I still remember that wet evening as I stood on the elegant staircase of CBT on Bahadurshah Zafar Marg and animatedly discussed the new book about to be released by Viking. The year was 1992 and I was talking to Urvashi Butalia, the known fiery writer and publisher and one of the owners of Kali for Women.
She asked me with a smile on her face, ‘You must’ve heard of Beastly Tales?’
‘No, I haven’t,’ I answered with a pinch of regret for sounding so out-of-date, and added, ‘not another of the story book launches by CBT, is it?’
‘It is a fabulous poetry volume by Vikram Seth. Read the papers, Arvind.’
Well, those were the non-PC and non-internet days and we all depended solely on the daily newspapers, the weekly and the monthly magazines, and the discussions on wet staircases! So when I reached home, I took out the past week’s papers and scanned them and read whatever there was to read on the new poetry volume by Vikram Seth. The next day I called up the publisher and asked him when he would be getting copies of this book.
‘In a week’s time,’ the clerk there said.
‘Ok. I’d like to book a copy please.’
Having so many friends in the publishing circle, I got a heavenly discount of thirty percent and paid seventy rupees for a thin hard-bound volume of ten poems!
‘Is this book really worth this much?’ asked my wife as I handed her the book in the evening.
‘Poems?’ remarked Pushkin, my son, ‘I love poems.’ Yes, he was around seven years old and loved to read books… all sorts of books. The three of us did not sleep that night. I was reading… and my wife and my son listened. There were short snack breaks and tea-n-milk breaks, and there was not a single poem left unread. All ten were read aloud… many times.
My voice is probably only less than half as powerful and tone-filled as it was then, but this video has me reciting a few lines from the book. Watch the video and begin your love affair with these great poems:
What is it that is so enticing and irresistible about these poems? Are the tetrameter couplets responsible for the euphoria that these poems raise even now after so many years? Are the witty drawings by Ravi Shankar the reason behind the popularity of this 4th book of poetry by Vikram Seth? Has the availability of audio books in Naseeruddin Shah’s voice made them ageless and immortal? Whatever be the reason, I know I still love reading these poems aloud… and my wife still loves hearing me recite these poems. We still love the ‘gibble-gabble, gibble-gabble’ of the hare, the ‘Ed, and Ned, and Fred’ of the tortoise, the hapless nightingale… and all the other charming animals in the poems in this book. Reading these poems aloud itself makes this book the world’s best for me! By the way, I also love reciting the poems of Harivansh Rai Bachhan… but we leave that to another day, another review.
We were on the subject of the charm that a Vikram-treated tetrameter might hold. Well, ‘the meter does not always gallop Dr. Seuss-style, but awkward lines are rare’ writes Stephen O. Murray in a review. Murray goes on give us a pithy bird’s eye view of the role of animals in these poems and writes that ‘the content generally makes me smile with one clever and/or resourceful animal in each tale, including a monkey (having to manage an ungrateful crocodile), a mouse (doing extended battle with a snake that swallowed its friend), a goat bluffing wolves, a cat outwitting a fox (to save the cat’s friend, a not very bright rooster), a beetle (avenging its rabbit friend cruelly decapitated by an eagle), and a frog (avenging itself on a nightingale who produced more beautiful sound). The Tragopan becomes a martyr, though its comrade, the elephant may prevail in the longest of the tales where a confederation of wildlife opposes humans building a dam and flooding their habitat.’
For the yet uninitiated, this trim little volume has ten tales in poetry and two come from India, two from China, two from Greece, two from Ukraine, and two, as the author puts it ‘came directly to me from the Land of Gup.’
The stories are all recognizable, but the versions are all Vikram’s own… he has gone and created sensual dialogue to synchronise with a tetrameter scheme, made up encounters that add zest and spice to whatever is happening within a story, concocted a modern twist wherever he was able to and presented another immortal version of commonly known tales!
During interviews, Vikram Seth has admitted that his decision to write this Jungle book fable was an impulsive one, prompted by a hot, sleepy day. He says: “I decided to write a summer story involving mangoes and a river. By the time I had finished writing ‘The Crocodile and the Monkey’, another story and other animals had begun stirring in my mind. And so it went on until all ten of these beastly tales were born”
Here is an excerpt from the first tale in the book, ‘The crocodile and the monkey’, and you have no alternative but to fall madly in love with the flowing rhythm that is there in the lines:
All along the river-bank
Mango trees stood rank on rank,
And his monkey friend would throw
To him as he swam below
Mangoes gold and ripe and sweet
As a special summer treat.
“Crocodile, your wife, I know
Hungers after mangoes so
That she’d pine and weep and swoon,
Mango-less in burning June”
Then Kuroop the crocodile,
Gazing upwards with a smile,
Thus addressed his monkey friend:
“Dearest monkey, in the end,
Not the fruit, but your sweet love,
Showered on us from above,
Constant through the changing years,
Slakes her griefs and dries her tears.”
(This was only partly true.
She liked love, and mangoes too.)…’
I am not surprised to have read a review on the net where one reader proudly admits that ‘no one my age would have gotten past 7th grade without parroting Seth’s ‘The Frog and the Nightingale’ in Book A of English in CBSE curriculum.’
Srikanth Mantravadi, another reader, has commented on the poetry writing talent of Vikram Seth, and writes: ‘All the bloated prose-when he writes fiction, melds into pithy turns of exquisite phrase. They are incredibly rhythmic and sing song and a pure joy to read even without the little denouements he packs in at the end.’
I remember once while we were talking about the poetry of Vikram Seth, one rather critical journalist said, ‘What’s so great about these tales? He has just borrowed them and put them in his own words. They aren’t original.’
Well, ‘the tales may be borrowed, but Seth’s authority is stamped all over. Seth’s rendition of the story still remains the same: the coaxing prowess of women and need to keep head over shoulders when in danger. With Seth’s touch, the Panchtantra tale comes out more suave and literally tastier.’ (Rakesh 2011)
Here is another excerpt from ‘The Hare and the Tortoise’, a tale that most of us know so well, and yet as you read these lines you will want to read them again and again and again… they mesmerize you, take you on a ride a strange land where the animals appear so real and the tale suddenly becomes much more readable and you murmur: ‘Let me read this just one more time!’
“After the announcer’s gun
Had pronounced that he had won,
And the cheering of the crowd
Died at last, the tortoise bowed,
Clasped the cup with quiet pride,
And sat down, self-satisfied.
And he thought: “That silly hare!
So much for her charm and flair.
So much for her idle boast.
In her cup I’ll raise a toast
To hard work and regularity.
Silly creature! Such vulgarity!
Now she’ll learn that sure and slow
Is the only way to go –
That you can’t rise to the top
With a skip, a jump, a hop
That you’ve got to hatch your eggs,
That you’ve got to count our legs,
That you’ve got to do your duty,
Not depend on verve and beauty.
When the press comes, I shall say
That she’s been shell-shocked today!
What a well-deserved disgrace
That the fool has lost this race.”
But it was in fact the hare,
With a calm insouciant air
Like an unrepentant bounder,
Who allured the pressmen round her.
“Oh Miss Hare, you’re so appealing
When you’re sweating,” said one, squealing.
“You have tendered gold and booty
To the shrine of sleep and beauty,”
Breathed another, overawed;
And Will Wolf, the great press lord
Filled a Gold cup – on a whim –
With huge rubies to the brim
Gorgeous rubies, bold and bright,
Red as cherries, rich with light –
And with an inviting grin
Murmured: “In my eyes you win.”
Rachel Redford has written in The Observer, Sunday 30 December 2001: ‘Whatever the simmering subtext, the overall mood is great fun, enlivened with character voices, from a prima donna hare to the wheedling, nasal singing of a cat.’
The poems go on and meander through every conceivable emotion that one can think of… you have all of them expressed through the economy of a poem, and that is what makes this work really brilliant. Just read these lines from ‘The Frog and the Nightingale’ and you will sympathise with ‘the poor gullible bird, completely deceived and exploited by the pompous frog, finally leading to her death’:
Trembling, terrified to fail,
Blind with tears, the nightingale
Heard him out in silence, tried,
Puffed up, burst a vein, and died.
These poems complete or in parts, have been read by a lot of us… and a lot of children all over the world are reading these lines even now as you are reading this review. It is these people who know how much this book deserves more formal recognition than it has actually received so far. There are mothers who want to read these poems out to their yet-to-be-born child, there are those who swear that this book is for all ages and for all times, and there are those who write inspired fan poetry for this book… the pictures below are proof of what I say.
Che, a writer and analyst, writes that ‘this book would be worth its very meagre price for its Illustrations alone. Each one precedes a poem and beautifully captures its quirky characters. Although these characters are elephants and cats and wolves and mice, their souls are unmistakably human. Seth uses these timeless fables to bare our darkest side to us. There isn’t always a happy ending here and almost never a ‘moral-of-the-story’, yet there is always an amazing insight into the most bewildering of all creatures. Humans.’
The inside cover on the book in my hands begins with this sentence: ‘From the impish to the brilliantly comic, Vikram Seth’s animal fables in verse can (like Diwali sweets) be enjoyed by young and old alike.’ I will not only agree with this, but also say that it those things that are enjoyed most that need to be treasured most. The obvious implication is that it is the treasured things that deserve the loudest applause, the grandest award, and the best smile!
Details of the book:
Title: Beastly Tales from Here and There
Author: Vikram Seth
Publisher: Viking
ISBN: 0-67-084657-0
Price (in 1992): Rs 100/- only for the Hardbound volume
A short note on Vikram Seth:
Born: 1952. Lots of people do not know that Vikram Seth did his schooling from the Doon School, Dehradun. Also studied at Oxford, Stanford, and Nanjing Universities. Been a research scholar in Economic Demography.
List of awards already received by Vikram Seth:
1983 – Thomas Cook Travel Book Award for From Heaven Lake: Travels Through Sinkiang and Tibet
1985 – Commonwealth Poetry Prize (Asia) for The Humble Administrator’s Garden
1993 – Irish Times International Fiction Prize (shortlist) for A Suitable Boy
1994 – Commonwealth Writers Prize (Overall Winner, Best Book) for A Suitable Boy
1994 – WH Smith Literary Award for A Suitable Boy
1999 – Crossword Book Award for An Equal Music
2001 – EMMA (BT Ethnic and Multicultural Media Award) for Best Book/Novel for An Equal Music
2005 – Pravasi Bharatiya Samman
2007 – Padma Shri in Literature & Education
Arvind Passey
07 July 2012
44 comments
Rickie Khosla says:
Jul 7, 2012
You know what I love even more than your delightful prose describing a book of poems? Or the sheer and uncontained joy that is evident when you write about it? And my serendipity of finding something wonderful to read on a lazy, cloudy ‘monsoony’ Saturday morning? It is to see the names of you, Sangeeta-ji and your son on the book, which has obviously been cherished for 11 long years! It’s like each of you wanted to mark an equal share of ownership on something that is beyond value or claim.
Cheers for a great review! 🙂
Arvind Passey says:
Jul 7, 2012
The book has been with us for around twenty years now… and has been opened and read for umpteen times.
Thank you for your kind words… will help me as I write more reviews.
🙂
Rickie Khosla says:
Jul 7, 2012
Sorry, I did mean to type 20 (21, actually)! Just thought I’ll correct that on record lest people think I am totally daft when it comes to even simple maths (which may or may not be true!). Hahahah…
Arvind Passey says:
Jul 7, 2012
🙂
Priyanka Dey says:
Jul 7, 2012
wow!
I have grown up listening to these fables from my granny and the Monkey and the crocodile was so much fun! This one truly deserves a lot more!!
I love the review simply because I feel excited reading it..It is simple and yet it brings out the qualities of the book like no other! 🙂 Thumbs Up!
Arvind Passey says:
Jul 7, 2012
Yes, these are tales I have heard when I was a child… and then Pushkin also read them all in kiddy books. Seth’s volume worked wonders… we fell in love with the book — and with his tetrameter poetry. Even I wrote quite a few poems with accurate syllabic count after I read his poetry.
Priyanka Dey says:
Jul 7, 2012
Oh! I would love to sit and hear you reciting some of them to me someday soon Passey Sir! 😀
Loved the video! Gibble gabble..Gibble gabble! 😀
Arvind Passey says:
Jul 7, 2012
Any time… even today I was reading them aloud to myself. But then, when you know a camera is ON, you do tend to become a bit formal… extra expressions, long gaps, and repetitions somehow get missed. But they do add charm to any poetry reading.
Mayuri Chaoji says:
Jul 7, 2012
wow…I wasn’t reading it….I felt like was sitting right beside you and your family and sharing the joyous experience with a imaginary blissful cup of tea in hand…u added life to the book with your review 🙂
Arvind Passey says:
Jul 7, 2012
The book has actually given me a life… these poems are indeed ‘timeless’. Any compliment coming from those who themselves write well is always a pleasure… thank you! 🙂
Akanksha says:
Jul 7, 2012
I think a review has done its job well, if it prompts the reader to go ahead and buy a book.I’m writing this comment, after ordering it from Flipkart 🙂 So, you know you’ve done it right 🙂
I remember The monkey and the crocodile, and The frog and the nightingale.I had fallen in love with those timeless beauties, while in school 🙂 And now, just can’t wait to read them, all over again <3
Loved the video and the pictures.They make you realize that the review is straight from the heart, and how much you enjoyed reading the book, over and over again!
Arvind Passey says:
Jul 7, 2012
As I told you on FB, you won’t ever regret buying this book. I love all my books, but this one is a special one as it has a lot of memories attached to it.
Nice to read that you liked the video… truth is I wasn’t happy with my reading and I wasn’t pleased with my video-editing either. But then I suppose I can’t do more than this on a 1GM RAM PC!! 🙂
Nandini Garg says:
Jul 7, 2012
Impressive, fulgent and adept Vikram Seth’s poetry,
You have provided a review that justifies all of its worthy.
The tales of the morals and diversity of the jungle,
The review you provided has made/will make everyone into the book mingle.
I was gifted this book by my Mami few years back, and loved reading it!
And the review you have provided is simply blazing! 🙂
Cheers @Arvind Sir! 🙂
Arvind Passey says:
Jul 7, 2012
Loved the quaint rhyme that you’ve dedicated to this review, Nandini. Let me tell you a small true story… that very year, Pushkin (my son) did memorise one of the poems in the book and recited it in one of the children’s workshops in CBT (Children’s Book Trust) library and got a prize from Manorama Jaffa. We had abridged that poem a bit so that it gets easier for him to memorise… and the poem was: The louse and the mosquito.
The edit marks are still there in the book.
Hemant says:
Jul 8, 2012
Your review made me think of going ahead and buy this book…nice one..and all the best for IBL…
Arvind Passey says:
Jul 8, 2012
Thank you Hemant… these poems will surely win your heart many times! 🙂
Sandeep says:
Jul 8, 2012
What a sincere, passionate review! I mean, I was hearing a man talk about a book of poems, but I was listening to the sound of a heart beating with passion for literature! The honesty just jumps off across the page. And what I liked best was the video, that is a nice touch that I’ll try to incorporate in my blog in future. This post is bookmarked in my browser. Superlative Sir!
Arvind Passey says:
Jul 8, 2012
Thank you, Sandeep… hope to keep reading your comments on future posts too. Yes, the inclusion of a video does add value to a review — however, this isn’t always possible. Nice to know that people actually click and watch the included video too.
Binoy says:
Jul 8, 2012
This is a review right from the heart. Loved your passion, innovation and creativity. The video, the photographs and the carefully measured words really makes this a winning entry and am sure has inspired many (like myself) to grab a copy of it ASAP.
Hats off to you Passey Sir!!!
And all the best for IBL..
Arvind Passey says:
Jul 13, 2012
Well, Binoy, this was indeed one review that I had always been intending to write some day… happy that the day came at a time when I could send it across to a wide section of people. Otherwise, reviews of books from the past are hardly ever noticed and read.
Thank you for your kind words.
Fatima says:
Jul 8, 2012
When I started reading, I did not expect that a review could be this sincere and heartwarming. The way you’ve described the beauty of Beastly Tales touched me immensely so much that I’m looking forward to buy and read this book!
Your subtle but intimate touches have left a mark of their own and I’m really falling short of words Sir.
Wishing you my wishes for IBL ! 🙂
Arvind Passey says:
Jul 13, 2012
Truth is, I wish the IBL judges were as intuitively matured as most of the commentators here seem to be… but then, their opinion really does not matter. What matters is the opinion of those who read this review and liked it.
Thank you for your appreciation, Fatima. 🙂
Aalooran Rahman Bora says:
Jul 9, 2012
I would love to read the book, and visit the wonderland again. The tales I used to hear from my GrandPa. The celebration of the greener days, when Animals were still telling some morals to us. And the simple celebration of their heroism. Yes, the book is a must read. But your narration about the book is as much joyful as the stories in the book.
Arvind Passey says:
Jul 13, 2012
Thank you Aalooran… and I do love getting to know you because of IBL. 🙂
The Fool says:
Jul 9, 2012
Very interesting – both the book and your reviews. I am amazed how interestingly you do reviews. And I liked the concept of this book personally- because I am also now trying to retell old stories in my own way.
Arvind Passey says:
Jul 13, 2012
Now this is wonderful news, TF… would love to be among the first to know when you get your collection done and published.
Thank you for your appreciative words.
Sudeshna Das says:
Jul 9, 2012
The only book of poetry I have successfully finished so far is Gitanjali. And that was because I was spell-bound by every word in it. And now, your review really makes me want to read this one. 🙂
Best wishes from Kolkata Knight Writers!
Arvind Passey says:
Jul 13, 2012
Well, it is always nice to read words coming from you as I know they too are coming straight from the heart, Sudeshna. And thanks for your wishes. 🙂
Anjali Garg says:
Jul 10, 2012
This is an exhaustive review! Loved it and I love Vikram seth. Will make it a point to read this book 🙂
Arvind Passey says:
Jul 13, 2012
Yes, do that Anjali… this is surely one book that will rise to become your favourite within minutes of your opening it. Read the tales aloud… with passion… and even the listeners will fall in love… 🙂
Poorvi says:
Jul 11, 2012
I find the review interesting 🙂 but I have never been amazed by Vikram Seth. My first attempt was ‘A suitable boy’. I still remember every time I went to buy it, saw the Rs. 549 tag and came back disheartened – only to realize that I dint like the author’s outlook after I read it. I also happen to read ‘Two Lives’ which was a better read for me than my previous attempt. I haven’t read this one but may be a try will be good..
Arvind Passey says:
Jul 13, 2012
‘A Suitable Boy’ was written in the way ‘Eugene Onegin’ by Alexander Pushkin was written… even I have the book with me and even I haven’t read it completely. But then there are so many books in my personal library that I haven’t read at all… and one of these days, I’m going to leave everything and just get down to reading all of them.
Nice to know that you liked my review. 🙂
Salty says:
Jul 13, 2012
Great to read a detailed review of Beastly Tales, one of my favourite books too. I wish someone would make librettos out of them since Seth himself doesn’t seem to be doing it unlike his recent Rivered Bed.
These tales would make excellent librettos for children to perform.
I liked the ‘crocodile and the monkey’ so much that I did a full translation of it in my limited Bengali in my blog. The immense joy of simply rewriting that in Bengali speaks volumes for Seth’s craft of fluid story-telling in verse without compromising with the meter/syllabic structure.
Prateek says:
Jul 23, 2012
Great Review. Thanks for sharing.
I remember being really awed by his poem -‘A doctor’s Journal entry for August 6, 1945; when i read it while in school.
Hope to get hold of this collection asap. 🙂
Rituraj Verma says:
Aug 20, 2012
Hi,
I liked your blog. I thought that we could do a few cross blog things.
Would you be interested in reviewing my new book “Love, Peace and Happiness:What more can you want?”
I could do an author interview on yours. I could also post your review on my fanpage referenced below which has more than 10,000 fans giving you a whole new set of visitors.
Let me know if this makes sense for your blog.
Rituraj Verma, author
http://www.facebook.com/BookLPH
http://www.riturajverma.com/blog
email:riturajverma2005@gmail.com
Arvind Passey says:
Sep 5, 2012
Thank you for your words of appreciation, Rituraj.
Yes, I’d love to read… and possibly review your book. You’re welcome to send a copy to me. My contact details are there on my Facebook profile… or please write to me: arvindpassey@gmail.com
Uma Anandane says:
Nov 11, 2012
Loved loved the poetic lines of Vikram Seth .And you have gone forward to recite the same in a video .A must read !
Arvind Passey says:
Nov 23, 2012
Yes, you’ll certainly love reading and re-reading this book of poems… this volume is one of the prized ones in my collection at home.
Saurabh Chawla says:
Apr 14, 2015
Read many reviews and started book reviews myself as well but this is a great review Arvind sir 🙂 Surely I would enjoy the poems in the book by Vikram Seth. Cheers 🙂
Arvind Passey says:
Apr 22, 2015
Thank you buddy… beleive me, the poems in this book are indeed memorable. I love going through them often. Thanks for coming over and reading my posts. Do visit again.
mahita says:
May 25, 2015
no too much animal death
Arvind Passey says:
May 25, 2015
Haven’t really understood what you are trying to tell me…
Sahil Gupta says:
Jul 6, 2015
At first glance, this seems to be a children’s book.
But all of these poems carry a deep meaning, which is meant to be read and understood by all.
Beastly Tales by Vikram Seth is truly a great anthology of poems.
PS: The Frog and The Nightingale is in the 10th class curriculum now.
Arvind Passey says:
Jul 13, 2015
Well, this book is my all-time favorite and it surely is NOT just for kids. 🙂