A child’s sparky
fascination,
Its smile radiating
tenderness,
Enjoying free gifts of
joy,
Holding the coins in piggy
bank
bigger than any gold mine.
An adolescent’s evocative
showcase,
All out shimmering and
sizzling,
The highly stylized teeny
hoppers,
The follies of love or
infatuation
sinuous, clandestine and
damning.
Mad with love
the youth’s audacious
installations,
Ephemeral love on moonlit
nights,
Rigorous and virulent in
its grip
(almost sinister and
vampirish),
Flamboyantly goofy,
zipping and zooming,
Squealing adrenaline rush,
Frantic and fidgety,
Spectacular and grand.
Stirring, intrepid spirit
of middle age
to carry the domestic yoke
amid all the social
cockfighting,
Skimming over the
competitive scum,
The shifting, virile
nature
of the greying years
spangled with nostalgia
for the erstwhile peaks,
So much the passing time
speaks.
Now on the other side of
age,
The realigning of
compromised reality,
The poignant reminiscences
of youth,
Now surface the skin
furrows uncouth,
Time’s acutely roving work
etched on the skin’s
landscape now,
The startling storage of
lifelong pursuits
now almost wreckage,
The soaring imaginations
gone,
Draped in humbling eerie
the thoughts of afterlife
swarm,
Gingerly waggling nostalgic
gait
seems just death’s bait.
The trivializing passage
of days,
Gone are the bright rays,
The world just a turbulent
grey now,
Snippets of life barely
chugging ahead
through a dreadfully
narrow lane,
And a scowl and frown,
Or some odd chuckle,
Thus goes time bulldozing
over us.
The touristy venture from
self-congratulation to
self-flagellation,
Bones in disarray,
Eyes grave and serious,
A helpless witness to the
shifting landscape,
An invalid clinging to
convalescence dreams,
Begging for stipends and
allowance
of some more drab
fruitless days,
Pleading for pennyworth of
life,
Poor and miserly soul
soliciting help from the
angels,
Taking it to be a
paradise,--
but drudgery in dungeon it
is,
Horrid apparition of death
hovers above,
Aah, the subversion of
life and its fraudulence!
Then the last wish,
‘If nothing more, give me
at least
a splendid, ceremonial
grave,
Let it not be a pauper’s
grave
without mourners at the
funeral.’
The last breath fluttering
a farewell
with one final wish,
‘Let there be
silk-thread embroidery in
my name!’