Flower Power: an Essay by Susmita Dutta
Here I was, reading a chapter on “Oral & Parenteral Opioid Analgesics” while all of a sudden I visualized the beautiful poppy flower, its
petals as soft as silk and as delicate as a baby’s cheek and my heart soared
with the memory of banks and banks of poppies I had seen, all along the
roadside in Central Europe, particularly when travelling from Prague to
Budapest during our last summer holidays. As my thoughts wandered in between
pearls of medical wisdom and poetic imagery, I thought of the various ways the
innocent and seemingly harmless poppy had made ingress into medicine, drug
abuse, wars, and literature and as a symbol of remembrance.
Opium use predates recorded history
(3000 BC) and use of opioids for pain management has oscillated between
indiscriminate use even a short century ago even among the elite to the severe restrictions of today which has
left many a patient suffering from severe pain, unrelieved. Morphine, the opiate obtained from the
poppy plant ( Papaver somniferum), we know today, is the gold standard to which
all other pain medications are compared.
We all know
about the effects of opium on the brain, and how it can both numb pain and
produce hallucinations. During the Romantic era in Britain which saw the emergence of the best of literature and poetry, it was also noted that there was
an increased use of opium, as it was thought that opium opened creative channels
and made imaginations more vivid (Abrams, M. H. [1934]. The Milk of Paradise: The Effect of
Opium Visions on the Works of DeQuincey, Crabbe, Francis Thompson, and
Coleridge. Cambridge: Harvard University Press). Now this distinctive
increase in imaginative writing could only happen to really talented writers and probably all the
romantic poets with probably the exception of Wordsworth indulged in opium
either on occasion or on a regular basis.
There were
several popular preparations like Godfrey’s Cordial, Dalby’s Carminative,
McMunn’s Elixir, Batley’s Sedative Solution, and Mother Bailey’s Quieting Syrup
with opium in them which were available off the counter. Another common
preparation was laudanum, and we read in literature of doctors prescribing a
drop of laudanum (combination of alcohol and opium) to soothe fraying nerves at
the drop of a hat. Those were the days when you treated anything and everything
from venereal disease to cough with this ubiquitous poppy milk.
All said and done, the writers of the Romantic era, like Samuel
Taylor Coleridge and Thomas De Quincey, who suffered from addiction to opium,
used beautifully imagined themes to create their writings and they accepted the
fact that such vividness in their descriptions could come from the soothing yet
hallucinogenic effects of opium. Samuel Coleridge wrote to his brother-“Laudanum gave me repose, not sleep; but, you, I believe, know how divine that
repose is, what a spot of enchantment, a green spot of fountain and flowers and
trees in the very heart of a waste of sands.”
Coleridge also attests to this fact in the preface
for Kubla Khan; or, A Vision in a Dream: A Fragment". Written in 1796, the
poem was composed one night after he experienced an opium-influenced dream after reading a
work describing Xanadu, the summer palace
of the Mongol
Kublai Khan..
He kept it for private readings for his friends until 1816 when it was
published.
And all who heard should see them there,
And all should cry, Beware! Beware!
His flashing eyes, his floating hair!
Weave a circle round him thrice,
And close your eyes with holy dread,
For he on honey-dew hath fed,
And drunk the milk of Paradise
Arthur
Rimbaud's poem on the other hand
described the body’s response when he was giving up opium in "Night in
Hell":
My guts are on fire. The power of the poison
twists my arms and legs, cripples me, drives me to the ground. I die of thirst,
I suffocate, I cannot cry.
Woman poets
in contrast, had other views and concentrated more on the medicinal properties
and its domestic uses. Their odes to opium demonstrate its presence in the
middle-class British homes, probably lying on their shelves within easy reach
and sometimes reflecting the long suffering woman’s longed-for mental escape from
domestic drudgery as in Maria Logan's "To Opium," Henrietta O'Neill's
"Ode to the Poppy," Anna Seward's "To the Poppy," and Sara
Coleridge's "Poppies,". And sometimes they wrote about physical
pain:
“Soft hangs the opiate in the brain,
And lulling soothes the edge of pain,
Till harshest sound, far off or near,
Sings floating in its mellow sphere.
Thus wrote Maria White Lowell, first wife of James Russell Lowell, American romantic poet.
Frail and plagued with ill health, Maria died at the age of 32.
Sara Coleridge wrote for her son, Herbert, a beautiful poem on ‘Poppies’,
the juice of which had helped her husband Samuel Taylor Coleridge create the
masterpieces.
O how should'st
thou with beaming brow
With eye and
cheek so bright
Know aught of
that blossom's pow'r,
Or sorrows of
the night!
When poor mama long restless lies
She drinks the
poppy's juice;
That liquor
soon can close her eyes
And slumber
soft produce.
O' then my sweet my happy boy
Will thank the
poppy flow'r
Which brings
the sleep to dear mama
At midnight's
darksome hour.
On further dwelling on the flower power, I
thought of the famed
memorial day (Remembrance Day) also
known as Poppy Day, observed by Commonwealth of Nations member states to remember the soldiers of their
armed forces who died in war and is observed on 11th November (11th
hour of the 11th day of the 11th month) to recall the end of hostilities of World War I on that date in 1918. Made famous by John Mcrae, the poem ‘Flanders
Field’ recalls hundreds of war heroes lying in the crimson fields where poppies
flowered in abundance making it almost poetic –
In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields
Hostilities formally Take up our quarrel with
the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields
From my initial
image to Flanders to Afghanistan, where fields of poppies and war go hand in
hand my thoughts turned from the innocent flower to the poppy being an epitome
of blood, mortality and the famed Opium wars. The two wars beginning in 1839
which speaks of typical English dominance initially starting with issues of
unequal trade between the British and China and ending with making China
subservient and turning many of its population to addicts and Indian fields
into massive areas of poppy cultivation (thus using both the countries to fill
their coffers).
The second opium war where Hong Kong exchanged hands with the British
started off a more modern Chinese history and as we know it is now reestablishing
themselves as one of the greatest world powers.
As my thoughts traversed between the good and bad that poppy did, I
cannot but think of the greatest benefit to mankind, in the form of relief of
pain, be it cancer or chancre.
As I ponder through my book again I cannot but ruminate that probably
by now I am addicted to the poppy flower without actually taking it as I see
Michele Obama alight on Indian soil wearing a ‘Poppy dress’ and even the book I
am currently reading has a dog called ‘Poppy’. Call the flower a weed, a
destroyer, a soother, or simply a vain flower, I cannot but help ending by
quoting the following poem.
The Poppy
BY JANE TAYLOR
High on a bright and sunny bed
A scarlet poppy
grew
And up it held its staring head,
And thrust it full
in view.
Yet no attention did it win,
By all these
efforts made,
And less unwelcome had it been
In some retired
shade.
Although within its scarlet breast
No sweet perfume
was found,
It seemed to think itself the best
Of all the flowers
round,
From this I may a hint obtain
And take great care
indeed,
Lest I appear as pert and vain
As does this gaudy
weed.
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