CHAPTER 3 – SOME TOPOI IN THE KURTULUŞ EDEBİYATI
97
Dinle Neyden
(Listen from the Ney)
(1919) he used both the
aruz
and the
hece
vezni
21
. As an exponent of the
aruz
metre he was praised by Yahya Kemal:
Bir lübbidur cihanda elezz-i lezaizin,
Her misra-i güzidesi Faruk Nafiz’in
Each select line of Faruk Nafiz
Is a delightful essence in this world.
His poems were very popular among the younger people of his time. In this period he
used the
aruz
metre and he is thought to be the last in the line of the master poets
who used the
aruz
metre (Muallim Naci, Tevfik Fikret, Mehmet Akif, Ahmet Haşim
and Yahya Kemal) .
Gradually he moved on from love and sentimental poetry to different subjects: he
dealt with fine descriptions of Istanbul landscape as well as with thoughts and
feelings common among the poor and suffering people. In this new kind of poetry, he
skilfully managed to bring some of the beauty of the old poetry into the new one.
His poem
Han Duvarları
is about Anatolia seen through the eyes of a person from
Istanbul. Anatolia had been the subject of poetry long before 1926, though. Folk
poetry echoes its landscape and its people. Mehmet Emin, Ziya Gökalp and Mehmet
Akif had made Anatolia the subject in their poetry, each of them projecting a
different ideology: Mehmet Emin showing its harshness, its poverty and its
21
Kurdakul I, 233
CHAPTER 3 – SOME TOPOI IN THE KURTULUŞ EDEBİYATI
98
abandonment, Mehmet Akif presenting a landscape united by Islam and Ziya Gökalp
an ideal country based on the ideals of Turan
22
.
In
Han Duvarları,
Faruk Nafiz describes the physical landscape of Anatolia through
the eyes of a traveller from Istanbul on a horse drawn cart. The poem successfully
conveys the impression of the vastness, remoteness and geographical variety of
Anatolia. It consists of 140 lines and is written in the syllabic metre
hece vezni
of
folk poetry.
The poet draws a tableau of what he sees and how he feels during the three day long
journey: the geography of Anatolia, the people of Anatolia and his inner world, his
own feelings. There is a clear sense of melancholy and nostalgia which increases as
the cart goes further into Central Anatolia which is presented as a place of
gurbet
(being far from home, foreign travel, exile).
In this three day long journey the vastness of Anatolia is eloquently presented with
these lines:
Nihâyetsiz bir ova ağarttı benzimizi,
Yollar bir şerit gibi ufka bağladı bizi.
Gurbet beni muttasıl çekiyordu kendine,
Yol, hep yol, dâimâ yol… bitmiyor düzlük yine.
And its people gathered around the fire at the first stop:
22
Kaplan, 8, rather than reflecting the realities of Anatolia mainstream poets of the prerepublican period
projected an imaginary landscape reflecting their own ideology.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |