The Kuttippuram Bridge
The Kuttippuram Bridge
The Kuttippuram Bridge
Kannur University
Common Course
Readings on Kerala (1A02ENG)
1. How does the narrator contrast the river and the newly constructed bridge?
The narrator contrasts the river and the newly constructed bridge by feeling proud of
standing on the bridge and elating at the height of the material development of
modernization. The poet experiences elation or joy at being so high while standing on
the bridge. The kingfisher and sparrows the poet observed while dipping in the river
as a child only achieved this height. The narrator is in awe of the ability of the human
being to construct such a powerful symbol of victory over nature. However, this
proud feeling is short-lived.
6. What are the similes, metaphors, and images used by the narrator to represent
mechanised development?
A simile is a figure of speech that is used to compare one thing with another. In "The
Kuttippuram Bridge" the poet uses several samples of similes. For example, his use of
a spinning top to explain the state of the hill named Anthimahakalan Kunnu in the
aftermath of modernization is a simile. Metaphor is a figure of speech, which is
applied to a word or action to which it is not related out of the poetic context. For
example, the poet addresses the village as his playmate. Images such as soot, cement,
and steel reigning over flowers, and the river Perar turning into a reeking drain are
used to convey the destruction and damage caused by the mechanised development.
Appreaciation
The poem, which was written in the wake of the construction of a bridge
across the River Nila, is an expression of the poet’s anxiety and uncertainty
about the process of modernisation that is slowly invading the rural world
around the poet. The bridge here symbolizes modernity.
The poet is nostalgic about a pre-industrialized agrarian past when everyone
was living in tune with the nature, around the banks of Nila/Perar. However,
as urbanization encroached upon the villages, people are alienated from
nature. This idea can be seen in the lines describing the past in which the
poet used to play poothankol whereas at present the poet stands still with his
eyes fixed on the river below.
In the first few stanzas of the poem, the poet tells us the construction of the
bridge, and the proud feeling he has upon the human achievement. In the
fourth stanza, he expresses the fear he has about the riverbank that it maybe
washed away. In the subsequent stanzas, he reminiscences his childhood, of
growing up in the riverbank, the playmate, i.e. the river. He worries that all that
constituted the village life, the river, the kavu, the pipal tree, songs of the
ploughman, everything will be destroyed by the advances of urbanization. In
the last few stanzas of the poem, the poet warns the results of urbanization
and how it is going to affect the life of the people.
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In the final stanza of the poem, the visionary poet laments the state of human
beings in the future as,