There goes my daughter to a place unknown,
The mature plant of a seed I had sown.
By these two hands how I reared,
With the passing days as she was endeared!
Her smile was a thing cherished; her cry did so pain,
Sulking once, how she would come to my arms again!
Must she be married; must she leave me alone?
‘Tis the plight of a father who cannot even moan.
Cruel is the world, which takes my daughter away,
I despair, how shall I spend my night and day?
There goes my daughter, who is no more mine,
And no more the sun or moon will shine,
There goes my daughter for a custom terse
With someone who was never her’s.
-3\12\98,Calcutta-63
COMMENTS :
This poem is so much relevant for a father in the Orient, like
in India. The philosophy goes that a daughter is paraya dhan
(other’s possession) who must be given over to her husband- in
fact there is even ceremony involved- kanya daan literally
means giving the daughter over to the husband, who now becomes the
legal and social owner of his wife. This feeling of loss of
possession eats into the heart of the father- in worse cases this
provides a cause for reluctance into doing anything good for the
daughter. The high cost of marriage of a girl becomes a headache
ever since her birth. Thus instead of being a bundle of joy the
girl becomes a burden of grief. But notwithstanding this
unfortunate attitude which has been created by social and cultural
conditions, there exists a deep emotional and psychological bond
between the father and the daughter-and forget Freud for some
moments. This bond is symbolically broken at this social ceremony
which hands over the father’s daughter to a man who was unknown
until this day. Perhaps for most fathers this is their most happy
as well as their most sad day.