Saturday, February 4, 2023

The Kashmiri Girl

 

 

I read a pastoral poetry,

Among hills, of elysian delight;

Light’s incidental rays when

versified moment that,

A little queen burst into view,

Eyes were mesmerized by

that youthful hill girl.

 

Our eyes met for the first time,

Mine from the plains,

Vehicled, wind-screened, speeding,

And hers from the mountains;

Alluring gaiety of hills and pastures,

One which saw so few;

Forests, snow, pastures, goats,

apple orchards, pines, sheep,

And jovial looks of course at

the vehicles bound for the holy cave.

 

The other but fed up with

brain-sauced, levelled up intricacies,

And when they butted upon,

Tensioned smiles surfaced,

Some grudges, some complaints,

Fear, excitement and adventure,

Mine for the fee-faw going on,

Hers for their sufferings.

 

Symbolized it two plates,

The Indian and the Eurasian,

Rubbing into each other,

Earthquakes, landslides, killings;

The tale of two religions,

Two geographies also.

 

She looked coyly,

The deflorating valley hurtled while

a craggy voice around,

Kashmiri girl! Child you were not

to shout for toffee, biscuit from the pilgrims,

Like the small ones doing the same.

 

A long road the yatris travelled,

Mature too you were not,

To snub at the pilgrim’s gifts,

From the jovial 14- or 15-stepped podium,

Thou smiled with full brace;

Nature’s smile, unchecked and pure!

Made then a V-sign with fingers,

Its meaning you may not even know:

A win for which side?

 

O floret! Still it was a welcome,

Also a signal to get some gift

from the pilgrims to the holy cave,

Some returning to the plains,

Perhaps never to return again.

 

Stupefied, I leaned forward,

To accept welcome from the houri,

Crowning the celestial beauty around,

Dollishly you smiled again,

Alas, thou were welcoming

a fleeting acardiac tin box,

Sped off which by your side,

Thy fingers somewhat shaking,

Curling to show dejection,

Under your breath

a deflorating smile surfaced,

It was laced with a sweet request,

The excitement in your beautiful eyes

touched peak as the vehicle crossed over,

That emeraldine face blushed,

I was but the poorest man,

Not to possess anything to offer

to that welcoming symbol of love,

Something strung and awakened the self

like the morning song of birds;

The ditty which the heart

just danced to beatific rhythm,

Turned it now the verse

defective at the beginning,

Yes! Fugitive and guilty—

Escaping with the heartless machine,

While that velvety cord,

Connected which many Twos,

Was on the verge of snapping,

Moving was I with lolling time;

Chhee, a passive journey

from here to the place called home.

 

Past it was becoming from the present,

Dirt cheap celerity was taking a toll,

A few seconds ago

the feminine Goddess smiled like full moon,

Chiding Abba was now turning it demi-lune,

That soft, juicy, jovial, ripening

bird of love and peace was branched alone.

 

In that moment of versification

forgot this mortal to symbolize

its ecstasy in any way,

The distance was increasing now

to the farness of hills from the plains,

Like a misbecomed soul,

I convulsed and turned to look back,

And there you shone like a little star,

Bright enough to make time reflow

by the road and your little hamlet nearby,

Crowning the path like

a milestone reached by someone, somewhere,

Missy, thou as rare as a perfect lunar rainbow!

Me lucky to spot one!

I waved at you,

A gesture of defeat, bliss, apologetic and may more,

Good bye perhaps to that

monticule moonet waving back,

Oh, what purity!

Welcoming and forgiving,

Brisking away the netherworld bursting around.

 

Girl, I looked back till

you turned a faint image

to these eyes,

kept on which hope for the peep-o’-day,

To see the orchid again,

Alas, you but were sheer rarity;

An elusive dreamy appearance,

Which like a fictitious love-tale

painted the heart for a while,

And then you were gone,

For seconds nine or ten

waved when you at the vehicle,

Chiselled in the heart an ogive,

Fade which will not with time,

That small ray emanating

from that montane onyx,

Will always keep travelling

to deep fathoms in my heart.

 

Tears were of course there,

For that smiling forgiveness,

I gave you nothing,

But the novelette poured

such tomes of wordings in my heart;

That wave of hand,

As rattled on the clatter-hearted pilgrim,

Created big tremors inside,

Enough to break the glaciers

crowning the peaks above,

With suffering peals of thunder inside,

Driven was I forward on the gutted path.

 

O girl from the mountains!

You smiled for Kashmir whole,

The smile which was part-coloured;

Anguish, fear, communalism, violence

got mixed in an all-pervading whiteness;

That olive branch to a visitor,

Offering the nature’s indiscriminating boons around,

Negating all that repressing force

subdues which the free-ways of liberated hearts,

You thus appeared a little saint,

Preaching love, compassion and humanity,

Oneness of nature, humanity and God.

 

A pilgrim to the valley,

Aching was isolation:

Not of tough clime and testing terrain,

But of hearts rapidly forgetting love,

Kashmir! The crown of India,

The diadem of culture and history,

With man-nature bonhomie,

And cradled heaven on highest terrain,

The seat for spirituality of the great Lord,

And many legends of religion mine,

Meditations in the snowy peaks,

Vales, glaciers, pastures and clouds,

The cheering spectators for truth’s delight.

 

Now the same peaks isolated,

Bombs and bullets yell macabre,

Only suffering cries reach His door,

From these lofty peaks under His chin

guns rattle and bombs create bloody din,

But for whom?

Ishwar or Allah?

Devastated by such a loss,

Hung midair like legendary Trishanku,

Between two extremes,

Trapped in a paradox,

With numbed senses,

Unable to think and feel,

I crossed your roadside hamlet,

And there you were,

Ready to enliven this dazed puppet

with a gold thread having silver core.

 

That girlish look of eagerness and curiosity,

Excitedly standing on the toes, chin high,

Neck firm like a goddess:

Seemed it a salad-days gyration:

That V-sign,

That smile,

and the wave of hand,

Byeing and good-byeing the visitor,

Hill girl, you stood for the nature around,

Sang a little song of lovely nightingale,

With the scented message that

I am above the things you think,

Waving on the road

you were thus left behind,

Rattled as I along the road,

Knew the authority of ‘moving on’—

‘Accept not welcome such’,

Many uncertainties of the stoppage:

Of Hinduism, Islam and a pilgrim,

Of a Kashmiri Muslim adolescent girl

waving at an Indian Hindu,

And thus helplessly I moved on,

Surrendered to fate and destiny,

Caught in the forces of an orbit,

Mechanised like all the parts

of the vehicle around me,

And then the curve in the orbit

took me out of sight

from that small raylet,

Which was left lost there.

 

A huge nostalgia piling up already:

Tears in my eyes;

Tears for the curved inevitability,

Tears for a glorious spectacle,

which the fate provided to a stranger;

Fear for the turmoiled smoke

ready to engulf her and her tiny hamlet,

And the Ws about her—

What, when, why, where, whom.

 

Moisture in the eyes,

Feeling of pain about the damsel,

Who an instant back

poured nature’s shower upon me,

And with such an open heart!

With such unselfishness!

A gift for the miser from the plains,

The glorious gift of the hill girl,

From the daughter of clouds,

From the sister of serpentine ravines,

From the playmate of wild breeze,

From the princess of that golden silence.

 

O bather in the brooks,

Catcher of early sunrays,

O snowy beauty of winters,

Or the flowery one of springs,

I don’t know whether

I will see you again or not,

But you will always remind that

nature once stood before me,

versified as a slender hill girl,

looked and waved at me,

That nature once let me read her,

Not the chapter usual

of forest, peaks, snow and brooks,

But a new chapter

in her human version,

Where a sweet swifty angel

chanced across me;

That nature from its abditory

produced a juvenile accretion,

With gaiety, mirth, hilarity;

A page from the Elysium epoch,

With words of unqualified love and smile.

 

The rugged topography around

saw a goddess in the ripening face,

Those fishy lips moving to fullness,

Those oval eyes acquiring hazel depth,

That nose eager to snatch female coquetry,

Those cheeks eager to be apple-hued,

That forehead proud to recently hear the call of puberty,

That chin with a naughty twitch,

All these depicted the desire and dreams

of the unconquered nature around,

Earlier it lost its smile

in the generality pervading around,

Mother nature, voice whose

came through birds, brooks and sighing mountain winds,

All these and more realized their worth

around your lips,

Whispered as you some sweet word with a smile,

These ears are most unfortunate,

Not to catch that soft whiff,

Which nature tried to voice.

 

Kashmiri girl!

Mother nature again hid you in its folds,

As suddenly as you appeared,

Lost are you in your small world,

I recollect the sinews now,

Scattered in my soul,

That glimpse sparkled too heavenly,

Melting pains and sparkling ecstasies,

Ever evolving and diversifying,

And me with a birdie hurry

try to relive the same picture again,

Alas, now but I only fail,

Depersonified nature I face now—

Huge mountains, forests, snow

and a large vacant pool of silence,

A wave of pain surfaces from inside,

It goes to the soul’s deep well,

And echoes from that cosmic experience

travel far into the distances.

֍♠֎

Wednesday, February 1, 2023

Tauji

 

While the world was lost

                in the frenzied tunes of urban lark,

In the countryside a faint flicker was

                tiptoeing through the dark,

Slowly-slowly the torch

                burnt high and bright,

Dynamic dimensions of its raylets

                woke up the slumberous masses for a fight.

 

Dignified confidence and exalted impulse

                of light went flinging forth,

Historically harassed and exploited millions

                got fresh hopes in south and north,

Lo! The fringe folks arrived

                at the forefront,

As the brightest star of Haryana

                in the sky brightly burnt.

 

Tauji, how high and mighty thou were!

                Still so down to earth and simple!

Corpulent informality thine

                brought always a smiling dimple

On every face tormented by

                a worrying wrinkle.

 

Thy simple soul,

                Always solemnly cuddled into

the paternal throes of composing

lushly-lustrous future

                for each and every one of us,

And when the brightest son of Haryana

                was gone for the eternal sleep,

A scar was created incalculably deep,

                While our helpless sky

fell into a mourning hush.

 

Still, O Tauji!

                Thy steady and unvacillating goodness,

And that persistently pronounced forthrightness

                will always remain with us

to guide us clear of every trouble's crush,

                Thy enlightening sagaciousness,

And the robust bravado of your heart

                will continue to inspire new green

sprouts in land troubled by thirst.

 

How fulsome was your love

                for the common people!

How refreshing was your smile's verve!

                Temper so gracefully proportioned

and enchantingly simple!

                How immensely foreseeable

was character yours!

                Just like a path straight

and an open book of pleasant hours,–

                Without any twists and turns,

O Tauji great!

 

Thy large-hearted liberality

                was simply unbelievable,

Sacrificed the Nation's highest post

                without tiniest trace of grumble,

Now, others follow thy legendary step

                and reap the political fruit,

But alas, hear they not

                the cries of masses mute.

 

Who can forget

                the old-age pension,

Aha, an enormously elaborate

                example of public work!

Gone was crippling old's tension;

                Rhythmically gleaming smiles now lurk.

 

O thou farmers' messiah!

                You tactfully removed

the noose of debt from their neck,

                Gave then a

fatherly pat on the back,

                And they – helplessly hemmed in by

the merciless loops of modern banking –

                found utmost solace

in thy patronage loop,

                Heavily indebted backs with a droop

got straightened with pride,

                Launched thou then

a new tirade against hunger,

                New hopes now linger

in peasants' dry eyes of yore,

Opened as thou a new door

to pride and prosperity.

 

Mystic subtlety and exuberance

                of thy demeanour,

And freely elaborate freedom

                of the 'human' in you,

Reach O subjects at the King's

                threshold at any hour,–

Aha, no officially reprimanding queue!

 

Your legacy burning

                like a lamp

in stillest of silence,

                And thy charisma holding

in spellbinding balance,

                While time's arms

swinging helplessly and silently,

                Grows as the great man's

legend almost exponentially,

                Continue it will to

shine as our path's light,

                And we the sturdy sons

will toil to reach the height

                where you wanted us to reach–

A new, fighting determination

                in heart each;

To get the justice

                for everybody wronged;

A new prosperity in homes

                where it never belonged;

For the youths a fresh start;

                Evolve we'll a new art,

Whereby everything is in

                exquisitely fine-proportioned

parallel to your cause,

                Brethren! Let us prove our gratitude

to the man who brought

                in teary eyes a smiling rose.

 

Long live our

                grand spellbinder's legacy!

God! Let it perpetually

                                                cut the time's fabric mazy!

Friday, January 27, 2023

Summer Flower

 

I was born on this day,

Quarter century old,

Time's scythe takes hold

Around years, months on the 5th May,

And the hot summer pay

For the cake gold,

Lies which in barn to be sold,

While sandy swirls make hay.

 

Thank thee O summer,

Only thou show passion for the child;

Arriving like the flower late,

Becomes who then a dreamer,—

Summer flower; without singlest trace wild,

Oh! The flower with unflowery fate!

On Intimacy with Mysterious Moment

 

Had I known the time

When the sleep came

Over me like the name;

Thou great mystery infinite!

With that instant to ignite,

I could light a small rhyme:

First maiden to be kissed firstly,

Or, ye lightening sky briskly

To quench the thirst of yore

Eagerly awaiting the first downpour.

Me doth but fail,

Like a disappointed lover hail

The start of love days:

Gaze first, first meet,—

Time caught in crazy ways,

Again but sadness beat

Its unlyrical, unrhymed tomber,

Lost is that instant

In noise huge of the bomber.

Aha, That Moment!

 

Aha that contemplative inward time!

Body when reaches its prime;

In harmony with mind, writes a rhyme,

Illusions not, but reality shine.

 

Aha that divine perfect position!

No couple ever found such satisfaction,

Every part stimulates loveliest reaction,—

Soul sends such vibration.

 

Aha that obliviousness to deflected reality;

Self-truths forced for social duty,

This but is the true beauty,

Simple, straight without sociality.

 

Aha that becoming part of the whole!

Where individual plays no role,—

Still, a huge stage with character sole,

And that possibility with single pole.

 

Aha that sudden cosmic struck!

When the ultimate crisply lurk,

And falsely hard-worked walls jerk,

Transform these into heavenly arc.

 

Aha that golden light inside head!

Beats which the dark dead,

Infinite facets cut the fad

To a glittering diamond on something dead.

 

Aha that helplessness of senses!

Struck which through the tenses,

Come they now across the fences,

Liberate which infinity in His ranches.

 

Aha that time of being with the being!

And seeing too much without seeing,

Crowning moment of the body's king;

Yes! Soul triumphant, possessively sing.

The Winner Takes it All

 

There walks the winner; triumphant

Shine of sweat on the brow,

Once he almost gave up, now buoyant

Bosom swells solid for the morrow.

There is the loser's bent head,—

Eyes which once sparkled, dropped dead;

Unnoticed, uncared to destiny's glad;

Bosom hunched back and example bad.

Who makes this greatest loss?

The difference between winning and losing,

Is it deciding time's momentary chaos?

Or those long hours found no time moving.

 

Branded two species; unmatching,

Aah! That even after single hatching.

The Ever Flying Kite

 

See the kite's sway in the sky:

Papered soul pulls for escaping fly,

Corded attachment but to the earthly;—

The life force to its limits finally.

The will of the soul for free float,

Alas! Possible only jerks lot,

Till the last drop hot,

The instinct, the desire leaves not.

 

And the momentary penury released,

As if to get the prisoner appeased,

What a beggar the besieged!

Pious but still teased.

Yes, broken at last! That wondrous free flight,

Alas but until fall for earthly delight.