Friday, September 14, 2018

A little bouquet of emotions

The Winter Dawn of My Village
My village under cold, foggy clouds,
Lives, dallies in the wintery days,
Aha, agrestic, agar and still closed to the world,
It dangles with dew, mist, frost and all:
Birds, animals, villagers all respond to the chill,
Matches which attitude theirs:
Uninterested and not much conscious of the ‘hotty modernity’.

The dawn taking a yawn after a night frosty,
Like a curvaceous damsel,
after a dreamful, sweet night,
arms raised to the vigorous pull of youth,
reddish lips in a tantalizing twisted pout,
and breasts firm against any overture uncouth:
Glimpsing the maternity universal,
Ready to save this world from the doomed hate,
Her eyes full of love, smiles and dreams.

The westerlies breeze over the budding wheat
like a dusky, nimble-footed beauty,
The soft touch of her heels on the earth—
soothing, assuaging, healing and comforting,
And the wheat spikes open their eyes
to the maternal touch,
Like an infant moves its small, sparse eyelashes.

Arrogant crows fly out of the village,
To those dense plantations afar,
With wings cutting the saffron rays,
labour they will the whole day
and return with the brumal signs in tired rays,
Choosy parrots fly to tastier trees,
Mother nature has extra-pampered them:
The vagrant beauty of colours red and green,
Even nature seems favouring them
more than the blacks,
So they fly in the opposite direction from the crows,
And why not?
Closer they are to nature
than the rookies showing many characters human
in being retentive, querulous and cunning,
So the greens fly higher than the blacks.

Wool-laden toddlers waddle along the streets,
Like little Eskimos,
Their mothers put extra woolen layers on them:
Maternal care swaddled around them,
While they sneak away like tiny explorers
to see a bit more of this world,
Their aged peers, their exact analogues
on the other side of the slope,
warm their fragile, old bones around hookas in chaupals,
Hollow cheeks buzz with chuckle and logic simple,
Far from the warmth of gushing youthful blood,
They are mere fractions of life,
trying to integrate the group
and form a still-meaningful complete integer,
to live with at least that much of life
that at least would comprise a single, bubbly youth.

The village beauty smiles behind her thin veil:
The moon behind a fluffy curtain of soft clouds,
The sun peering over a cloud’s edge,
The star smiling from the farthest distance,
The lotus in hazy waters.
The hurried gait to finish her morning household chores
looking awkward on her fine, work-honed curves,
Tipsy, honeyed ogles,
potent to infatuate the hardest heart,
just fall on crude work,
Locks of hair with style simplest,
The envy of metropolitan beauties of great care,
Worry not! The virgin soil of the village
dances around thy work-beaten heels;
a chilly breeze kisses thy rosy cheeks;
The tiniest particles of the mist cling
at the single lock out of the veil.
And the sun struggles to rise in the east,
Only to ogle at thy shadow moving graciously.

Yes, such is the winter dawn!
Reddish-brown rays cut across the fog,
Gobble up the last traces of the night;
It comes to my village
like a daughter practicing ‘nature’s care’,
right from her birth in every relation.

The rising sun will dry away the dew, mist and frost,
Seedlings straighten up; the burden is off!
Bravo! Every seed off the peasant’s hand
fights nature to feed the nation,
Salutes! The farmer’s green paint splashed around.

Icy vapours off the village pond
shelter migrants; many from the Himalayas,
Exiled by the snows,
they live happily, warmly here,
This dawn is proud to host the familiar
crane couple, ducks, pelicans, herons and many more.
Such is my village at dawn,
Ready to go and almost self-sustain,
So few are such places, elsewhere!

The Light Beyond
There is light beyond the deepest dark depth,
There is a bright day after the ghostly haunts of nightmarish night,
After a barren famished fight there is a blossomed springed delight,
After pining pangs of separation there is a worthy end to the desperation,

After crashing in the gutters there is a surge and rise to bathe in holy waters,
After crying convulsions on the lips, a smile takes honeyed sips,
After the last deafeat, still there is an undying urge to accomplish the feat,
Even when blind with despair, there is hope hiding and cajoling somewhere,
Even in hate love still lurks somewhere!!!!

Love Fangs
I feel the shapeless mass of your love,
It creeps like a venomous reptile
through the garden of my heart,
It furiously hisses,
returning my softest kisses,
I bear the toxic marks
left on my skin by your fangs.
Still I carry your poisonous bulk
in the soft cradle of my heart.
Why?
Because I have no choice to hate you,
I can just love you!

The Immortal
I know life has rejected me,
And death when will accept me
that time is yet to be!
Till then, O Sufi, is there any light to see?
Yes fella!
It's in being with those who have been discarded by fate,
Who have laboriously scrawled and scribbled lifelong
but still have a clean slate;
It's in smiling with innocent dawns;
It's in basking in the sunny charms of forlorn lawns;
It's in the faded twinkle of distant stars;
It's in saying goodbye to the intrigues of my own internal wars;
It's in being with me,
And the way it is, let it be!

A Note from Spring’s Deathbed
The spring's traces last,
Hot summers approaching fast,
Languid notes in the air,
A solitary bird's forlorn chirping for musical share,
Drowned in stillness
this late morning bright and fair, 
Sky's dull blue,
Overhanging the earth in paling hue,
But a smaller world is there,
The overall lethargy cannot reach where,--
In its self-defined world
in a corner tiny,
The luscious wild flower 
still stands brave and shiny!

 The Smile, the Godliness
O thou wind-lashed flower!
Sadistic nature took rapist bites
at your soft petals,
At each bite and cut it laughed
and licked its blood-smeared lips,
You but stood unfazed for
beauty and fragrance.
The storm but
kept on increasing its fury,
But for how long?
It ran out of its fuel!
And stood panting and drained out!
When the night and the storm died
and a beautiful, warm, sunny day was born,
the profound flower stood majestically resplendent!
Its storm-lashed petals
more beautiful than ever!
Why?
Because never did it let
the smile go off its face!

The Flower’s Tears
Flowers aren’t supposed to weep,
Even if their petals are vandalized
and raping storms
spit all their fury
on their fragrant face.
It’s just for beauty’s sake, they say,
And tears on its petals are no tears,
These are unholy signs of its revolt.
So they just expect it to smile
while their poisonous fingers
greedily tear away petal after petal.
Listen you merciless fools!
A flower bears the pain most!
Even though its unfading smile
never allows it to surface on
its smiling face.
But a flower weeps unseen in the
dark hours of the night,
Humans, the dew-laden petals that you
gratify your senses with
are in fact the tears of that
soft petalous self.

The Mother
I’m the fire,
Who can fathom my
burning core’s plight!
They dance in my warmth
and see only the light!

The Bleeding Flower
Flower you were always beautiful!
Those balmy days blossomed your wonderful petals.
Then the weather changed,
Stormy winds, furious storms
took sadistic bites at your soft petals.
Bleeding flower,
You but kept your smile,
Nature’s fury caressed and lashed you,
Biting winds lynched you,
Like a sinful rapist they groped you,
You but smiled forgivingly.
Now the sinner stands
robbed of its fury,
And you smile more
beautiful than ever.
Lover, beauty and harmony prevail,
Hate, anger and lust fail!

The moment which fell out of my pocket on the way
Staring at the misty past
and forcing myself not to see the future eager to unfold itself too fast,
I wave at the nostalgic strains still beckoning and alive,
How I wish I could dive
back into the pools of the past,
To have my moments last
at a place that held me in its cradle soft,
That pious embrace which still holds me aloft!

The Last Prayer
It has been months since
I last lit my faith's lamp,
So many days have passed since
prayers chimed in my dark den's air damp,
My meditating self,
Now gives atheistic yelp.
Lost my faith!
Lost my prayer!
Lost my rituals!
Lost my meditative trance!

The Coin
My story is strange,
To understand it, you need brains
I was a coin with lot of shine
Then I went into the hands of
one after the other,--
The darkness gave me the creeps,
And I was lying on top of the heap,
Somehow I was given to a young guy,
Who tossed me in air and made me fly,
Then I was given to an old lady,
She kept in a place that was very shady,
I noticed I had lost my shine,
And I didn't look young and fine.
That is because I had grown old,
Now ,I know my life's story is told,
There are endless scars
and imprints on my soul.
I have lost my value in my own esteem,
But they still haggle sometime.

Wednesday, August 29, 2018

A Rainy Moment

Village...
musty...
like a mossy mushroom under a banyan...
rain-lashed...
semi-shaded days...
washed greenery greedily sprouting forth...
a love-lorn peacock dancing...
a bee-eater diving for its success and the insect's failure...
swallows riding the airy horses...
a tailor bird throwing loud vocal force for its 7 gram weight...
squirrel and crow fighting for a nut...
a mud-smeared dog losing the force of its barking against a braying donkey...
paddy standing lugubriously...
and the water hanging above,
ready to melt and shower its love again, 
any moment...

Saturday, January 7, 2017

Lost in Red Mist


She is a courtesan fighting for a respectable identity in the quagmire of degenerated nobility, wars, intrigues, debauchery, lust and, last but not the least, love.
She is a foreign tourist in India, raped, picking up the fragments of her violated self, walking with bruised honour, her innate goodness intact, to reach the house of justice to salvage her identity, to redeem her pride.
A circumstantial pawn in the checker-work of sex trade, she passes much of her youth in the muck of lust only to regain herself back, to free herself in her forties, to begin a new life.
Kashmir is burning and in the bigger fire are smouldering little worlds of common hopes, mundane dreams, routine aspirations and regular cravings.
He is huge and lifts unthinkable weights for a living, goes on living and lifting weights only to be crushed by circumstances.
On a badly stomped platform he gathers the nameless pieces of his dusted identity to have a name, a face, an identity of a common person from the normal world.
In the Tsunami ravaged Andaman, she, an Australian anthropologist, survives and looks with hope at the remnants including the sole surviving Shompen tribal.
On the devastated eastern coast of India, he, a mere kid, takes the onerous task of caring for his still smaller sister, while the world around seethes in chaos.
He dreams big from his small village, only realizing later that the dreams that grow in disproportion to one’s circumstances are as good as nightmares.
He, an old man staying alone with a cat, patches up the holes in his present through tales of the past, to survive, expecting a painless end in the future.

She, a Western tourist at Rishikesh, opens her spirits while a whole world drags around her feet.     

Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Lost in Red Mist

She is a courtesan fighting for a respectable identity in the quagmire of degenerated nobility, wars, intrigues, debauchery, lust and, last but not the least, love.

She is a foreign tourist in India, raped, picking up the fragments of her violated self, walking with bruised honour, her innate goodness intact, to reach the house of justice to salvage her identity, to redeem her pride.

A circumstantial pawn in the checker-work of sex trade, she passes much of her youth in the muck of lust only to regain herself back, to free herself in her forties, to begin a new life.

Kashmir is burning and in the bigger fire are smouldering little worlds of common hopes, mundane dreams, routine aspirations and regular cravings.

He is huge and lifts unthinkable weights for a living, goes on living and lifting weights only to be crushed by circumstances.

On a badly stomped platform he gathers the nameless pieces of his dusted identity to have a name, a face, an identity of a common person from the normal world.

In the Tsunami ravaged Andaman, she, an Australian anthropologist, survives and looks with hope at the remnants including the sole surviving Shompen tribal.

On the devastated eastern coast of India, he, a mere kid, takes the onerous task of caring for his still smaller sister, while the world around seethes in chaos.

He dreams big from his small village, only realizing later that the dreams that grow in disproportion to one’s circumstances are as good as nightmares.

He, an old man staying alone with a cat, patches up the holes in his present through tales of the past, to survive, expecting a painless end in the future.


She, a Western tourist at Rishikesh, opens her spirits while a whole world drags around her feet.     

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Chimp, Champ and Chops

Chimp, Champ and Chops

“These are dreamy descriptions outlining a softer humanity lying buried under the bigger talk of inexpressibly ridiculous modernity. The truth, lying in soft and silent spirits, gets a mouthpiece to call to attention the basic things in life through these poems. The verses narrate the enriched anatomy of the humane self with its soft emotions caged in rock-hard convictions. These solemnly composed verses in poems after poems highlight the monumental charisma of inherent beauty of the human self. The little poetic chisel strikes raise a virtuous fragrance as they hit against the sadly spread-out rock face of human indifference and insensitivity in present times. These true tears tell little stories with a face moving slowly in sedate resignation. There are plaintive tales in verse to highlight the prodigious waste of inhumanity building around. There are inspiring anecdotes to help the humane in us to get back onto its feet. There are murmuring complaints of human apathy about need, hunger and deprivation scattered like dust on our shoes. There are delightfully vague vistas that tell the stories of the nature choked at material crossroads. These footloose fantasies take you to a world basking in balmy serenity…far away from the zoom, boom and doom of the modern world.”


Amazon buying link to get Chimp, Champ and Chops by Sandeep Dahiya