Mercy Kill | kavippithan.com
kavippithan.com · Tamil Poetry in English

Mercy Kill

Kill the mercy
Let dread rise high
Grant them the pain of living
If they are proven vile,
what place has mercy — on their path
To uproot this twisted lust
To deny such evil — even in dreams
Does this life deserve to rise?
Do not hesitate to end it
When guilt is known and certain
Make them a corpse
Whoever they are — even if it is I.
Poem Explained
The Meaning and Essence of the Poem
1
Kill the Mercy — Punishment Is Justice
Kill the mercy / Let dread rise high / Grant them the pain of living

This poem is written entirely against sexual violence. The poet’s firm stance is that those who commit such heinous acts deserve no mercy whatsoever. They must be seized by deep fear — made to tremble with the very pain of living. The poet demands that punishment be real and unsparing.

2
Proven Vile — No Forgiveness Remains
If they are proven vile, / what place has mercy — on their path

Once guilt is proven, the demand is clear — no mercy for anyone. Did they show mercy to their victims? Can they return the life they took? Can they erase the pain they caused? They cannot. Therefore, they deserve no mercy either.

3
Uproot the Twisted Lust — Destroy It at the Root
To uproot this twisted lust / To deny such evil — even in dreams

This corrupt desire, this sexual violence, must be eliminated entirely. Even in sleep, such wicked thoughts must find no room to rise. The poet believes that only the severity of punishment can make this possible.

4
Do Not Hesitate to End It — I Support Capital Punishment
Does this life deserve to rise? / Do not hesitate to end it

Some human rights advocates oppose capital punishment — that view may seem reasonable to them. But can those who took a life through sexual violence restore it? They cannot. And so the poet says aloud: if guilt is proven, do not hesitate to take that life.

5
Whoever They Are — Even If It Is I
When guilt is known and certain / Make them a corpse / Whoever they are — even if it is I.

These are the most powerful lines of the poem. By saying “even if it is I,” the poet includes himself — declaring that if he were ever to commit such a wrong, he too should receive no mercy. This is the most honest and courageous statement the poem makes.

If guilt is proven,
show mercy to no one —
not even to me, if I am the one.
Make them a corpse.


This is the inescapable
justice this poem demands.

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