Wednesday, December 23, 2015

The Rose That Dropped


Synopsis:

First of its kind from my pen, this poem is a blend of three stories (happening simultaneously) from a youth's point of view.
1. It is about him admiring a girl from the opposite side of a crossroad, with whom he has had no word in person.
2. It is a little bird's struggle to fly that the boy observes while he is standing on the other side of the road.
3. Two shops next to him a man is being accused by his wife for cheating her.

The poem is phrased in 8-paragraphs, the first 6 containing the above three listed stories in a one-time repetition. The second last para (7th para) is a blend of all three stories, trying to reach an ending. The last para beautifully summarises it.

I hope, with this basic introduction, it shall become easy for you to comprehend the composition.
Happy reading!


Title:

I couldn't think of any suitable title for this composition, for I had not thought about what to write before writing, (it just kept happening). So I give you the authority to give it a suitable title, once you finish reading it. Post it in in the comment box at the end of this page. For the time being let's call it:


The Rose That Dropped



A busy crossroad and the cacophony of passing cars,
As always she was there, so close on earth yet infinitely far like on Mars.
Her wet hair dripping water drop by drop,
So vehemently my emotions swayed the love-crop.
She would seldom look up in bits and chunks,
Her fingers penning circles and feet thumping to English punks.
It was a moment of solitude when the eyes met,
Like a dry sooting throat suddenly turning wet.


On the same building behind her a little bird was trying to fly,
Dropping and falling at every leap, yet determined to rule the sky.
It chirped and cried but stood back again,
To try another leap, it unstoppably ran.
Above it an eagle hopefully hovered and perched,
But to her defence the mother bird devotedly lurched.
Falls after falls could not break her will to fly,
Every now and then to another failure the little bird would give a try.


Two shops next to me a lady accused her husband loud and bold,
By no good means, or pleas would she stop or hold.
Their little son all bored and confused,
In the middle of a crossroad all passer-bys they amused.
With her blabbering I deciphered it was all about an extramarital affair,
His shifted priorities, an 'illegal' son, and an undecided heir.
Like the scorching sun's heat she was raging and furious,
And to know her whereabouts she was curious.


She looked up and our eyes met once again,
Once in a while, for hours at a stretch, this is how our chemistry ran.
With smiles not hinting as smiles and blushes without a swell,
Our seemingly shallow aquifer, but indeed a deep down well.
Her big white eyes, a fair face with a mole on the upper lip,
That pointed nose and the curl of hair to which I would often slip.
Sooner than usual today, she just stood up and went inside,
An all of a sudden decision, an unpredictable emotion or perhaps some wrong doing from my side.


Half an hour passed, and the mother bird now engaged in renovating the nest,
The eagle seemed missing, and the little birdie giving her best possible test.
Little flights she could now make, but yet imperfection towed her wings,
To cloud her failures, in between the mother bird so melodiously sings.
She would come to the brim again and give it a little push,
A meter's flight hardly or just a little swoosh.
She climbs back and jumps again in a cycle of repetitions,
With never falling hopes and determined resolutions.


She started crying and bursted in loud hiccups,
An observing crowd gathered in swift pick-ups.
The commotion thickened and curious onlookers kept gathering,
He kept insisting and pleading, and the child's eyes between them battering.
He went down on his knees and joined his hands,
His head bowed and rough pleas emanated from his dry glands.
Onlooking men sympathised and women loathed his circumstances,
Shattered was he like a mundane tree with no leaves and nests but only branches.


Curling her tufts with her index-finger she came out once again,
Perched to the rail and with her eyes on me she down-poured a torrent of dry-rain.
I was still buoyant and mesmerised, and she dropped down a red rose,
Smilingly she turned back and walked away but my heart froze.
Amidst the muffled chirrups, a pair of wings fluttered,
The little bird flew unceasingly and a victory praise its mother uttered.
In an overwhelming state the lady wiped her husband's tears,
His eyes spoke of forgiveness and her emotional smile neutralised his fears.


She looked at me with a stealing glance as I picked up her first gift,
High in the sky the bird flew, swaying and swift.
He hugged her wife back and the crowd dispersed,
He laughed loudly when in his ears something she whispered.



Thank you:

I hope you enjoyed reading it, so just take out a moment to put in a comment below. :)



Tuesday, December 15, 2015

The girl that teased

A step at a time on a cold winter road,
I walked in slow gaits, even and odd.
Low was visibility, and temperature perhaps 8℃,
From the fog emmerged a beautiful face, oval and gracious.
Blue eyes, glistening teeth and dimples dug deep,
So captivating was her appearance, that an instant gratification of happiness I could reap.
When our eyes met we refused to look away,
All senses alert, in the foggy wind's grey.
Her eyes squinted and broadened, and the lips arched,
Like a hypnotised kid, I glared and glared.
The steps slowed and silence grew,
All senses alert like the watching crew.
As we passed-by her dimples shot,
And touched the trenches of the heart like melting plastic passes a coal so hot.
It was like a violent slap on the guitar strings,
All chords reverberating with echos and rings.
Like bad loud drum beats, the heart shouted with each thump,
And emotions taking a leap in long-jump.
Glee was I, for she had smiled; so fragile is the human mind,
The cold didn't affect, and no worries of the 8℃ swift wind,
There was a fire raging inside, that couldn't help but arise,
A new beautiful world was all about to rise.
I turned back to see her one last time,
To see if it did actually rhyme,
She stood there with her hands on the hips,
Wide open eyes, and straight-lined lips.
She dropped her tongue out and twisted her nose,
With her thumb she pressed the tip of her nose and and swayed the remaining fingers to my dispose.
Startled was I, for that was the end of all dreams,
A castle so lovingly built, was shattered in seconds.
Like a small heartbroken child I walked away, hearing her evil laugh in echos and titters,
I crushed my teeth and pulled my sleeves, to my realisation all around was the biting cold of winters,
A step at a time on a cold winter road,
I kept walking in slow gaits, even and odd.

Monday, December 14, 2015

A Sunny December Day


A sunny day and white clouds,
Chirping birds that sing aloud.
The hitting sun and its scorching heat,
my heart flying to loving beats.

Eyes glued on passer-bys, 
One hand flipping a coin, and the other raising HI's,
Ears overhearing a silly fight,
and lips spreading an elegance so light,
Boots thumping and knuckles banging,
On a distant tree are nests hanging.

Little puppies go wandering about,
and playing boys in haste all around shout.
Corporate men soothing themselves with smoke,
Behind the trees some couples lock.

A sunny-day after so many foggy nights,
Emotions rage and heart fights,
to stand up and sing aloud,
beat the music and loudly shout.

Yet there is something that stops from within,
Perhaps the music or the heat of the open sky kiln.
It is a Sunny December day,
and surrendered to the mighty sun, I lay.

Eyes that talk

On the roadside stands, or across the street,
Sometimes from a moving bus, so lovingly they meet,
Like old acquaintances who didn't recall a name,
Or seldom like a friend with golden fame.


It has words that utter without the lips moving,
And the skin sensing each other without touching.
It is like a thousand arrows piercing,
And a hundred false hopes reeking.
So pleasant is the effect, that it isn't unfair to call it hypnotism,
A world of vitality, no wrongly called 'realism'.


A basic sense of attraction, unknowingly turning into devotion,
From just a mere spectator to an admirer, so swift is the evolution.
Then thoughts emerge, and dreams cloud,
The heart thumps, big and loud.
A smile arches and teeth glisten,
To every little speck of noise, the ears listen.


Call it a blush, or a desire to show,
It's often the only weapon to blow.
Then their are his/her friends, that stare you in the face,
Like a concerned dad, showing grace,
Who cares for them, when the goal is defined?
It is your friend, go tell "her", if you don't mind.


Then slowly they raise their head, in a blush the eyes meet again,
A limited 2-second contact and the body feels spikes of torrents of rain.
That's the end of all joys and both depart,
Around the corner, or by the last turn, into the door or behind the cart,
But for one last glimpse they'll turn around,
And see each other, for this 2-second bond.


It's now this that is most cherishing, for it's a blend of both meeting and parting,
Both take the other in memories, and slowly walk away smiling.

On the roadside stands, or across the street,
Sometimes from a moving bus, so lovingly they meet.....

Friday, November 06, 2015

Netaji, you're so fast!

As far as the eyes can see- back and forth- there are vehicles with their wheels jammed and horns barking. Motorist set their eyes on all possible gaps and try to fit in wherever possible. Men lean out of their car windows, some to spit a jet of pan, others to abuse the one ahead them. There is a vast stillness and a ripple of chaos runs across the entire street, which seems to never settle down for hours at stretch or even days.

Hours pass and horns keep honking, people keep shouting and bikers keep changing their positions while everyone else remains stagnant. Helpless they all feel, big fat men cloaked under whites and saffrons, businessmen and industrialists, middle-class and upper-middle class, or even a few just landed NRIs- helpless on the streets of this nation. All of them wait for a ray of hope, a lead to catch, a rope to clung, a plank to get over and sail off this sea of oddly parked vehicles, but only a few get it.

That ray of hope, that lead to catch, that rope to clung, that plank to get over and sail through comes late, and takes along with it a few of them. In that melancholic air, the only smiles on their faces comes when either an ambulance stirs its way through the maddening and disordered queue or some Netaji decides to take his elite cavalcade cutting through these suffering and intolerant species.

Either of these sirens hold the perfect potential to do what possibly a hundred volunteers could not do to kill the chaos and push back the wrong lineups. As the echoing procession marks its presence from a distance, bikers descend to the footpath, cars pick up a reverse-gear and a vacant lane is created in less than what one would count as a complete minute, or two in an adverse case. 

Then on that same jammed highway Netaji's procession passes by like a flash of light, while helpless commuters stay back on the same place. A few luck ones take the lead and sail through the sea of cars. Others just spit jets of tobacco and abuse the ones standing ahead them.
Netaji, that's unfair. You're so fast!

Thursday, April 16, 2015

Moonlight Shoes



It started with being a shoe, and waiting for someone to come and become my rightful owner. I was displayed on the stands of an all time lighted showcase, where buyers frequented all day long. Often, the store-boy would take me out of the stand and suggest me to his customers, whose stinking feet I would have to smell and keep smelling with no other choice. There were variety of them, some with week’s long unwashed moist socks, some with communicable allergy, and some with open wounds and pus flowing out. I was helpless, and had to fit into everyone’s feet entirely as the store boy wished to.

Had I been capable of selecting the feet that would wear me, I bet I would have discarded them all of the privilege that they enjoyed by wearing me and walking a few steps back and forth in front of the mirror and showing off how elegant I made them look.

During my tenure of eight days three hours on the stand, besides smelling rotten feet I have also heard and learnt a lot of things that these stinking humans with branded ironed clothes on the outside and stinking unwashed socks beneath them say. One of those things is, “Every man has his day!” I believe the same is true for shoes as well. And ever since I heard this thought, ironically from the most pathetic of all men who ever wore me, I muttered back instantly, “If you can have a day, then surely I shall also have one.”

The day came, on the seventh of July, on a hot summer day, when people drenched in sweat were coming in to check me out. It was a tough time repeatedly passing on from one person to another. I changed a total of six feet, (three people, unfortunately with two each) in three hours with none of them buying me. I was thankful that they didn’t buy me, as it would have been one hell of a task to cope up with their poisonous stink. Moreover, it also wasn’t that I couldn’t tempt them, but that they couldn’t afford me.
Finally, the minute arrived and halted at ‘Feet & Shoes Limited’, a young dynamic man in his thirties walked in with a pit-pat sound of hard heels. Alike all, he too wore ironed clothes, but his sophisticated short-step gait signaled something outside usual. He settled directly in front of me and through my lace holes I tried sniffing his feet as he loosened the shoe and took it off. I was startled to see that they were fresh, dry and odorless. The store boy started offering him shoes one after the other, and he rejected them in the same chronological order. I was happy to see him reject them, while bubbles of joy emerged within me. When his eyes finally fell on me, I looked back at him without a blink and it seemed as if he had already accepted me. The store boy picked me up and parted my belly and the man gently thrust his foot in it. And then the other, even gently. There was no smell of sweat, his stockings were fresh and smelled of camphor. Moreover, the way he handled me was like the way a mother handles her new born, gentle and caring.

I wanted him to buy me, but he walked out of the shop after an unfinished settlement over the price. My heart shrunk as he started moving out of the shop, for I was better convinced that no one as gentle and clean as him would ever lay foot in this shop. I wanted him to buy me, I twitched in anger and defeat while my fellow companions laughed and joked at me. I yelled at the peak of my voice, just to hear my own wails back. Nothing helped. And with his disappearance from the door I believed that the just witnessed good moment was all over and lost. It would be better to think that it never happened.

As I dropped all hopes of him, he reemerged, in somewhat bigger steps than before, and my heart leaped with joy. Every shoe beside me frowned and waited along with me to see what would happen next. He exchanged a few words with the store boy and finally taking out his wallet handed him crisp notes.

I was sold.

That was my day!

The store boy kept me in a box and handed me over to him, he took me and placed me on the rear seat of his car and drove away, to somewhere. Lying there in that box and sniffing to the dull cardboard smell I thought how different and refreshing this smell was as compared to the stink of the every second common man who used to put me on. However, not every shoe like me would get a smell-less fresh feet owner and thus for them this smell of the cardboard would be a refreshing smell, before it would be again worn by its creepy owner.

Life at home was different. He had a younger brother, who wore me during his plays and by the time we entered back home, I would be covered under a thick layer of mud and stains of all kinds. He was a ruthless brat and unlike his elder brother lacked the skills of taking proper care and keeping away stains. He would dirty me every Saturday during his match and his elder brother would wash me clean the next day. I loved the way his elder brother took care of me, for it was all one could offer me, and indeed even more that I would have ever demanded. Somehow, the better part in getting dirty by him was that his feet too didn’t stink.

Days passed and then months, while I clung tight to my ropes and stitches from falling apart, despite the fact that my limited age and my rightful owner’s younger brother’s unpitying use brought creases and wrinkles on my beautiful body, the same routine continued almost every Saturday and Sunday until one day I fell open just beneath the right thumb. My stitches were worn out and cut open, the younger brother kept me in the shoe rack and took out another pair; his plays continued, my life took a standstill.
Almost a week later, the elder brother took notice of me, he brushed the mud off me that had dried in patches and layers, he washed the grease stains and then took me to the cobbler. Nine cross stitches, and I was back to normal. I felt so indebted and gratified to him, for he really was my rightful owner. I wanted to be with him, till my last day, until I would wither off completely and open up from all around. I knew, I would never find a man better than him, an owner more impressive and gentle.
But they ‘humans’ say, as I have heard a number of times, (and what seemed so true just the next moment), that, “Life is full of surprises and unexpected things.”
As he was walking me back from the cobbler’s place, a cab running at more than a hundred kilometers an hour knocked him down while he was crossing the road. A loud screeching noise of the tires, a loud bang of collision, the noise of bones colliding with the windshield and bonnet, and then a halt filled with his wails and moans in the air of complete silence while people started rushing in from all places. The silence faded gradually as people began talking, the way the crowd always does. Everyone suggested something, but none came to help him, someone called the ambulance, just because it was a toll-free number and no one bothered where I was. The only person who would have bothered was lying half dead, twitching in pain and shouting in helplessness. His right shoe had come off his foot and was lying on the side of the road, while the left one still hung on to him.

The ambulance came and people rushed him in, and it drove off. People kept standing for a few minutes on the spot and discussed the cause of the accident. The next minute even they went off to their respective businesses, leaving me behind, unclaimed and unwanted.

I realized that it was the end of my life, but it wasn’t.

I lay there, by the side of the road for the next many hours while people, hundreds and hundreds of them, passed beside and over me, but none paid any attention to me despite the fact that I was new and shining. For I was a single shoe, unmatched and useless. Such is life, and such are these humans, they want you as long as you can serve them some good.

The other part of me, luckily managed to reach back home, with hopes that I won’t be abandoned and perhaps they’ll go back to the accident spot and bring back the one that’s lying there, but that never happened. Instead that evening they didn’t keep me in the shoe rack, but threw me on the pile of plastic waste at the corner of the lawn near the garage. My new companions were a rusted can, two beer bottles, a stained cloth, dozens of plastic bottles and a few broken tiffin boxes and coke bottles, and some broken accessories, to them all it hardly mattered how young or beautiful I was, for I was useless without the other me. And perhaps they all would be laughing at my nearing sudden tragic end, perhaps one or two amongst them all would have felt pity.
Three cars, four bikes, a heavy loaded truck and a roadways bus, a total of nine vehicles and eighteen wheels passed over me, crushing me and deforming me. The despair ended with the fall of the night as the traffic reduced and I lay there in a crumbled form, on the same spot where my so caring owner had fallen down. As I lay for more than an hour, and no vehicle passed over me I started gaining back my lost consciousness. My muscles twitched back to normal and when I had almost turned normal, a stray dog came and started sniffing at me, the way I used to sniff at my master’s feet.

It sniffed for some thirty seconds, when he finally grabbed me in his jaw and ran away. I wondered if it was my rescue, or if it was just another form of trouble. He took me to the foot of the flyover, settled down there and started chewing me. I wanted to get free of him, as I had hopes of living more, I had hopes of reuniting with my other part and to live the remaining of my life again in the feet of my humble owner, but the dog was uncared and merciless, it kept on chewing me, piercing those long canines in and out like needle on a cloth. In between he licked me with his wet tongue, and sometimes he would keep me down for a few seconds while he relaxed his jaw muscles. Just, in another moment he would again start the painful discourse.

I was deformed and had open up from the front again, but he kept on chewing mercilessly. An hour later dawn broke, one of his feminine companions passed beside us with a trail of dogs sniffing her genitals and following her. He instantly dropped me on the ground, stretched his front legs, then the rear and joined her admirers.
I said to myself, “Dogs, will be dogs! May you never get what you desire, bastard.”
As she led the procession across a tunnel and went out of sight, something knocked me on the heal. It was a metallic fell, an iron thing. I looked back to see it was a rag picker.
He picked me up, pulled my laces to check my battered state and tossed me into his sack. From the dusty road I fell amongst plastic bottles, cardboard cartons and tin cans 
that he had gathered from all over across the city.

I wondered if it meant the end of all troubles or the beginning of some more!