Poetry: Time and Time Again
Assam Board · Class 12 · English
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Responding to the Poem — Time and Time Again (A.K. Ramanujan)
1What did you think the poem was about when you read the first few lines?Show solution
Concept: First impressions and the role of the title in shaping a reader's interpretation.
Answer: When we read the first few lines, the poem appears to be a simple, almost mundane observation about clocks and their varying times. The reader initially thinks it is about the ordinary domestic experience of noticing that different clocks in a household or neighbourhood show different times. The tone seems casual and descriptive, giving the impression of a slice-of-life poem about the minor inconsistencies of everyday life — the way no two clocks ever seem to agree perfectly. There is no immediate hint of any deeper social or political commentary; the poem seems to be about the harmless idiosyncrasy of timekeeping.
2From which line does the import of the title strike the reader?Show solution
Concept: The title's deeper significance becomes clear when the poem moves beyond domestic clocks to describe violence and destruction.
Answer: The full import of the title strikes the reader from the lines that describe the clock being destroyed — 'eyeless, silent, a zigzag sky showing / through the knocked-out clockwork, after a riot, a peace-march time bomb, or a precise act / Of nature in a night of lightnings.' Here, 'time' is no longer merely about clocks; it becomes a metaphor for recurring cycles of human violence (riots, time bombs planted even during peace marches) and natural destruction. The phrase 'time and time again' now resonates with the idea that such destruction — both man-made and natural — repeats itself endlessly, cyclically, throughout history. The title thus signals the poem's central theme: the relentless, repetitive nature of violence and chaos.
3What makes for the differences between the timekeeping of the various clocks? What is the implicit comparison?Show solution
Concept: The clocks serve as a metaphor for the people, communities, and societies they represent.
Answer: The differences in timekeeping arise from the fact that each clock is set, wound, and maintained differently by its owner — each household, each community, each institution operates according to its own rhythm, priorities, and sense of time. No two clocks are perfectly synchronised.
The implicit comparison is between the clocks and the people or communities they represent. Just as clocks in the same city show different times, people and communities in the same society live by different rhythms, values, and worldviews. They are all part of the same larger world (the same town, the same nation) yet they are fundamentally out of sync with one another. This lack of synchrony is not merely a technical inconvenience — it is a metaphor for the social, communal, and cultural disharmony that exists within a diverse society like India. The clocks' inability to agree on the time mirrors the inability of communities to agree on shared values or to coexist peacefully.
4Why is the act of nature described as 'precise'?Show solution
Concept: The word 'precise' is used ironically and also literally to describe nature's destructive power.
Answer: The act of nature — a lightning strike — is described as 'precise' for the following reasons:
(i) Literal precision: A lightning bolt strikes a specific target with pinpoint accuracy. Unlike a riot or a bomb, which may cause widespread, indiscriminate destruction, a lightning strike hits one particular spot — in this case, the clock — with surgical exactness. Nature, in this sense, is more 'precise' than human violence.
(ii) Ironic contrast: There is a deep irony in calling nature's destruction 'precise.' Human beings plan riots and plant time bombs with deliberate intent, yet their violence is chaotic and widespread. Nature, which has no intent or malice, destroys with a precision that humans, for all their planning, cannot match. This irony underscores the poet's wry, detached observation of both human and natural destruction.
(iii) Philosophical implication: The precision of nature's act also suggests that destruction — whether by human hand or natural force — is inevitable and unerring. Time, and the instruments that measure it, will be destroyed one way or another, 'time and time again.'
5Which of the following reflects the poet's attitude towards communal disharmony:
(i) Critical condemnation
(ii) Helpless acceptance
(iii) Wistful lamentShow solution
Justification: A.K. Ramanujan's tone throughout the poem is quiet, observational, and tinged with sadness rather than outright anger or passive resignation. He does not loudly condemn communal violence (ruling out 'critical condemnation'), nor does he simply shrug and accept it as inevitable (ruling out 'helpless acceptance'). Instead, his tone is that of a wistful lament — a sorrowful, almost elegiac recognition that clocks (representing communities and their harmonious coexistence) are repeatedly destroyed by riots, time bombs, and other acts of violence. The matter-of-fact, understated way in which he lists 'a riot, a peace-march time bomb' alongside a natural lightning strike conveys a deep, quiet grief — a lament for the recurring cycles of destruction that mar human society. The very casualness of the listing makes the lament more poignant, not less.
6Is the poet's attitude a representation of how the average Indian feels both towards human violence and nature's fury?Show solution
Concept: The relationship between a poet's personal voice and the collective consciousness of a society.
Answer: Yes, to a significant extent, the poet's attitude does represent how the average Indian feels towards both human violence and nature's fury.
(i) Towards human violence: The average Indian, living in a diverse, multi-religious, multi-ethnic society, is all too familiar with the periodic eruption of communal riots and politically motivated violence. Like the poet, most Indians do not respond with loud, sustained outrage every time such violence occurs — they have seen it 'time and time again.' There is a weariness, a wistful sadness, a sense of resigned familiarity with the cycle of violence. The poet captures this collective emotional state accurately.
(ii) Towards nature's fury: Similarly, Indians living in a subcontinent prone to floods, droughts, cyclones, and lightning storms have developed a complex relationship with natural destruction — one that combines awe, acceptance, and grief. Nature's 'precise' destructiveness is something the average Indian understands and has learned to live with.
(iii) However, one must also note a limitation: the poet's attitude is that of an educated, reflective, middle-class observer. The 'average Indian' who is directly affected by a riot or a flood may feel far more acute pain, anger, or despair than the poem's quiet, detached lament suggests. In this sense, the poem represents one strand of the Indian emotional response — the contemplative, literary strand — rather than the full spectrum of how Indians feel about violence and natural disaster.
In conclusion, the poem resonates deeply with the Indian reader because it articulates a widely shared but rarely expressed emotional truth: the quiet, recurring sorrow of watching time, harmony, and human life destroyed again and again, by forces both within and beyond human control.
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