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4 EDIT SIKKIM EXPRESS, TUESDAY, 25 DECEMBER 2018, GANGTOK Little by little T he name of the game in democracy is to take a step, assess its popularity and implementation, and if found wanting, take one or even two steps back. The implementation of a national tax is no small matter. Never mind the shenanigans and sledging that is part and parcel of Indian political life, the GST remains a great step towards integrating the country. Remember, the Unification of Germany was preceded by a customs union in early nineteenth century, which went a long way in breaking down protectionist barriers and led to the creation of a German nation. So, the decision of the Central government and the GST council on Saturday, to reduce price cuts on 23 items is welcome. The list includes all that is dear to the common man– movie tickets, third party motor insurance, smaller TV sets, power banks, flights for Haj and Mansarovar Yatra and branded frozen vegetables. They are all set to get cheaper. With the latest round of cuts, that become effective from January 1, the government has reduced rates on nearly 360 items since GST was introduced almost 18 months ago. By all indications, there is more to come. At the next meeting in January, the Union Finance Minister and the state finance ministers will look to pare down more items, including the ever important housing. There is a plan afoot to cut rates on under-construction houses, given its importance to the public. The revenue loss likely to accrue from this latest round of cuts is estimated somewhere in the region of Rs 5,500 crore. But when considered against the background of public relief it offers, it is frankly not much. Significantly, of the 23 goods and services whose rates have been slashed, the tax rate on seven items in the 28 per cent slab has been brought down. With this, only 23 goods are left in this high tax bracket. In other words, the 28 per cent slab is now restricted to only luxury and sin goods, apart from auto parts and cements. Obviously, given the high revenue implications, it would be difficult to touch them for the moment. Finance minister Arun Jaitley has a point when he says that rate rationalising in an ongoing process. When GST was introduced, India had one of the most irrational taxation rates anywhere. Most items were charged at 31 per cent so the government had transiently put them at 28 per cent, because an immediate reduction would have impacted social expenditures of the central and state governments. To that extent, the Prime Minister must be credited with keeping his promise of reducing rates as revenues have moved up and affordability has increased. So the common criticism against the government of keeping rates too high at the time of introducing GST is now beginning to wear thin - all in good time. To be sure, some states have objected to the rate cut because it impacts their own revenues. As can be expected, they have demanded that their revenue losses be compensated by the central government. Making the world a kinder place Rhenock School - My Buba Dreamt of Diamond Jubilee Y ear Incarnated THINKING LOCAL RAJIV A SHANKER SHREST A The poet’s poet: Edmund Spenser P AR T -II B esides Dr. Shanti Chettri, a renowned lietterateur, many of his students have excelled later in life. Jamyang Bhutia, Tsering Wangchuk Bhutia, Bedha Nidhi Sharma, Meghnath Sharma, Juddhabir Chettri, Nedup Tsering Bhutia, Hari Prasad Pradhan, Deo Kumar Pradhan are the names that come immediately to my mind who served as teachers apart from Dr. Hari Prasad Chettri, an agriculture graduate turned reputed educationist (Five Ways Tutorials, Himalayan Pharmacy Institute, harkamaya Collge and Greenland School) post retirement. Krishna Pradhan has been serving as Panchayat President and Hukum Chandra Pradhan* was a popular Mandal, while Ganesh Kumar Pradhan of Ram Gauri Sangrahalaya, who was also my student there, has made a name for himself to be honoured by the Government of Sikkim on Independence Day this year for his outstanding contributions to the society. Khamtu Tsering served as a peon with Buba for along time and he has good memories of many of the heads there like PJ Joseph, Geeta Sharma*, Isaac Mukhia, Lachchy Pradhan and many others and what way my Buba excelled those days. Deepa Pradhan (now happily settled down in Maryland, USA), Sita Pradhan* (sister-in-law of Sunder Babu) and Bishnu Kumar Pradhan* (father of illustrious sons like Dhiraj – Managing Director of Denzong Agriculture Co-operative Society, Sunil and Bikram) were lucky from (Khamtu’s batch included Bhagat Gurung also) the class VIII of 1962 to be selected for Bharat Darshan to Delhi and other places and bring home classic books like ‘My Experiment with Truth’ and ‘Discovery of India’ presented to him by the Ministry of Education. Pema Dadi, Nari Tsering, Tsering Gyatso, Topgey Bhutia, Topay Bhutia, Sono Tsering, Hom Nath Sharma*, Binoy Kumar Pradhan*, Shaym Sunder Pradhan, etc. were the students who were good footballers for their school TNA and have contributed much to the State serving the Government in various capacities. Students from the business community Prem*, Omkar, Ram Awatar, Santosh, Keshar, Bijay, Purushottam, Harishchandra, Pawan, Sajjan and many others are all success and most of them have moved away to Siliguri (Balaji Logistics, Sikkim Plaza) besides to the capital Gangtok (Beekay Hardware and its branches from the original Banwarilal Omkarmal of Rhenock), Pakyong and other places. Even children of the teachers there like P. K. Pradhan viz., Sushila, Kumar, Sabina and others have served and retired from this School. To top them all is the present Principal Suren Pradhan from home GPU Aritar. He has the rare honour to head the Rhenock Senior Secondary School to bring in unprecedented major changes to an entirely new look to the premises with a beautiful huge modern auditorium, school and hostel buildings awaiting inauguration soon. Best to remember that rose in the political scenario to represent the constituency and become our own Area MLA is the present incumbant Bikram Pradhan also from the home GPU Aritar, who has made a niche for himself and proved to be a popular figure not only among the youth but old alike. Remote GPU of the constituency, Lower Khamdong adjoining Lingsey Simana in West Bengal border is happy getting new link roads being recently approved and tendered after years together of neglect. What could he do the best for the Rhenock School was black- topping of the approach road though a small stretch of a few hundred meters but had to wait all these years till 2017 when much water flowed down the Reshi and Rorathang rivers with many of the political leaders from the area utterly failed in this regard. Water supply provided by the PHE connection has also reached recently there in Kingston the far end of the Aritar GPU and better flow of development is expected here by all. Not only the School but the adjoining areas also look forward for better days with boost in tourism like in other places in Aritar known known for Lampokhari Tourist Festival (under the patronage of Dhiraj, Bikram and many others) every April bringing in increased number of visitors each year. Rhenock though late in getting the recognition as a senior secondary school, is proud to have a Government College besides a private senior secondary level school and many other schools to feed ever increasing hunger for better and higher education of the present youth who have aspirations to reach the sky in this competitive world that has turned out to be a global village due to internet connectivity expected to improve in near future. With these developments taking place not only the soul of the founder-members of the School Managing Committee with my Buba as the beloved Head Sir but of all who were behind establishing and raising it directly or indirectly, each contributing their best as students, teachers and parents to the present status of the Rhenock School reincarnated way back since 1958 would feel their dreams fullfilled and all their blessings from heaven go on showered to them on their Annual Day coming Monday the 24 th December that also happens to be is Diamond Jubilee Year to look forward for more laurels and achievements with renewed vim and vigour in the years ahead. Wishing all our readers A Very Happy and Prosperous New Year - 2019 to augur well, full of happiness, peace, prosperity, success along with healthy long life! (Disclaimer: This is author’s personal account of memories updated to cherish and treasure often on a detour here and there en route to share the joy of the journey called life. Some names (asterisk* for those no more), quotes, places and events mentioned are just to connect with and no malice whatsoever intended. He can be reached at [email protected]. ‘The Newars Worldwide Connecting the Dot : Sikkim’ and ‘Sikkim: The Newfound Home of the Newars in the Black Hill – Newars : Here and There’ by the author are available at www.rachnabooks.com.) CONCLUDED T his is for all those people who write to me complaining about the dogs on the streets. They always start their emails by saying they are great animal lovers and they have dogs of their own BUT we must do something about the “dog menace” in order for them, their children, and their dogs, to move freely without encountering “junglees”, “strays”, “ pi-dogs”. While the government, and all the courts, have ordered sterilization of all dogs by all municipalities and district administrations, in reality less than a tenth of the country is doing it. Lack of vets, lack of money and, the most important, is lack of vision. The dog sterilization programme is controlled by the Ministry of Environment, who put out less than 50 lakhs a year for it, instead of the Ministry for Health which has been allocated more than Rs 300 crores. But the Ministry for Environment will not hand it over. And the Ministry for Health is not trying too hard because, as their secretary said to me “Our job is not to sterilize dogs”. Since this would come under the heading of rabies control, I asked why they were killing mosquitoes since that was not their job. Because, that was the only way to bring malaria under control. Exactly. Sterilizing and vaccinating dogs would remove rabies within 5 years. It is difficult to educate bureaucrats, since the space where their brains should be is filled with ego and a limited logic that runs only on one narrow gauge track. However, here is another way to deal with the dogs and cats on the road. Illegal breeders are breeding lakhs of pedigreed dogs who are unhealthy, inbred and found in every pet shop. It is now illegal for any pet shop to keep any animals without a registration, which is very strict, but our feet on the ground are so limited and so vulnerable to bribes that I am not sure how long it will take the authorities to apply the new laws. So, here is what we can do: America’s shelters have a kill policy. Abandoned animals in shelters are allowed to live 28 days and if they are not adopted, they are killed. Over the years a large number of no- kill shelters have come up. But the dogs live in cages for the rest of their lives, unless they are adopted. In 2017 , California passed a law, A.B.485, that pet stores will only sell puppies, kittens and rabbits from shelters and rescue centres. Violators will be fined $ 500 and shut down. This effectively puts an end to commercial animal breeders and brokers, and to the terrible practice of illegal breeding. Just recently we had to rescue 11 dogs in the backyard of a doctor in Thane. They were starved, on the verge of death, eating their own faeces, but each had given birth to any number of puppies who had been sold by the doctor with forged certificates as to their foreign pedigree. The pet trade in America predictably protested saying that “it would jeopardise jobs”. (They were overruled). But in India the trade does not employ anyone. It is an illegal business which operates by taking a few dogs, tying them up, forcibly breeding them every six months and then putting them in illegal pet shops. It will put no one out of business. Why not bring the same law into India. Almost every city now has an animal welfare group. Many of them have animal shelters. My shelter in Delhi, Sanjay Gandhi Animal Care Centre, gets a minimum of ten throwaways a day. People who have bought pedigreed dogs, kept them badly, made them sick, tied them up the whole day and made them ferocious, and then they come to the hospital, pretend they have come for medicine /treatment and then, when they think no one is looking, they run off, leaving the dog behind in an alien, diseased, unfriendly surrounding. We take Rs 15,000 for each abandoned animal but, in order not to pay, these people – who have paid far more in buying the dogs, will tie them to the gate or even throw them over the wall. Most of the abandoned dogs are Pomeranians and Spitzes. The others are Labradors, and the huge woolly Swiss ones that were originally smuggled into India. And, of course, lots of Vodafone pugs. We put the dogs into a special enclosure, in full view of the hundreds of visitors who come, so that they can adopt them. Some get homes. Others waste away with broken hearts, and the terror of being in an uncomfortable enclosure with fifty other dogs, till they die. My sister takes the most damaged ones home, and she has 17 in her tiny house. I have 24. Once they recover and bounce back, we try and find homes for them. So, if we made it compulsory for pet shops to only sell dogs and cats from shelters, we would be able to achieve two things: the abandoned foreign animals would find homes and the shelters would make a little money. The dogs/cats could be sterilized, vaccinated and made healthy before selling – unlike the pedigreed dogs/cats that come from breeders . They are sold without vaccinations and most of them die as puppies of distemper and parvo. The other thing it would achieve is that pet shops will start selling the cutest Indian puppies supplied to them from shelters. No shelter will breed foreign dogs, so, , in the absence of formal retail outlets, the breeding of foreign dogs will go down. People who want dogs will take Indian dogs. People who like buying dogs will buy them from shops. Please start campaigning in your states for this. We can make the world a much kinder place if we push for the right things. (To join the animal welfare movement contact [email protected], www.peopleforanimalsindia.org) DR. P .K. CHHETRI I n the days of Queen Elizabeth, the poetry was what mattered, not the man who wrote it, therefore writing the biography of a poet was not even dreamed of. Poetry was only a delightful hobby, and considered not an occupation to engage to take all a man’s time or even his most serious moments of life. It was only a leisurely pursuit, in which nearly every gentleman indulged in. It was not deemed necessary by an Elizabethan to find out to know, how and why a particular person becomes a poet, or what the external influences which shaped him into to develop his work. They simply read it and gloried in it. But without knowing the inclinations of the poet it is difficult to fully admire his poetry, because man is the product of his nature. Therefore, without knowing in nutshell the miniature biography of Edmund Spencer, we shall not be able to understand how he became the author of “The Faerie Queene”, which brought him love and honour and was also held in high esteem for creating the most musical, most sweetly beautiful poetry in English literature. He was most probably born in 1552 in London. His father was a cloth maker from Lancashire and not very well off financially, but being a free journeyman of the Merchant Taylors’ Company, he managed to send his two sons Edmund and John to the newly founded Merchant Taylors’ School with the help of Robert Nowell, a rich Lancashire man. The headmaster of the school, Richard Mulcaster, was a highly learned man, and under his care Spencer had dreamt of being one day a great poet of all England. He started writing poetry while at school, and some of it was published in 1569 in the form of an anthology edited by John van der Noodt. Since Mulcaster was a pioneer in teaching English, Spencer constantly received encouragement from him in his early efforts. In those days learning of Latin was considered as indispensable to study by every teacher, only a few felt it necessary to teach English. For Mulcaster learning English was the priority, “We are directed by nature and property to read that first, and to care for that which we use most, because we need it most” and for those who thought Latin as finer language, he said, “I honour the Latin, but I love the English.” Even he mustered courage to declare, “I take this present period of English tongue to be the very height thereof, because I find it so excellent well fined, both for the body of the tongue itself and for the customary writing thereof ...” So he adopted certain methods to teach his students English, and those methods are growing popular even today. He also had a fascination for acting, and organised his students every year to perform before the Court. Edmund Spencer was a delicate, sensitive boy and passionately fond of reading, and just we can imagine if he was forced to cram Latin grammar and composition for hours, as was the rules in other schools, what would have become of him, because the learning process of Latin was too strenuous like Sanskrit. Besides English, the headmaster also groomed him in Latin, Greek and Hebrew, which made the boy a learned classical scholar, who became fond of Plato. But Spenser found delight in play-acting, writing simple sonnets and verses and also developed charm for music, which was being played and sung everyday in the Merchant Taylors School. In 1569, Spenser joined Pembroke College, Cambridge, where he remained almost for seven years. Here he befriended Gabriel Harvey (about 1550 – 1631), who was appointed Fellow of Pembroke a year after Spencer’s arrival. He was a highly learned scholar, whose lecture on rhetoric drew crowds of eager students. This friendship remained lifelong and proved extremely valuable. Since Gabriel was very often ridiculed as a conceited, quarrelsome and stupid pedant, many people wondered what brought Spenser so close. But hardly people knew Gabriel Harvey always demonstrated himself as a true and faithful friend and adviser of Spenser. Gabriel was haunted at times by mistaken ideas of poetry like Sir Philip Sidney and Roger Ascham, who were termed as leaders in a ridiculous attempt to remodel the fashion of the English poetry in line with the classical rules. Therefore, he expressed his disappointment in “The Shepheardes Calender” and the first draft of the “Faerie Queene” in candid and friendly fashion, yet he definitely helped Spenser with good advice very often and also encouraged him as poet and scholar. Even he introduced Spenser to Sir Philip Sydney and the Earl of Leicester. In those days for a poet of humble rank it was customary to find out a patron, invariably should be a man of influence to whom he could dedicate his work and who would display interest in it and such a person Spenser found in Sir Philip Sidney and to whom he dedicated his first important work, “The Shepheardes Calender” (1579). It is very difficult to assess what initially cultivated friendship between them, because Sidney greatly admired and respected Spenser, but it was also a fact Spenser loved Sidney as he loved no other man. Sidney was after all a highly brilliant and accomplished courtier and a gentleman in the contemporary England, and who simply at the age of thirty had earned a reputation throughout Europe as a soldier, skilful diplomatist and scholar. It cannot be imagined at this moment how these two people walked together arm in arm in the gardens of Penshurst, Sidney’s beautiful home in Kent, and argued on philosophy and recited verses they had composed. If we rule out for the present other influences that went to compose “The Faerie Queene”, we cannot ignore the love he bore to Sir Philip Sydney, the hero of his youth and the ideal of his manhood. Every possible care was taken to make the publication of “The Shepheardes Calender” a big event. Spenser and his friends had hoped for an overwhelming reception, for the work in itself was absolutely a new attempt in English poetry and a daring poetry in more ways than one. At this moment none was sure how English poetry was going to develop, whether it would be influenced by classical, Italian or English. He threw down the gauntlet and declared himself boldly as English through and through. For him Chaucer was his mentor and admitted that from Chaucer alone had he learnt the art of poetry. For Chaucer he had coined a name Tityrus in his poem, and expressed his profound love and reverence: “The god shepheardes Tityrus is dead, Who taught me homely, as I can, to make, He, whilst he lived, was the soveraigne head of shepheardes all ... But if on me some little drops would flowe, Of that the spring was in his learned hedde, I soone would learne (teach) these words, to mourne my woe, And teache the trees, their trickling tears to shedde.” The poem is obviously pastoral and written in popular form. There are twelve poems in “The Shepheardes Calender”, each representing a month, and he took liberty to use all sorts of metres. This was quite a new experiment in English literature. Without doubt they are English metres, but they were picked up from Chaucer and the ballads. Unmistakably the language is English, yet it was an open challenge to those who Latinized the English tongue. In a letter to Harvey he wrote, “Why, a God’s name, may we not have the kingdom of our language?” “The Shepheardes Calender” established English as a language of the Englishmen. Here he employs dialect, old-fashioned and words long since dead and slang expressions of his own time. He coined new words to fit in his verse. His friend E.K. supplied a glossary. He appears in the poem as Colin Clout and all the shepherds in the poem are real people in disguise and he openly declares himself as the master poet far better than his other fellow poets. He writes: “For never thing on earth so pleases me; As him to hear, or matter of his deed.” In the poem Spenser had paid tribute to Queen Elizabeth hoping that he would receive recognition and get a position at Court. He did not get what he had hoped for, however in August 1580 he was appointed private secretary to Arthur, Lord Grey of Wilton (1536- 1593), who had recently been made Lord Deputy of Ireland. Rest of his life was spent in Ireland, which helped him to reflect in his poem the beauty of the Irish scenery. Had he not been in Ireland, then “The Faerie Queen” would not have become the work of haunting loveliness that it is at present. For two years he was the close companion of Lord Grey, whose rule in Ireland was a record of savage butchery, yet for Spenser he was “most gentle, affable, loving and temperate” and his rule was “the necessity of that present state of things enforced him to that violence, and almost changed his very natural disposition.” When Spenser reached Ireland, it was in the state of utter wretchedness, its inhabitants lived the life of brutes, hunted and lived in caves and fought amongst themselves, but they loathed one foe in total unison, the English. Lord Grey, supported by Spenser, decided to suppress with brutal force the Irish to force them into submission. So for two years they were terrorised like anything by open massacre, ravaging and burning and even executing on flimsy grounds. It astonishes a reader as to how a gentle, sensitive poet approved of the application of brutal force on the dissidents and honouring and revering a cruel man like Lord Grey; even he went beyond all logic to make him Sir Artegall, an upright hero and an emblem of justice of “The Faerie Queene”. This is because both of them were Puritans and for the conquest of Ireland applied the same zeal of the early Crusaders who went to recapture Jerusalem. In the name of vindicating Protestantism all cruelties were considered justified by him. Lord Grey believed that it was his holy duty in the name of his Queen and God to exterminate and wipe out the rebellion and Roman Catholicism. The saddest side of Spencer is: he could not see the fine line that separates justice from cruelty. Spenser continued to live in Ireland even after the departure of Lord Grey. After living in Dublin for some years, in 1587 he was presented with the estate and mansion of Kilcolman in Cork, where he wrote most of “The Faerie Queene”. Though he began it long before as early as 1579, here he has been provided with enough of time to give it perfection and incorporate loveliness and beauty for which he has great fascination. In 1589, Sir Walter Raleigh (circa 1552- 1618), a most noble, brilliant and restless adventurous pioneer of the time, visited Spenser, for whom he read out the three books of “The Faerie Queene”. Raleigh felt highly impressed and at once understood what a masterpiece it was. He immediately inspired Spenser and both of them set sail for London to publish. In the early next year (1590) it was published with a dedication addressed to Queen Elizabeth, “Her most humble servant, Edmund Spenser doth in all humilitie dedicate, present and consecrate these his labours to live with the eternitie of her fame.” Indeed “The Faerie Queene” acquired eternal fame by distinguishing itself as the chief glory of English literature. It quickly acquired tremendous popularity amongst the Elizabethans. They loved its beauty of language, its melody and endless adventures of the knights of ladies in Fairyland and its allegory. For the ladies of the Court he became an idol, and in gratefulness he composed elegant sonnets and other verses for them. Despite so much of popularity, he failed to get a position at Court, yet he received a small pension from thrifty Elizabeth. Leaving behind him a volume of “Complaint” for being neglected to be published, he returned to Ireland in utter disgust. The first three books narrate the stories of St.George, the Knight of the Red Cross, or Holiness, the Una, of Sir Guyon, who was Temperance, and Britomart, the maiden knight of Chastity. In 1596, further three books were published in which were included the stories of Cambel and Telamond, or Friendship, of Artegall, or Justice, and of Calidore, or Courtesy. After the death of Spenser a fragment of a seventh book, of Constancy, was published. His untimely death prevented him from completing the rest of the books. In October, 1598, the Irish rose in revolt, and having his home being burnt down, he along with his family fled to London. In the early January next year he was taken ill, and died quite suddenly. He was buried in Westminster Abbey, which was a great honour those days. Spenser had earlier planned twelve books of “The Faerie Queene” with perhaps another twelve to follow, unfortunately he could complete only six, and therefore it is difficult to judge at this moment the nature of his other volumes and how they would have fared. Nobody reads Spenser now; he is read because, according to Charles Lamb, he was “the poet’s poet”, who displayed immense command over English poetic rhythm and metre with extraordinary poetic imagination. Though he died a poor man, yet his work was no less inferior to Milton’s “Paradise Lost.” ( Email: [email protected])

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4EDIT SIKKIM EXPRESS, TUESDAY, 25 DECEMBER 2018, GANGTOK

Little by littleThe name of the game in democracy is to take a step,

assess its popularity and implementation, and if foundwanting, take one or even two steps back. The implementationof a national tax is no small matter. Never mind the shenanigansand sledging that is part and parcel of Indian political life, theGST remains a great step towards integrating the country.Remember, the Unification of Germany was preceded by acustoms union in early nineteenth century, which went a longway in breaking down protectionist barriers and led to the creationof a German nation. So, the decision of the Central governmentand the GST council on Saturday, to reduce price cuts on 23items is welcome. The list includes all that is dear to the commonman– movie tickets, third party motor insurance, smaller TVsets, power banks, flights for Haj and Mansarovar Yatra andbranded frozen vegetables. They are all set to get cheaper.

With the latest round of cuts, that become effective fromJanuary 1, the government has reduced rates on nearly 360items since GST was introduced almost 18 months ago. Byall indications, there is more to come. At the next meeting inJanuary, the Union Finance Minister and the state financeministers will look to pare down more items, including theever important housing. There is a plan afoot to cut rates onunder-construction houses, given its importance to the public.The revenue loss likely to accrue from this latest round ofcuts is estimated somewhere in the region of Rs 5,500 crore.But when considered against the background of public reliefit offers, it is frankly not much. Significantly, of the 23 goodsand services whose rates have been slashed, the tax rate onseven items in the 28 per cent slab has been brought down.With this, only 23 goods are left in this high tax bracket. Inother words, the 28 per cent slab is now restricted to onlyluxury and sin goods, apart from auto parts and cements.

Obviously, given the high revenue implications, it wouldbe difficult to touch them for the moment. Finance ministerArun Jaitley has a point when he says that rate rationalisingin an ongoing process. When GST was introduced, India hadone of the most irrational taxation rates anywhere. Mostitems were charged at 31 per cent so the government hadtransiently put them at 28 per cent, because an immediatereduction would have impacted social expenditures of thecentral and state governments. To that extent, the PrimeMinister must be credited with keeping his promise ofreducing rates as revenues have moved up and affordabilityhas increased. So the common criticism against the governmentof keeping rates too high at the time of introducing GST is nowbeginning to wear thin - all in good time. To be sure, somestates have objected to the rate cut because it impacts theirown revenues. As can be expected, they have demanded thattheir revenue losses be compensated by the central government.

Making the world a kinder place

Rhenock School - My Buba Dreamt ofDiamond Jubilee Year Incarnated

THINKING LOCAL

RAJIVA SHANKERSHRESTA

The poet’s poet: Edmund Spenser

PART-II

Besides Dr. ShantiChettri, a renownedlietterateur, many of

his students have excelled laterin life. Jamyang Bhutia, TseringWangchuk Bhutia, BedhaNidhi Sharma, MeghnathSharma, Juddhabir Chettri,Nedup Tsering Bhutia, HariPrasad Pradhan, Deo KumarPradhan are the names thatcome immediately to my mindwho served as teachers apartfrom Dr. Hari Prasad Chettri,an agriculture graduate turnedreputed educationist (FiveWays Tutorials, HimalayanPharmacy Institute, harkamayaCollge and Greenland School)post retirement. KrishnaPradhan has been serving asPanchayat President andHukum Chandra Pradhan* wasa popular Mandal, whileGanesh Kumar Pradhan of RamGauri Sangrahalaya, who wasalso my student there, has madea name for himself to behonoured by the Governmentof Sikkim on IndependenceDay this year for hisoutstanding contributions tothe society. Khamtu Tseringserved as a peon with Buba foralong time and he has goodmemories of many of theheads there like PJ Joseph,Geeta Sharma*, Isaac Mukhia,Lachchy Pradhan and manyothers and what way my Bubaexcelled those days. DeepaPradhan (now happily settleddown in Maryland, USA), SitaPradhan* (sister-in-law ofSunder Babu) and BishnuKumar Pradhan* (father ofillustrious sons like Dhiraj –Managing Director of DenzongAgriculture Co-operativeSociety, Sunil and Bikram) werelucky from (Khamtu’s batchincluded Bhagat Gurung also)the class VIII of 1962 to beselected for Bharat Darshan toDelhi and other places and bringhome classic books like ‘My

Experiment with Truth’ and‘Discovery of India’ presentedto him by the Ministry ofEducation. Pema Dadi, NariTsering, Tsering Gyatso,Topgey Bhutia, Topay Bhutia,Sono Tsering, Hom NathSharma*, Binoy KumarPradhan*, Shaym SunderPradhan, etc. were the studentswho were good footballers fortheir school TNA and havecontributed much to the Stateserving the Government invarious capacities. Students fromthe business community Prem*,Omkar, Ram Awatar, Santosh,Keshar, Bijay, Purushottam,Harishchandra, Pawan, Sajjan andmany others are all success andmost of them have moved awayto Siliguri (Balaji Logistics, SikkimPlaza) besides to the capitalGangtok (Beekay Hardware andits branches from the originalBanwarilal Omkarmal ofRhenock), Pakyong and otherplaces. Even children of theteachers there like P. K. Pradhanviz., Sushila, Kumar, Sabina andothers have served and retiredfrom this School. To top them allis the present Principal SurenPradhan from home GPU Aritar.He has the rare honour to headthe Rhenock Senior SecondarySchool to bring in unprecedentedmajor changes to an entirely newlook to the premises with abeautiful huge modern auditorium,school and hostel buildingsawaiting inauguration soon.

Best to remember that rosein the political scenario torepresent the constituency andbecome our own Area MLA isthe present incumbant BikramPradhan also from the homeGPU Aritar, who has made aniche for himself and proved tobe a popular figure not onlyamong the youth but old alike.Remote GPU of theconstituency, Lower Khamdongadjoining Lingsey Simana inWest Bengal border is happygetting new link roads beingrecently approved and tenderedafter years together of neglect.What could he do the best forthe Rhenock School was black-topping of the approach roadthough a small stretch of a fewhundred meters but had to waitall these years till 2017 whenmuch water flowed down theReshi and Rorathang rivers withmany of the political leadersfrom the area utterly failed inthis regard. Water supplyprovided by the PHEconnection has also reachedrecently there in Kingston thefar end of the Aritar GPU andbetter flow of development isexpected here by all. Not only

the School but the adjoiningareas also look forward forbetter days with boost intourism like in other places inAritar known known forLampokhari Tourist Festival(under the patronage of Dhiraj,Bikram and many others) everyApril bringing in increasednumber of visitors each year.Rhenock though late in gettingthe recognition as a seniorsecondary school, is proud tohave a Government Collegebesides a private seniorsecondary level school andmany other schools to feed everincreasing hunger for better andhigher education of the presentyouth who have aspirations toreach the sky in this competitiveworld that has turned out to be aglobal village due to internetconnectivity expected toimprove in near future.

With these developmentstaking place not only the soulof the founder-members of theSchool Managing Committeewith my Buba as the belovedHead Sir but of all who werebehind establishing and raisingit directly or indirectly, eachcontributing their best asstudents, teachers and parentsto the present status of theRhenock School reincarnatedway back since 1958 would feeltheir dreams fullfilled and alltheir blessings from heaven goon showered to them on theirAnnual Day coming Mondaythe 24th December that alsohappens to be is DiamondJubilee Year to look forward formore laurels and achievementswith renewed vim and vigourin the years ahead.

Wishing all our readers AVery Happy and ProsperousNew Year - 2019 to augur well,full of happiness, peace,prosperity, success along withhealthy long life!

(Disclaimer: This is author’spersonal account of memoriesupdated to cherish and treasureoften on a detour here and thereen route to share the joy of thejourney called life. Some names(asterisk* for those no more),quotes, places and eventsmentioned are just to connectwith and no malice whatsoeverintended. He can be reached [email protected]. ‘TheNewars Worldwide –Connecting the Dot : Sikkim’and ‘Sikkim: The NewfoundHome of the Newars in the BlackHill – Newars : Here and There’by the author are available atwww.rachnabooks.com.)

CONCLUDED

This is for all thosepeople who write tome complaining about

the dogs on the streets. Theyalways start their emails bysaying they are great animallovers and they have dogs oftheir own BUT we must dosomething about the “dogmenace” in order for them, theirchildren, and their dogs, tomove freely withoutencountering “junglees”,“strays”, “ pi-dogs”.

While the government, andall the courts, have orderedsterilization of all dogs by allmunicipalities and districtadministrations, in reality lessthan a tenth of the country isdoing it. Lack of vets, lack ofmoney and, the mostimportant, is lack of vision.The dog sterilizationprogramme is controlled bythe Ministry of Environment,who put out less than 50 lakhsa year for it, instead of theMinistry for Health which hasbeen allocated more than Rs300 crores. But the Ministryfor Environment will not handit over. And the Ministry forHealth is not trying too hardbecause, as their secretary saidto me “Our job is not to sterilizedogs”. Since this would come

under the heading of rabiescontrol, I asked why they werekilling mosquitoes since that wasnot their job. Because, that wasthe only way to bring malariaunder control. Exactly. Sterilizingand vaccinating dogs wouldremove rabies within 5 years.

It is difficult to educatebureaucrats, since the spacewhere their brains should be isfilled with ego and a limitedlogic that runs only on onenarrow gauge track.

However, here is anotherway to deal with the dogs andcats on the road. Illegal breedersare breeding lakhs of pedigreeddogs who are unhealthy, inbredand found in every pet shop.It is now illegal for any petshop to keep any animalswithout a registration, whichis very strict, but our feet onthe ground are so limited andso vulnerable to bribes that Iam not sure how long it willtake the authorities to applythe new laws.So, here is what we can do:America’s shelters have a killpolicy. Abandoned animals in

shelters are allowed to live 28days and if they are notadopted, they are killed. Overthe years a large number of no-kill shelters have come up. Butthe dogs live in cages for therest of their lives, unless theyare adopted.

In 2017 , California passeda law, A.B.485, that pet storeswill only sell puppies, kittensand rabbits from shelters andrescue centres. Violators willbe fined $ 500 and shut down.This effectively puts an endto commercial animal breedersand brokers, and to the terriblepractice of illegal breeding. Justrecently we had to rescue 11dogs in the backyard of adoctor in Thane. They werestarved, on the verge of death,eating their own faeces, buteach had given birth to anynumber of puppies who hadbeen sold by the doctor withforged certificates as to theirforeign pedigree.

The pet trade in Americapredictably protested sayingthat “it would jeopardisejobs”. (They were overruled).

But in India the trade does notemploy anyone. It is an illegalbusiness which operates bytaking a few dogs, tying themup, forcibly breeding themevery six months and thenputting them in illegal petshops. It will put no one outof business.

Why not bring the samelaw into India. Almost everycity now has an animal welfaregroup. Many of them haveanimal shelters. My shelter inDelhi, Sanjay Gandhi AnimalCare Centre, gets a minimumof ten throwaways a day.People who have boughtpedigreed dogs, kept thembadly, made them sick, tiedthem up the whole day andmade them ferocious, and thenthey come to the hospital,pretend they have come formedicine /treatment and then,when they think no one islooking, they run off, leavingthe dog behind in an alien,diseased, unfriendlysurrounding. We take Rs15,000 for each abandonedanimal but, in order not to pay,

these people – who have paidfar more in buying the dogs,will tie them to the gate or eventhrow them over the wall.

Most of the abandoneddogs are Pomeranians andSpitzes. The others areLabradors, and the huge woollySwiss ones that were originallysmuggled into India. And, ofcourse, lots of Vodafone pugs.We put the dogs into a specialenclosure, in full view of thehundreds of visitors who come,so that they can adopt them.Some get homes. Others wasteaway with broken hearts, andthe terror of being in anuncomfortable enclosure withfifty other dogs, till they die.My sister takes the mostdamaged ones home, and shehas 17 in her tiny house. I have24. Once they recover andbounce back, we try and findhomes for them.

So, if we made itcompulsory for pet shops toonly sell dogs and cats fromshelters, we would be able toachieve two things: theabandoned foreign animals

would find homes and theshelters would make a littlemoney. The dogs/cats could besterilized, vaccinated and madehealthy before selling – unlikethe pedigreed dogs/cats thatcome from breeders . They aresold without vaccinations andmost of them die as puppiesof distemper and parvo.

The other thing it wouldachieve is that pet shops willstart selling the cutest Indianpuppies supplied to themfrom shelters. No shelter willbreed foreign dogs, so, , in theabsence of formal retail outlets,the breeding of foreign dogswill go down. People who wantdogs will take Indian dogs.People who like buying dogswill buy them from shops.

Please start campaigning inyour states for this. We canmake the world a much kinderplace if we push for the rightthings.

(To join the animal welfaremovement [email protected],

www.peopleforanimalsindia.org)

DR. P.K. CHHETRI

I n the days of QueenElizabeth, the poetry waswhat mattered, not the man

who wrote it, therefore writingthe biography of a poet was noteven dreamed of. Poetry wasonly a delightful hobby, andconsidered not an occupationto engage to take all a man’stime or even his most seriousmoments of life. It was only aleisurely pursuit, in whichnearly every gentlemanindulged in. It was not deemednecessary by an Elizabethan tofind out to know, how and whya particular person becomes apoet, or what the externalinfluences which shaped himinto to develop his work. Theysimply read it and gloried in it.But without knowing theinclinations of the poet it isdifficult to fully admire hispoetry, because man is theproduct of his nature.Therefore, without knowing innutshell the miniaturebiography of Edmund Spencer,we shall not be able tounderstand how he became theauthor of “The Faerie Queene”,which brought him love andhonour and was also held in highesteem for creating the mostmusical, most sweetly beautifulpoetry in English literature.

He was most probably bornin 1552 in London. His fatherwas a cloth maker fromLancashire and not very welloff financially, but being a freejourneyman of the MerchantTaylors’ Company, he managedto send his two sons Edmundand John to the newly foundedMerchant Taylors’ School withthe help of Robert Nowell, arich Lancashire man. Theheadmaster of the school,Richard Mulcaster, was a highlylearned man, and under his careSpencer had dreamt of beingone day a great poet of allEngland. He started writingpoetry while at school, andsome of it was published in 1569in the form of an anthologyedited by John van der Noodt.Since Mulcaster was a pioneerin teaching English, Spencerconstantly receivedencouragement from him in hisearly efforts.

In those days learning ofLatin was considered asindispensable to study by everyteacher, only a few felt itnecessary to teach English. ForMulcaster learning English wasthe priority, “We are directedby nature and property to readthat first, and to care for thatwhich we use most, because weneed it most” and for those whothought Latin as finer language,he said, “I honour the Latin,but I love the English.” Evenhe mustered courage to declare,“I take this present period ofEnglish tongue to be the veryheight thereof, because I findit so excellent well fined, bothfor the body of the tongue itselfand for the customary writingthereof ...” So he adoptedcertain methods to teach hisstudents English, and thosemethods are growing populareven today. He also had afascination for acting, andorganised his students everyyear to perform before theCourt.

Edmund Spencer was adelicate, sensitive boy andpassionately fond of reading,and just we can imagine if hewas forced to cram Latingrammar and composition forhours, as was the rules in otherschools, what would havebecome of him, because the

learning process of Latin wastoo strenuous like Sanskrit.Besides English, the headmasteralso groomed him in Latin,Greek and Hebrew, which madethe boy a learned classicalscholar, who became fond ofPlato. But Spenser found delightin play-acting, writing simplesonnets and verses and alsodeveloped charm for music,which was being played and sungeveryday in the MerchantTaylors School.

In 1569, Spenser joinedPembroke College, Cambridge,where he remained almost forseven years. Here he befriendedGabriel Harvey (about 1550 –1631), who was appointedFellow of Pembroke a yearafter Spencer’s arrival. He wasa highly learned scholar, whoselecture on rhetoric drew crowdsof eager students. Thisfriendship remained lifelong andproved extremely valuable.Since Gabriel was very oftenridiculed as a conceited,quarrelsome and stupid pedant,many people wondered whatbrought Spenser so close. Buthardly people knew GabrielHarvey always demonstratedhimself as a true and faithfulfriend and adviser of Spenser.Gabriel was haunted at times bymistaken ideas of poetry likeSir Philip Sidney and RogerAscham, who were termed asleaders in a ridiculous attemptto remodel the fashion of theEnglish poetry in line with theclassical rules. Therefore, heexpressed his disappointmentin “The Shepheardes Calender”and the first draft of the“Faerie Queene” in candid andfriendly fashion, yet hedefinitely helped Spenser withgood advice very often and alsoencouraged him as poet andscholar. Even he introducedSpenser to Sir Philip Sydney andthe Earl of Leicester.

In those days for a poet ofhumble rank it was customaryto find out a patron, invariablyshould be a man of influence towhom he could dedicate hiswork and who would displayinterest in it and such a personSpenser found in Sir PhilipSidney and to whom hededicated his first importantwork, “The ShepheardesCalender” (1579). It is verydifficult to assess what initiallycultivated friendship betweenthem, because Sidney greatlyadmired and respected Spenser,but it was also a fact Spenserloved Sidney as he loved noother man. Sidney was after alla highly brilliant andaccomplished courtier and agentleman in thecontemporary England, andwho simply at the age of thirtyhad earned a reputationthroughout Europe as a soldier,skilful diplomatist and scholar.It cannot be imagined at thismoment how these two peoplewalked together arm in arm inthe gardens of Penshurst,Sidney’s beautiful home inKent, and argued onphilosophy and recited versesthey had composed. If we ruleout for the present otherinfluences that went tocompose “The Faerie Queene”,we cannot ignore the love hebore to Sir Philip Sydney, thehero of his youth and the idealof his manhood.

Every possible care wastaken to make the publicationof “The Shepheardes Calender”a big event. Spenser and hisfriends had hoped for anoverwhelming reception, forthe work in itself was absolutelya new attempt in English poetry

and a daring poetry in moreways than one. At this momentnone was sure how Englishpoetry was going to develop,whether it would be influencedby classical, Italian or English.He threw down the gauntlet anddeclared himself boldly asEnglish through and through.For him Chaucer was hismentor and admitted that fromChaucer alone had he learnt theart of poetry. For Chaucer hehad coined a name Tityrus inhis poem, and expressed hisprofound love and reverence:“The god shepheardes Tityrusis dead,Who taught me homely, as Ican, to make,He, whilst he lived, was thesoveraigne head of shepheardesall ...But if on me some little dropswould flowe,Of that the spring was in hislearned hedde,I soone would learne (teach)these words, to mourne my woe,And teache the trees, theirtrickling tears to shedde.”

The poem is obviouslypastoral and written in popularform. There are twelve poemsin “The Shepheardes Calender”,each representing a month, andhe took liberty to use all sortsof metres. This was quite a newexperiment in Englishliterature. Without doubt theyare English metres, but theywere picked up from Chaucerand the ballads. Unmistakablythe language is English, yet itwas an open challenge to thosewho Latinized the Englishtongue. In a letter to Harveyhe wrote, “Why, a God’s name,may we not have the kingdomof our language?” “TheShepheardes Calender”established English as a languageof the Englishmen. Here heemploys dialect, old-fashionedand words long since dead andslang expressions of his owntime. He coined new words tofit in his verse. His friend E.K.supplied a glossary. He appearsin the poem as Colin Clout andall the shepherds in the poemare real people in disguise and heopenly declares himself as themaster poet far better than hisother fellow poets. He writes:

“For never thing on earthso pleases me; As him to hear,or matter of his deed.”

In the poem Spenser hadpaid tribute to Queen Elizabethhoping that he would receiverecognition and get a positionat Court. He did not get whathe had hoped for, however inAugust 1580 he was appointed

private secretary to Arthur,Lord Grey of Wilton (1536-1593), who had recently beenmade Lord Deputy of Ireland.Rest of his life was spent inIreland, which helped him toreflect in his poem the beautyof the Irish scenery. Had he notbeen in Ireland, then “TheFaerie Queen” would not havebecome the work of hauntingloveliness that it is at present.

For two years he was theclose companion of Lord Grey,whose rule in Ireland was arecord of savage butchery, yetfor Spenser he was “mostgentle, affable, loving andtemperate” and his rule was“the necessity of that presentstate of things enforced him tothat violence, and almostchanged his very naturaldisposition.” When Spenserreached Ireland, it was in thestate of utter wretchedness, itsinhabitants lived the life ofbrutes, hunted and lived in cavesand fought amongstthemselves, but they loathedone foe in total unison, theEnglish. Lord Grey, supportedby Spenser, decided to suppresswith brutal force the Irish toforce them into submission. Sofor two years they wereterrorised like anything by openmassacre, ravaging and burningand even executing on flimsygrounds. It astonishes a readeras to how a gentle, sensitivepoet approved of theapplication of brutal force onthe dissidents and honouringand revering a cruel man likeLord Grey; even he went beyondall logic to make him SirArtegall, an upright hero andan emblem of justice of “TheFaerie Queene”. This isbecause both of them werePuritans and for the conquestof Ireland applied the same zealof the early Crusaders whowent to recapture Jerusalem.In the name of vindicatingProtestantism all cruelties wereconsidered justified by him.Lord Grey believed that it washis holy duty in the name ofhis Queen and God toexterminate and wipe out therebellion and RomanCatholicism. The saddest sideof Spencer is: he could not seethe fine line that separatesjustice from cruelty.

Spenser continued to livein Ireland even after thedeparture of Lord Grey. Afterliving in Dublin for someyears, in 1587 he waspresented with the estate andmansion of Kilcolman in Cork,where he wrote most of “The

Faerie Queene”. Though hebegan it long before as early as1579, here he has beenprovided with enough of timeto give it perfection andincorporate loveliness andbeauty for which he has greatfascination. In 1589, SirWalter Raleigh (circa 1552-1618), a most noble, brilliantand restless adventurouspioneer of the time, visitedSpenser, for whom he read outthe three books of “TheFaerie Queene”. Raleigh felthighly impressed and at onceunderstood what a masterpieceit was. He immediately inspiredSpenser and both of them setsail for London to publish. Inthe early next year (1590) itwas published with a dedicationaddressed to Queen Elizabeth,“Her most humble servant,Edmund Spenser doth in allhumilitie dedicate, present andconsecrate these his labours tolive with the eternitie of herfame.” Indeed “The FaerieQueene” acquired eternal fameby distinguishing itself as thechief glory of Englishliterature. It quickly acquiredtremendous popularityamongst the Elizabethans.They loved its beauty oflanguage, its melody andendless adventures of theknights of ladies in Fairylandand its allegory. For the ladiesof the Court he became an idol,and in gratefulness hecomposed elegant sonnets andother verses for them.

Despite so much ofpopularity, he failed to get aposition at Court, yet hereceived a small pension fromthrifty Elizabeth. Leavingbehind him a volume of“Complaint” for beingneglected to be published, hereturned to Ireland in utterdisgust. The first three booksnarrate the stories ofSt.George, the Knight of theRed Cross, or Holiness, theUna, of Sir Guyon, who wasTemperance, and Britomart,the maiden knight of Chastity.In 1596, further three bookswere published in which wereincluded the stories of Cambeland Telamond, or Friendship,of Artegall, or Justice, and ofCalidore, or Courtesy. Afterthe death of Spenser afragment of a seventh book,of Constancy, was published.His untimely death preventedhim from completing the restof the books.

In October, 1598, the Irishrose in revolt, and having hishome being burnt down, healong with his family fled toLondon. In the early Januarynext year he was taken ill, anddied quite suddenly. He wasburied in Westminster Abbey,which was a great honourthose days. Spenser had earlierplanned twelve books of “TheFaerie Queene” with perhapsanother twelve to follow,unfortunately he couldcomplete only six, andtherefore it is difficult to judgeat this moment the nature ofhis other volumes and howthey would have fared. Nobodyreads Spenser now; he is readbecause, according to CharlesLamb, he was “the poet’spoet”, who displayed immensecommand over English poeticrhythm and metre withextraordinary poeticimagination. Though he died apoor man, yet his work was noless inferior to Milton’s“Paradise Lost.”

( Email:[email protected])