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Seeing through danger: The aesthetic of resistance in Venugopal's poetry

By Ravi Ranjan* 
In the landscape of contemporary Hindi poetry, Venugopal occupies a unique and vital space. His work, primarily collected in three volumes—Ve Hātha Hote Haim (They Are Hands), Havaem Cupa Nahim Rahatim (The Winds Do Not Stay Silent), and Cattanom Ka Jalagita (The Song of the Rocks over Water)—is marked by extreme verbal economy and profound symbolic depth. Across these collections, natural elements such as roots, wind, rock, river, and sky become dynamic symbols of revolution and change. His poetry operates in the liminal space between the political and the existential, forging an aesthetic of resistance that is as subtle as it is powerful.
The poem 'Future' is perhaps the most concentrated expression of Venugopal's philosophy. In just a few lines, he presents a vision of transformation that is both revolutionary and natural: "Like strong horses running / are the roots / and dawn is everywhere / as though the image / of dense forests / has emerged / in the sky." This image of "roots running like strong horses" shatters conventional expectations. Roots are traditionally symbols of stability, anchorage, and the past. By setting them in motion with the speed and valour of horses, Venugopal redefines tradition itself as a dynamic, forward-driving force. It is not a rejection of the past but its reactivation. The roots—representing history, identity, and the common people—are no longer static; they are galloping towards the future.
The word "as though" is crucial here; it introduces a note of magical realism, suggesting that this transformation is as much a matter of consciousness and feeling as it is a physical reality. The emergence of "dense forests in the sky" is the ultimate symbol of this change. Against the lifeless, concrete skyscrapers of a shallow modernity, Venugopal posits a future defined by the density, abundance, and greenery of life. The sky, the realm of infinite possibility, is filled not with machines but with the organic complexity of a forest. This is the poet's eco-utopia, a vision where human progress is measured not by technological mastery but by the health and expansion of life itself.
This grand vision is grounded in the stark realities of the present, as seen in the long poem 'They Are Hands'. Here, the poet addresses his "friends"—the intellectuals and activists crushed by the changing face of the system. The poem opens with a devastating critique of sham modernity: the "dark, rugged paths" of genuine struggle have been transformed into dazzling "royal roads" with neon lights, where the common people have no place. The forests, from which the call to revolution once came, have been cut down and replaced by military parade grounds—a powerful symbol of growing state control and the militarisation of civil society.
The poet's friends are lost; they "cough in the smoke" of their extinguished torches, trapped in melancholy and terrorised by a "duplicitous" information system that fills them with fear through reports of arrests and violence. Against this psychological warfare, Venugopal offers an alternative consciousness rooted in the body and in collective labour. "True strength," he asserts, lies not in newspaper headlines or state weaponry, but in the "life-blood flowing through healthy human veins." 
The poem's central symbol is the "hands"—not as individual body parts, but as the unified emblem of labour, creation, and collective power. These hands possess the hardness of stone, the softness of wax, the heat of fire, and the fluidity of water. They are the hands that work in fields, on threshing-floors, and in streets. The poet's purpose is to convince his despondent friends that these invincible hands are rising, and that they, not the barrel of a gun, will ultimately decide the future.
Where 'They Are Hands' addresses collective political despair, the poem 'Dangers' tackles fear at the level of individual consciousness. "Dangers are transparent. Beautiful," the poem begins, overturning the conventional association of danger with darkness and terror. To illustrate this, Venugopal uses a tender domestic image: a little girl who puts on a wild animal's mask and leaps out. 
The initial reaction is fear, but if one looks beyond the mask, one sees the girl's soft body and, beyond her childhood, a "young joy." The poem suggests that fear is a limitation of vision. Danger is merely the outer mask of the future. If we recoil from the mask, we lose sight of the possibilities hidden behind it. But if we gather the courage to "lift" the danger into our arms, the same crisis becomes a "coloured transparent glass" that opens the way forward.
This is a profound philosophical insight. The mask represents the terrifying external challenge of change, while the girl symbolises the tender, creative energy at the root of every new beginning. Fear, therefore, is not objective but interpretative. By advocating for a vision that pierces the frightening exterior to see the innocent potential within, Venugopal calls for a fearless and intimate attitude towards life's struggles. This poem connects directly to 'They Are Hands' and 'Future': the hands that struggle need the eyes that can see through danger. The "young joy" hidden behind the mask is the same "dawn" that emerges when roots begin to run.
The philosophical underpinnings of Venugopal's work can be illuminated by comparing him with his contemporaries. Unlike the direct, slogan-like interventionism of a poet like Gorakh Pandey, whose work is a weapon for immediate political change, Venugopal's poetry operates on a deeper, more cultural level. Where Gorakh Pandey's socialism is a "strategy" for overturning power structures, Venugopal's "future" is an "eruption" of consciousness, a "becoming" that involves reconnecting with nature and roots. Similarly, a comparison with Agyeya reveals different poles of nature-philosophy. 
Agyeya's "crest of millet" celebrates individualism and the uniqueness of personal experience. In contrast, Venugopal's "drying stalk"—from his poem 'Unique in Every Condition'—finds its "uniqueness" precisely in its connection to the whole. The stalk, even as it dries, remains a "unique part of the forest." This is the triumph of collectivity and solidarity; identity is affirmed not in solitude but in an unbreakable bond with the larger community.
This philosophy of connection extends to his use of magical realism. Unlike the terrifying inner caves of Muktibodh, Venugopal's magic is auspicious and dense. His "as though" creates a space where the impossible—roots running, forests appearing in the sky—becomes a felt truth, a necessary leap of faith for a struggling humanity. His creative process relies on "visual texturing," where an idea is first turned into a scene and then animated through words. The breaking of his lines is never arbitrary; wherever he breaks a line, he gives the reader space to pause and feel the depth of the image. The silence between lines is a kind of "breathing space," a resistant force against the noise of modern life.
In Venugopal's poems, time is not a static concept but a biological flow. In 'They Are Hands', time plays the role of a "decider": "when the time comes / time itself hands over guns." Here time is a force that ripens circumstances. In 'Fertile Fatigue', when the poet sees his "face / becoming time" in the mirror of a grass blade, the distance between time and the person disappears. Time is not an external power but the maturity within human beings that deepens with labour. In poems such as 'Dangers' and 'Stalk', time is related to the "dignity of the moment." The "drying" and the "being lush" are two ends of the same truth; for the poet, time is not merely progress but the continuity of being.
Ultimately, Venugopal's aesthetic of resistance is a journey from emptiness to density. It begins with the dream, which, as he writes in a short poem, is itself a beginning: "Let there be nothing / only a dream / even then it can be a beginning." This dream is the seed that activates the roots. The roots run, gathering the speed of horses. The winds, which "never stay silent," carry the storm of change. And finally, the sky, once empty, fills with the dense, living image of a forest. 
In an age of technological singularity, environmental crisis, and political despair, Venugopal's poetry offers a vital alternative. It reminds us that the future is not an external destination to be found, but a potentiality hidden within our own foundations. It is built not by machines, but by the labour of hands and the courage of a vision that can see the young joy behind the terrifying mask. His poems are a living philosophy, assuring us that as long as the roots are alive and running, both the storm and the dawn remain possible.
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*Professor & former Head (Retd.), Department of Hindi, School of Humanities, University of Hyderabad. This is the abridged version of the author's original paper 

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