Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Rajamouly Katta’s poem "Time": An Interpretation By D.C Chambial

Rajamouly Katta’s poem "Time": An Interpretation

D.C. Chambial’s Critique

Time has been defined as “the definite continued progress of existence and events that occur in apparently irreversible succession from the past, through the present, to the future. Time is a component quantity of various measurements used to sequence events, to compare the duration of events or the intervals between them, and to quantify rates of change of quantities in material reality or in conscious experience. Time is often referred to as a fourth dimension, along with three spatial dimensions” (Wikipedia). Einstein, the twentieth century renowned scientist and mathematician put forth his theory of spatial relativity to explain “that time slows down or speeds up depending on how fast you move relative to something else. Approaching the speed of light, a person inside a spaceship would age much slower than his twin at home. Also, under Einstein’s theory of general relativity, gravity can be time” (Wikipedia).

While throughout the ancient literature, there is no hint to the origin of time, the Gita discloses that Time also originated from the Supreme: He is time; and Time is Him. In the tenth chapter of the Gita that is about the opulence of the Absolute, Lord Krishna tells Arjuna that he is the source of all:

अहं सर्वस्य प्रभवो मत्त: सर्वं प्रवर्तते

इति मत्वा भजन्ते मां बुधा भावसमन्विता: 10.8

 

[I am the source of all spiritual and material worlds. Everything emanates from me. The wise who perfectly know this, engage in My devotional service and worship Me with their hearts. - Trans. Swami Prabhupada]

and then in the same chapter later, He tells us that He is Time:

 

अक्षराणामकारोऽस्मि द्वन्द्व: सामासिकस्य

अहमेवाक्षय: कालो धाताहं विश्वतोमुख: 10.33

 

[Of letters I am the letter A, and among compound words I am the dual compound. I am also inexhaustible time, and of creators I am Brahma. - Trans. Swami Prabhupada]

In the 20th century, the scientists propound the origin of time thus: “Everything, space, time and matter, came into existence with a ‘Big Bang’, around 13.7 billion years ago” (May 26). It is the scientists who have fixed the origin of Time with ‘Big Bang’.

Dr. K. Rajamouly is professor of English by vocation and poet, short story writer, essayist, critic and translator by avocation. He has authored 23 books and 95 articles, stories and poems published in national and international journals. he has worked for his PhD on the concept of Time in the poetry of British poet, Philip Larkin. So, time seems to have percolated into his conscious and oozes out in his literary creations.

Dr. Rajamouly, a scholar of Philip Larkin’s poetry becomes obsessed with Larkin’s concept of Time. Professor Chelliah, of Madurai Kamraj University, who has also studied Larkin’s poetry, contends: “A close analysis of Larkin’s poems would reveal the fact that most of his poems lay focus on the deceiving and destroying capabilities of time” (2). For him, time, in Larkin’s poetry, remains deceptive and destructive.

Professor Rajamouly writes a poem, entitled Time, which throws light on the varied aspects of Time. The poem, for the benefit of readers, is given below:

TIME

 

How you stepped into this world is strange

Your endless flow is bound up in mystery;

Your galloping speed for incessant change

Left imprints in every living history.

 

The milestones mark your age on the milky way

It’s race on wheels at a high pace

A wayfarer’s journey without stay,

Yet no trace of weariness on your face

 

You manifest eroding powers in all circles

Even pliant limbs and sharp mind grow decrepit

The petal-soft countenance carves wrinkles.

The sculpture in a quake breaks into many a bit.

 

 

You resemble a river in its ceaseless glide

Your resolve is like the planets’ orbit

You look like an eternal traveller in his ride,

And travel like the flash of light brightly lit.

 

Five senses, in strict governance of the mind,

Fail to unravel and charter your powerful role

Mysterious are your ways to humankind.

Everything manifests under your iron control. (122)

After having read the poem, let’s try to interpret it. The present poem, “Time”, is also a manifestation of his penchant for the theme of time not only in his critical writings but also in his creative works. The poem begins with an apostrophe to Time personified:

How you stepped into this world is strange

Your endless flow is bound up in mystery;

Your galloping speed for incessant change

Left imprints in every living history. (lines 1-4)

The protagonist finds it very queer about the appearance of Time in this world. The very first word, “how”, in the first line, hits at the way, manner/mode, or means of its appearance. The phrase “stepped into” makes Time appear as a living being, most probably, a human being. Time does not stop anywhere; so, the protagonist mulls that its continuous flow is full of vagueness, as none knows an answer to it. While the noun “flow” in the second line brings to memory the flow of river, the verb, “bound up”, makes it intrinsically connected with obscurity - a union of the concrete and the abstract, because none is able to decipher the insurability of its flow. Time is never constant or static; it is ever moving ahead: what it is now, it moves ahead in the next movement. There is also an adage associated with Time: ‘time and tide wait for none’. So, its speed is closely associated with change. Hence, he finds that Time’s ever moving and changing attribute has left indelible impression on the world’s “everything living history”. Several civilizations have appeared and disappeared in this world and each and every civilization has borne the burnt of time. The poet tells here, in this stanza, about Time’s appearance from vacuity, its mysterious and non-terminating flow or movement: it is ever moving for change, because change is the law of Nature; as it is endemic in its nature and that accounts for the change in the apparent world. Tennyson also writes about the necessity of this change in his poem Morte d’ Arthur’.

The old order changeth, yielding place to new,

And God fulfils Himself in many ways,

Lest one good custom should corrupt the world. (lines 291-93)

The “old order” does not signify only the established customary state of society, but also the flow of time - thus “order” and “time” are relative to each other.

The second stanza is about Time’s age, its ever-moving attribute, its speed without any hits of any exhaustion. The poet portrays it as a traveller ever fresh and full of energy:

The milestones mark your age on the milkyway

It’s race on wheels at a high pace

A wayfarer’s journey without stay,

Yet no trace of weariness on your face. (lines 5-8)

A living being grows older day by day and ultimately reaches the end point - death. Time also grows in age; however, it is marked “on the milky way” and never reaches its death. While all other creations, animate or inanimate, have their life span and are aged, Time is as old as the milky way. It does not walk, (the word, “stepped” in the first line) instead, it races, moves very fast, “on wheels” at a high speed. The poet brings in the vehicle of transport in his imagination - the contemporary technology, which is also a change from the wooden wheel to the present metallic wheel. With this change in the material of the wheel the speed has also increased. Now the speed may be greater than the speed of escape velocity with which the space scaling spaceships move away from the gravitation pull of Earth. Then, it is likened to a traveller’s journey; rather, the Time becomes a traveller, who keeps on moving and never halts for rest or to refresh itself. How bizarre it is that despite its continuous journey, it doesn’t show any sign of fatigue, an attribute of a non-living thing. While all living beings feel tired after a long journey, but time has “no trace of weariness” on its face or its limbs do not get lethargic contrary to human beings. Time knows no sloth and lethargy.

The third stanza shows Time’s destructive impact on all things, living or non0living of this world.

You manifest eroding powers in all circles

Even pliant limbs and sharp mind grow decrepit

The petal-soft countenance carves wrinkles.

The sculpture in a quake breaks into many a bit. (lines 9-12)

As Time passes or moves ahead minute-by-minute, day-by-day, year-by-year, its acerbic/destructive effect - “eroding powers” - is visible on all, “in all circles”. The supple body parts become inflexible; the sharpest minds lose their sharpness with the passage of time and, eventually, become infirm and useless. It also manifests its impact on human faces - beautiful or ugly, alike. Beautiful faces lose their beauty and become ugly as wrinkles appear as Time advances. Youth changes into old age. The artifacts carved out of stone and hard materials, supposed to be long-lasting, cannot bear the onslaught of Time and during an earthquake are broken into several pieces. Thus, Time spares none from its destructive effect. It is friend to none. All fall prey to it.

The fourth stanza describes Time’s varied attributes, e.g. movement, determination, appearance, and speed:

You resemble a river in its ceaseless glide

Your resolve is like the planets’ orbit

You look like an eternal traveller in his ride,

And travel like the flash of light brightly lit. (lines 13-16)

The poet writes, as if talking to Time standing before him as second person that is similar to a river in its non-ending and smooth movement/flow. Its trait of being resolute is as specific and determined as “planets’ orbit” - the fixed path of the movement of heavenly bodies. If they lose their resoluteness, even for a fraction of a second, then the cosmos may collapse. Everything is pre-determined in the kinesis of time. Its unending journey makes it look “like an eternal traveller” riding his horse or vehicle traveling with the speed of light. Time is never lazy; so, it moves or travels with high speed: “like the flash of light brightly lit”.

The fifth stanza, the concluding one, tells that even the most intelligent ones are unable to unveil Time’s enigma:

Five senses, in strict governance of the mind

Fail to unravel and charter your powerful role

Mysterious are your ways to humankind.

Everything manifests under your iron control. (lines 17-20)

The poet arrives at the conclusion that a human being, who has five senses of sight, touch, taste, smell, and hearing at his behest and under the full control of his mind, finds himself helpless to decode and show Time’s “powerful role” in this world. Time’s modus operandi or ways of operation in this world still remain unexplained and baffling to humanity. Whatever happens does not fall beyond the control of time. Every change whether micro or macro, is the outcome of Time’s strict rule, or its “iron control”.

In the views of Mundra and Agarwal, “A useful analysis is almost always one which deals with a good poem (not necessarily a great one) and shows exactly why and how it is to be admired” (149). They also lay down that the reader should be free from any prejudices and “presume to catch something of the poet’s vision”(149). My interpretations of poems always tend to catch this “something of the poet’s vision”.

The Development of Theme

The Poem is about the mystery of Time. The poet has developed them in five stanzas using regular rhyme scheme of ABAB in iambic pentameters with little variations. The poem begins with the mysterious nature of Time that moves non-stop and is ever changing. The thought, in the second stanza, develops making Time an eternal traveller without showing any signs of tiredness. In the third stanza, the poet makes Time all powerful that has destructive effect on everything of this material world: beauty wanes, softness becomes rugged, and works of art get destroyed. Fourth stanza reveals Time as a river moving noiselessly with a firm resolve and travels very fast. The poet, in the fifth stanza, confirms Time’s weirdness that even the most intelligent men are not able to know its position and function. Human beings are only subject to Time’s stern control.

* * *

Syntax

I’ll try to study the poem’s syntax in the first stanza only and leaving the other stanzas for the readers to study themselves, because a direct involvement in the process gives more enjoyment.

How you stepped into this world is strange

Your endless flow is bound up in mystery;

Your galloping speed for incessant change

Left imprints in every living history

It appears from the given syntax that the stanza has one sentence only. A simple sentence, in English, must have a subject, a verb, and an object. The first line: “How you stepped into this world is strange”, has subject - “How you stepped into this world”, verb - “is”, and subject complement - “strange”. Though generally the subject and object in a sentence are nouns or noun phrases; but here the subject is the manner and object is an adjective. It is the deviation that the poet has wrought in his technique/style. It should have followed by a period, thereby, making it a complete sentence. Similarly, the second line: “Your endless flow” as subject, “is” as verb, and “bound up in mystery” as the object. The third and fourth lines of this stanza make one sentence: “Your galloping speed for incessant change / [has] Left imprints in every living history.” Here “Your galloping speed for incessant change” is subject, [has] left, a verb, and “imprints in every living history”, an object that is followed by period. However, if we analyse the subjects and objects shown in the lines/sentences of this stanza, they are subject to further scrutiny. For example, the subject in the first line: “How you stepped into this world” can be broken into six units (also called parsing): 1) “how” expressing manner, 2) “you” second person singular pronoun, 3) stepped verb in past tense, 4) “into” preposition denoting movement, 5) “this”, though demonstrative pronoun, becomes/behaves as an adjective when used with a noun, 6) “world”.

It can be rewritten as:

“How you stepped into this world” [despite being a noun phrase, it is also a complete sentence]

1. How - a manner word

2. You - pronoun [second person singular]

3. stepped - verb [past tense]

4. into - preposition [shows the relationship of word/s preceding and following it]

5. this - adjective [qualifying world], and

6. world - noun

and the subject complement, “strange”, after the verb “is” is an adjective and leaves the subject complement (here manner) understood.

If the poet had used “How strange you stepped into this world”, that would have changed the meaning of the sentence contrary to the poet’s intention. There are three ways of writing this sentence:

1. How you stepped into this world is strange. [as given in the poem]

2. How strange, you stepped into this world! [It expresses woder at the stepping in of the subject “you”.]

or

3. You stepped into this world, how strange! [It expresses queerness of the subject coming into this world.]

However, the poet prefers the first one to match his argument. A linguist can similarly analyse the syntax structure of the entire poem to understand the poem in a better way and why the poet has used this kind of syntax.

Alliteration

The poet has used assonance, similar vowel sounds in the fourth line of the first stanza e.g. /i/ sound in “Left imprints in every living history” at three different places of the word/s: beginning, middle and end. The example of consonance, recurring sound of a consonant, e.g. mark the nasal /m/ sound in the first line of the second stanza, “The milestones mark your age on the milky way”; and /r/ sound in the second line, “Fail to unravel and charter your powerful role”, of the fifth stanza. A careful reader can still discern some more examples of it in the poem. These, assonance and consonance, are the examples of alliteration, though not strictly used in the beginning of a word or line.

Imagery

The poet has used three phrases in the first stanza: “stepped into” in the first line, “endless flow” in the second line and “galloping speed” in the third. The first phrase is an image of a person walking steadily and gracefully; the second, “endless flow”, is drawn from Nature, of a river flowing continuously; and, the third, “galloping speed”, of the horse. His images in this stanza are all concrete.

In the second stanza the image becomes a blend of the concrete and the abstract: “milestones mark your age on the milky way”: “age on the milky way” is abstract - we can only guess/imagine and neither touch nor see; and “milestones mark” is concrete in the first line, and in the second line, “race on wheels”, is drawn from the domain of technology. In the fourth stanza, the image, “planets’ orbit” in the second line, is drawn from heavenly bodies, their imaginary but fixed route; and the next image, “flash of light brightly lit” in the fourth line, from the light to express its high speed, is also abstract.

Metaphor and Smile

Metaphor is a poetic device to make the thing/object look like the one with which it is compared. There is no apparent example of metaphor in the poem.

The poem starts, addressing time with reference to its invincible powers as it is not an abstract idea but a moving force. We are bound to concur with time’s powers that conquer all in its flow. “Stepped into” indicates speedy and steady movement and the preposition ‘into’ also expresses the idea of motion.

To capture the reader’s attention the poet uses smiles instead of metaphors.

Here his use of smiles is very apt, carrying immediate effect on the minds of readers. In some other contexts metaphors are more suitable. Through the use of a smile, a poet makes a comparison with some other relevant object and is introduced by the words - “like” and/or “as”, e.g. in the fourth stanza:

Your resolve is like the planets’ orbit

You look like an eternal traveller in his ride,

And travel like the flash of light brightly lit.

Here, the poet first compares Time’s resolve with the Planets’ path in the heavens; Time, in second line above, is compared with a traveller; and, in the third line, Time’s speed is compared to that of the light.

Symbols:

The poet uses symbols in a unique way for poetic effect: ‘The Milky way’ is a symbol to stand for the permanent sojourn of time and ‘Pliant limbs’ and ‘petal soft countenance’ are symbolic of the physical, temporal and ephemeral in nature. ‘Sharp mind’ is symbolic of mental and psychological nature. ‘Quake’ symbolizes the element of devastation, and disruption in time’s ceaseless fleet. ‘Living river’ is symbolic of time in incessant flow. ‘Five senses in the control of mind’ are symbolic of the five elements in the control of Time (as the five Pandavas, the warriors, are in the guidance of Lord Krishna). ‘Mind’ that is never static is symbolic of Time. Finally, ‘Iron control’ stands for the merciless and relentless nature of time to devastate and disrupt all in its flow.

To conclude, it is the mysterious nature of time that appeals to the reader in the very first reading and the poet has very aptly, cogently, and coherently developed this theme in the poem. The tone remains throughout one of astute surprise. A reader, through such an analysis of the poem, arrives at the core of “the poet’s vision”, tone, and meaning conveyed in the poem beside deriving pleasure from it that is the sole object of writing poetry. It also informs and enlightens the reader; and, thus, adds to his repertoire of knowledge.

Works Cited

Chelliah, Dr. S. “Philip Larkin’s Concept of Time as Projected in his Poetry: A Brief Analysis.” IJRAR - International Journal of Research and Analytical Reviews, vol. 3, issue 2, April - June 2016, pp. 1-5. https://ijrar.com/upload_issue/ijrar_issue_263.pdf

May, Brian, Patrick Moore, Chris Lintott. BANG! The Complete History of the Universe. Carlton Books Limited, 2006.

Mundra, S.C and S.C. Agarwal. Practical Criticism. Prakash Book Depot, 1971

Rajamouly, Dr. K. “Time.” Cherished Cherries: A Collection of Nine Anthologies. New Delhi: Author Press, 2016, 00. 122.

Tennyson, Alfred. “Morte d’ Arthur.” In Memoriam, Maud and other poems, edited with Introduction by John D. Jump. J. M. Dent & sons Ltd, 1974.

Wikipedia - A Brief History of Time (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time)

 

 Published: Poetcrit July - Dec 2026

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