri Aurobindo Ashram (February 1961). Mother India. p. 55. Retrieved 9 October 2012. 

His family joined him in 1863, and thereafter they shifted to the much cheaper Versailles, due to the miserable state of their finances. Funds were not arriving from India according to his plans. He was only able to relocate to England in 1865 and study for the bar due to the munificent generosity of Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar. For this, Dutt was to regard Vidyasagar as Dayar Sagar (meaning the ocean of kindness) for as long as he lived. He was admitted to the High Court in Calcutta on his return in February 1867.[5][7] His family followed him in 1869.[4]

His stay in England had left him disillusioned with European culture. He wrote to his friend Bysack from France:

If there be any one among us anxious to leave a name behind him, and not pass away into oblivion like a brute, let him devote himself to his mother-tongue. That is his legitimate sphere his proper element.[14]

Marriage and family

Dutt had refused to enter into an arranged marriage which his father had decided for him. He had no respect for that tradition and wanted to break free from the confines of caste-based endogamous marriage. His knowledge of the European tradition convinced him of the superiority of marriages made by mutual consent (or love marriages).

He was the first Indian to marry an European or Anglo-Indian woman.[4][5] While in Madras he married Indo-Scottish-Britton,[4][5] Rebecca Thompson McTavish,[5] a 17 year-old resident[4] of the Madras Female Orphan Asylum, on 31 July 1848.[5] Dutt assumed the name Michael when the marriage was registered in the baptismal register. They had four children together. He wrote to Bysack in December 1855:

Yes, dearest Gour, I have a fine English Wife and four children.[15]

Dutt returned from Madras to Calcutta in February 1856, after his father's death (in 1855), abandoning his wife and four children in Madras. No records of his divorce from Rebecca or remarriage have been found.[5] In 1858, he was joined there by a 22 year old of French extraction,[4] Emelia Henrietta Sophie White, the daughter of his colleague at the Madras Male Orphan Asylum.[7] They had two sons, Frederick Michael Milton (July 23, 1861- June 11, 1875)[4][10][16] and Albert Napoleon (1869-August 22, 1909),[4][16] and a daughter, Henrietta Elizabeth Sermista[4] (1859- February 15, 1879).[4][7] A fourth child was stillborn.[5] Their relationship lasted until the end of his life, Henrietta pre-deceasing him by three days, on 26 June 1873.[7]

Rebecca died in Madras in July 1892. Only a daughter and a son survived her. The son, McTavish-Dutt, parctised as a pleader in the Court of Small Causes in Madras.[4]

The tennis player Leander Paes is a direct descendant of his- Dutt is his great great grandfather on his mother's side.[17]

Death

Madhusudan died in Calcutta General Hospital on 29 June 1873.[7] Just three days prior to his death, Madhusudan recited a passage from Shakespeare's Macbeth to his dear friend Bysack, to express his deepest conviction of life:

...out, out, brief candle!
Life's but a walking shadow; a poor player,
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage,
And then is heard no more; it is a tale Told by an idiot,
full of sound and fury, Signifying nothing.

Tomb of Michael Madhusudan Dutt

দাঁড়াও পথিক-বর, জন্ম যদি তব
বঙ্গে! তিষ্ঠ ক্ষণকাল! এ সমাধিস্থলে
(জননীর কোলে শিশু লভয়ে যেমতি
বিরাম) মহীর পদে মহা নিদ্রাবৃত
দত্তোকুলোদ্ভব কবি শ্রীমধুসূদন!
যশোরে সাগরদাঁড়ি কবতক্ষ-তীরে
জন্মভূমি, জন্মদাতা দত্ত মহামতি
রাজনারায়ণ নামে, জননী জাহ্নবী
[18]

Recitation of Madhusudan Dutt's Samadhi in Bengali
A 33-second sample recitation of poetry Samadhi

Problems playing this file? See media help.

Legacy and honours

Dutt was largely ignored for 15 years after his death.[19] The belated tribute was a tomb erected at his gravesite.

His epitaph, a verse of his own, reads:

Stop a while, traveller!
Should Mother Bengal claim thee for her son.
As a child takes repose on his mother's elysian lap,
Even so here in the Long Home,
On the bosom of the earth,
Enjoys the sweet eternal sleep
Poet Madhusudan of the Duttas.[1]

  1. ^ "A poet of epic proportions". The Daily Star. Retrieved 23 July 2012. 

Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar said:

Meghnad Badh is a supreme poem.[20]

In the words of Sri Aurobindo:

All the stormiest passions of man's soul he [Madhusudan] expressed in gigantic language.[21]

Major works

See also

References

  1. Michael Madhusudan Dutta : Profile of an Epic Poet Compiled by Aparna Chatterjee
  2. Charles E. Buckland (1999). Dictionary of Indian Biography. Cosmo Publication. pp. 128–. ISBN 978-81-7020-897-6.
  3. "Michael Madhusudan Dutta". Calcuttaweb.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Moreno, H. W. B. (1923). "Michael Madhu Sudhan Dutt & His Anglo-Indian Wives". Journal Of The Calcutta Historical Society. 26 (Bengal Past And Present) via Digital Library of India.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Dutt, Michael Madhusudhan; Seely, Clinton B. (2004). The Slaying of Meghanada: A Ramayana from Colonial Bengal. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 16, 22–23. ISBN 9780195167993 via Google Books.
  6. Bhowmik, Dulal (2012). "Dutt, Michael Madhusudan". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Paranjape, Makarand R. (2012). Making India: Colonialism, National Culture, and the Afterlife of Indian English Authority. Springer. pp. 76–78. ISBN 9789400746602 via Google Books.
  8. Ray, Mohit K., ed. (2007). The Atlantic Companion to Literature in English. Atlantic Publishers & Dist. pp. 154–. ISBN 978-81-269-0832-5.
  9. Ghose, Subhas Chandra (1996). Socio-Political Dynamics. Northern Book Centre. p. 178. ISBN 978-81-7211-070-3. Subhas Chandra Ghose (1 January 1996). Socio-Political Dynamics. Northern Book Centre. p. 178. ISBN 9788172110703.
  10. 1 2 Gibson, Mary Ellis (2011). Indian Angles: English Verse in Colonial India from Jones to Tagore. Ohio University Press. p. 166. ISBN 978-0821419410 via Google Books.
  11. Sri Aurobindo Ashram (February 1961). Mother India. p. 56. Retrieved 9 October 2012.
  12. Ramanial Kanaiyaial Yajnik (1933). The Indian Theatre: Its Origins and Its Later Developments Under European Influence, with Special Reference to Western India. Ardent Media. pp. 219–. GGKEY:WYN7QH8HYJB. Retrieved 9 October 2012.
  13. 1 2 Mother India: Monthly Review of Culture. 13. 1961. p. 57.
  14. Arabinda Poddāra (1970). Renaissance in Bengal: quests and confrontations, 1800–1860. Indian Institute of Advanced Study. p. 216. Retrieved 23 July 2012.
  15. Ghulam Murshid; Gopa Majumdar (30 October 2003). Lured by hope: a biography of Michael Madhusudan Dutt. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-565362-5. Retrieved 9 October 2012.
  16. 1 2 Bose, Amalendu (1979). Makers Of Indian Literature: Michael Madhusudan Dutt. New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi. p. 49.
  17. "I'm waiting for the right opportunity to join politics: Leander Paes - Times of India". Retrieved 2016-08-29.
  18. "Madhusudan Dutta's Samadhi Lipi".
  19. "A Review": Ghulam Murshid, Lured by Hope: A Biography of Michael Madhusudan Dutt, translated from Bengali by Gopa Majumdar, Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 2003. ISBN 0-19-565362-9. Pp 238 + xvi, at Parabaas
  20. "Meghnad, the Protagonist, the Heart of a Rebel Poet and My CHHOTO KAKA". indiatimes.com. Archived from the original on 12 August 2014. Retrieved 22 February 2012.
  21. "Michael Madhusudan Dutt". Sri Chinmoy Library. Retrieved 22 February 2012.

Further reading

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