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Nisheedhi's Nature
     Poetry



     Nature Poetry




     nisheedhi
Nisheedhi's Nature Poetry
       Nature Poetry




         nisheedhi
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Contents
Houses                                1

Tree                                  2

The power of knowledge                3

Hampi rocks                           4

Morning images                        5

Morning walk                          6

There will be no rain                 7

Morning at the Palm Hotel,Vizag       9

The parijat flowers                   10

Moths in the first rains              11

This festival                         12

Our childhood                         14

Tonight                               15

The blade of grass                    16

The Dam                               17

Corners                               18
Winter shadows                         19

Borra caves                            20

In the blue mountains                  21

Flowers                                22

Our Parijat tree                       23

A night in the Topslip forest          24

Our cuckoo friend                      25

Twitter                                26

On a boat in the Ganga in Kolkata      27

The Ambhir lake                        28

At the Park Hotel on the Vizag beach   29

This September                         30

Our Pipal tree                         31

The Palm Trees in Our Village          32

The moon                               33

My sister                              34

At the Kumarakom lake resort(Kerala)   35
Midnight music                       36

A train journey through Kerala       37

The sea                              38

Hail                                 39

Morning in Hyderabad                 40

Moths in the first rains             41

The Wind                             42

A gust of wind                       43

There is defiance in the air         44

Images in the morning walk           45

Thinking poems                       46

The tree pretends to be alive        47

The afternoon sounds                 48

Unspent spring                       49

Women in the afternoon               50

Our village home                     51

The hillock with a hole on the top   52
Houses

Houses we think of, in sun and rain-
Those houses which live, cheek by jowl,
With maternal mango trees of summer.
Their shadows paint their white canvas.
In monsoon the houses are painted green
In delicate taffeta of luminous moss.
The squirrels climb the tree looking
Curiously into your bedroom window.




                               1
Tree


It had stood there bare and brown and stone dead
And waved in the breeze pretending to be alive.
Evening birds had still been sitting on its branches.

Yesterday it became a mere image in my mind
Two axes did a fine job in the day and from balcony
I now have uninterrupted view of the blue sky.




                                  2
The power of knowledge

Yesterday evening, as on all days,
The banyan briefly dallied with river
Its tiny fruits floated on the waters
Glistening in the sunlight like rubies
The woman-bather, while disentangling
Flickering stars of pieces of driftwood
From her floating amavasya-like hair ,
Took no notice of the fruity overtures.

The last ferry did not bring him here
Nor did the five ‘o clock circular train
Which disgorged people in sweaty bush shirts
Onto the dusty Bagh Bazar platform .
The mongrel got up from its disturbed sleep
Sniffing at the coal-smell left by the train
Went back to its sleep under the cement bench.

The beggars on the river steps ate their
Early dinner and retired for the day
Somehow they had scintillating knowledge
That nobody was actually expected
On the train or by the ferry that day
Or for that matter , on any other day.




                                 3
Hampi rocks

The evening swapped the orange sky
For a silver-lined cloud in tatters.
The rocks had sizzled in the day;
At sundown their fever subsided.
Their blazing orange desires ebbed
In the nucleus of their inner being.
Time had burnt them to perfection
Beyond the pale of a petrified self.
Their sun-smell touched the bushes
Quickening life in their brown limbs
As the sun sank behind world’s edge
Their shadows vanished in the sky.




                                4
Morning images

There the parijat flowers lie on the earth ,
Their faces in the dust, feet to the sky.
Someone’s cut flower creeper still fills
The air with previous night’s fragr’nce.
On the hills ,from a balcony ,a dark woman
Looks down as if expecting the milkman.
There a man is up in arms against the sun.
A w’man froths at mouth with toothpaste.
Words remain,as many scraps of memory.
An image or two vanishes in the wilderness;
Its fragrance stays as unrealized poetry.




                                 5
Morning walk

The night moon turned pale at the sight of a
Significant sun, rising after nights of low rain.
There a car comes laden with rich ripe people.
A heavy auto-rickshaw overflows with body parts .
With the winter round the corner, the monsoon
Says goodbye from the dried up street puddles.
We see the last of the frog carcasses on th’ road.




                                 6
There will be no rain

The sky is deathly pale
With no birds and fluffy clouds
The cold flows from clamminess
Not out of possible silver rain-
Pearl-white and smooth
But not encouraging emotion.

Monsoon floods loom like
Imminent possibility and then
The ocean’s belly may become
The seat of a violent storm
Bringing wind at high velocity
And rain lashing my awning.

From the road the lake shimmers
Blue and crystalline, with dark
Figures of cormorants on the rocks
Protruding in the middle of the lake.
They hang above the edge of the rock
Flapping their restless wings.
Trees brood on the edge of the lake;
Their shadows gyrate on the ripples.

Then suddenly the sun breaks
Through the gray clouds
Painting their edges in gold
There is lightness in the air,
Cool breeze and scattered clouds



                                   7
There will be no rain after all.




                                   8
Morning at the Palm Hotel,Vizag

Six A.M. the crimson orb
Bursts from the sea’s vastness
A red-and-white old lighthouse
With patches of chipped-off paint
An apparition of a coconut tree
With its frond struck down
By last year’s lightning.




                                    9
The parijat flowers

There someone picked up parijat flowers
From the earth where they lay in dust
With their ghost-white faces down
To the earth , their red feet to the sky.
The man’s back bent over the earth as if
He wished to smell them straight from the earth.
The parijat tree looked on unconcerned.
The flowers now belonged to the earth.




                                10
Moths in the first rains

They appear from nowhere
And at the dead of the night
Embrace their shadows
On the frosted glass and die.
The window-sill is carpeted
With their transparent wings.
The garden walk is strewn
With innumerable carcasses
Of their one-night glory.




                                11
This festival

Wear your soul on the sleeve
Paint the roadside bushes red
Catch the grass-hopper by wings
Make it hold a tiny pebble.

When the fly sat on your nose
It was celebrating monsoon.
Think of the fly’s perspective.
You are a mere nose, a surface.

This festival let your hair down
Roam the countryside in bare feet
Sniff the rain-smell on the earth
Spread your tongue to catch hail
Scoop them up and feel them melt
In your enclosed finger-spaces.

Those red velvet insects from the earth
Live only for a few transient days
Take them into palm to feel them crawl;
Fear for the fragile velvet of their backs.

This festival, catch the cow by its udders
Gently coax them into thin silvery streams
Feel the milk flowing on puffed up cheeks
But leave some nourishing milk for the calf.




                                   12
Stand under the guava tree after the night’s rain
Shake its trunk to let the raindrops fall on you.

Lie on the open ground facing the unlimited sky.
Take in its fresh mint breath of the blue sky
Close your eyes and see tiny fish-worms swim.

This festival, squat on the shallow riverbed
With its cool water touching your happy chin
Look at the far mountains over the water
Find them shaking as if the end of the world.

Stand on the sea with the waves beating the shore
Your feet sinking softly into the wet brown sand.

Sit on the cement bench in the garden of your house
And watch the shadows slowly emerge from its walls.
Climb the wide-spread banyan on the lazy river bank
And jump from its branches into the currents below.

This festival celebrate being alive, being aware.




                                 13
Our childhood

In those days, consciousness flowed unbroken;
What went on in minds stretched to the horizons.
The mountains had no blue veil of secrecy
And the lakes seemed pure and crystalline.
The vegetable creeper bloomed in backyard
In yellow flowers that seemed like many moons.
We knew there would soon be plump gourds
On our thatched roof basking in the autumn sun
We would watch them growing every morning.

The afternoons were red-hot and weary.
The smell of charcoal in our kitchen stove
Somehow connected to our daily lives.
We dug patches in our garden thro’ the day
And when dusk fell we planted little beans
Just under the skin of the soaked earth.
We had not slept the whole night waiting
For the miracle of the sprouted seeds.
We had covered the tumescent guavas
With white cloth against marauding squirrels.
We watched them grow bigger and bigger
Hour to hour , morning after morning
At night when the jackals howled at the moon
We lighted our winter fires of dry twigs
And stood with our cold palms against the fire
As giant shadows played on the compound wall.




                                14
Tonight

Tonight you shall climb your roof
To lick jellied moonlight and catch
Flickering asteroids falling from the sky
To put them one by one in shirt-pocket.
When you walk in murky paddy fields
You shall be taken for a willow-th’-wisp.
Along the mud tracks the thorny bushes
Shall wear a black veil of moonless dark.
You shall peep into the dark steep step-well
And lower the metal pail tied to the rope
To gather pieces of a spectral moon.




                                 15
The blade of grass

I cannot focus awareness on the winding road
The distant hill is covered in a blue haze
There is all-around oblivion felt in my unbeing
Only the other day I was a blade of grass
Today I cannot wave in the mountain breeze
Uprooted from my mother I do not know my being
Like that hill covered in a haze of forgetfulness.




                                 16
The Dam

Then, at the dead of the night
The waters rose and swelled
To the high mud embankment
And spilled over to the village.
The mountains calmly looked on
While a flying chariot-in-flames
Had sheared their edges smooth.
The river swelled with pride
As rain poured into catchments
In the rugged mountain ghats.

The river is now bound within banks
Tamed by men in plastic helmets.
There is no excitement of spate.
It is now so much brown sand
And thin streaks of shallow water.
These days funeral fires rage
On the sun-baked river-bed.
On the annual festival days
Thousands of merry- making
Peasants and townsfolk, alike,
Congregate on the brown sand
To celebrate their God’s birthday.




                                17
Corners

Light poured through the corners;
A gentle breeze blew over them.
The corners had their own soul
They were sleeping in half light
Creating own silhouettes.
The jasmines whispered
Through soft jellied moonlight.
Their fragrance held’us in thrall.

Our old til’d house had its corners
Soft and purring like our kitten
They cast such fine shadows
Dusky, deep and mysterious.
We looked into our abandon’d well
To fathom the depth of its corners
The water there was a mere shadow
Shadow of a reality that once was.




                                 18
Winter shadows

The shadows were liquid and sensuous
Dense in the core, undefined in the edge.
They were not like the morning shadows
Warm and expectant under the April sun.
They were not like the afternoon shadows,
Stentorian shadows striding behind you.
They touched your heart, tingled your skin
Tousled your hair and teased your mind.




                                19
Borra caves

It is as though I was there the other day
Only they have grown bigger and taller
And their inner spaces more cavernous.
That time I tried writing pretty pictures
On their scraggy walls in stunning hues
To mark leafy arrivals of the silver oak
And jackfruits sitting heavily on the bark.
I drew lovely pictures of charging bison.
Our tribeswomen danced dimsa all night
As we drank cup after cup of palm wine
And our dappu beat in rising frenzy.

Aeons ago I saw this very mountain
Gurgling to form a gigantic gas bubble
This very bubble hides the parchments
Of my ancestors’ glorious history.
They all went beyond the mountains
Never again to return to our land.
But I can still see all their dark specters
In the cavernous womb of this mountain
Clinging to the moss-laden roof upside down.
They shrieked out the secrets of the other-world
And of life beyond the mountain-peaks
That piled, one on the other, on sunny days.

(Stalactite caves dating back to the pre-historic times , some
distance from Vizag)




                                   20
In the blue mountains

In the blue mountains
Passions do not rise high
The mountains gently shake
Shimmering silver oaks off
The wind in their hair.
These matronly mountains
Squat pretty in the valleys
Wearing their best velvets .
The air here is tea-fragrant
As magical woman-fingers
Pluck two leaves and a bud
To hurl into baby-baskets .
There is no anticipation here.
Time but hangs lightly ‘tween
Sips of tepid C.T.C. tea .

(in the tea gardens of Coonoor)




                                  21
Flowers

These flowers spoke nothing
Waiting for indifferent lovers.
Their soft colours climbed the sky.
Their existence was close-ended
Being closely trapped in th’ sun.
Drinking moon-beams, they want to
Fly like birds in the higher zones.




                                22
Our Parijat tree

Our parijat had dropped all its flowers
At night when we were fast asleep
The tree had found its flowers too lovely
Too fragile ,to itself, to keep.
The flowers ,their tender faces all downcast,
Fell one by one on the earth to weep
With their orange feet to the sky, their faces
To be darker by the sun ,sad and deep.

The (Parijat) tree is sometimes called the “tree of sorrow”, because
the flowers lose their brightness during daytime; the scientific name
arbor-tristis also means “sad tree” (Wikipedia)




                                  23
A night in the Topslip forest

All through the stillness of the night
The wind howled in the bamboo clump
The bamboo bushes danced in rapture
In the inky darkness our searchlight beamed
On shadowy forms of giant-sized bison
Their luminous eyes stared in unconcern
The creatures of the wild refused to appear
A night safari was just not their idea of fun .




                                  24
Our cuckoo friend

In early spring our mango burst into flowers
And filled our verandah with fragrance
As our swinging feet touched the sky.
By May mangoes appeared in the foliage.
Then, one dark night, when we were fast asleep.
The monsoon came with fierce wind and gale
Spoiling the kid’s fun and promises of fruit.
We blame this entirely on cuckoo friend
Who brought in premature rains this season
By his persistent musical supplications.




                               25
Twitter

My birds twitter constantly;
Their colors refuse to climb the sky
Amid scattered sounds and sunrays.
My mornings are many-hued skies
Rising from treetops of birdsongs.




                                26
On a boat in the Ganga in Kolkata

Near the Babughat the Ganges wore
A splendid necklace studded with images
Of inverted candle lights under the bridge .
The flickering flame of the lantern
In our boat refused to dance to the
Winds death-tune in the inky darkness.
Near the jetty stood a dark monstrosity
Brooding in unillumined lon’liness .
Its cavernous stomach ache’d with
The darkest secrets of the high seas.




                                 27
The Ambhir lake

From the road the lake shimmers
Blue and crystalline, with dark
Figures of cormorants on the rocks
Protruding in the middle of the lake.
They hang above the edge of the rock
Flapping their restless wings.
Trees brood on the edge of the lake;
Their shadows gyrate on the ripples.




                               28
At the Park Hotel on the Vizag beach

The coconuts with their weathered fronds
At times obtrude on your consciousness.
They stand resolute but gently shaking
Alongside the abandoned lighthouse
While the sea is unmoved and smiling,
Where it reaches out toward the far sky.

A pretty puffing steamer pops up
Like it is part of the un-human sea
Like the hordes of the feverishly flying
Dragonflies on the fringe of the blue sea
This red-tiled canopy structure
Makes a last-ditch vainglorious attempt
To merge seamlessly into the sea-scape
A small wicket gate with rusty hinges
Opens out into the sea’s expanse .

The red-and-white lighthouse is now a ghost
Which has lost its licking orange flames
You may stand on its top and wave your scarf
Command the ghost ships to rise instantly
I know you come here thrice each year
To rejoin the broken splinters of your self.




                                 29
This September

This air is still crisp and there is promise of
Excitement on the leafy floor of the forest
As the mongoose scurries among the yellow leaves
Tens of thousands of zany butterflies of many hues
Have burst out of the bushes on the Tirumala hills
Striking the stunned panes of the passing cars .




                               30
Our Pipal tree

Our moss-laden backyard wall played host
To hundreds of creeping-crawling creatures
A little Pipal with thick-green conical leaves
Spread its roots in its entrails leaving a crack
The widening crack soon became home
To a wild creeper with tiny red flowers
That set our entire backyard sky ablaze
The Pipal grew quickly in horizontal space
Little blue birds from far lands visited the tree
Hundreds of big busy black ants crawled
All the way to its top dangling in the air
Our proud Pipal swayed, blissfully unaware
That its burgeoning growth brought havoc
It is a matter of time before the crack widens
And the bricks give way spelling its doom .




                                   31
The Palm Trees in Our Village

The palm trees cogitate in groups,
Just as our mild-mannered cattle do ,
Casting their dark brooding shadows
On the limpid waters of our paddy fields .
In the sowing season their shadows
Tickle our women’s delicate feet
Submerged in soft knee-deep slush .
When our fields are shorn and brown
Our palms proudly sport golden fruit
This male one in the shadowy corner
Sports no fruits , only leafy extensions
We love it all the same for its shade




                                 32
The moon

This season our backyard coconuts
Hid it under their swinging fronds
Behind our asbestos-sheeted shack,
Its presence marked by the pale shadow
Of our cow swishing tail on the insects
In the backyard’s lonely darkness.
The cow looked in the water trough
Giving out a low plaintive moan.
Her eyes shone through the night
As the rope of the pail seemed to move.
Actually it was a mere water snake
That had made the well its home.
Our hibiscus stood mute by the well;
Its flowers went gray by the moonlight.
Tiny flowers bloomed on the creeper
That had climbed our red-tiled roof.
Their fragrance filled the night air.
It was as though it was the moon
That smelled good in our backyard.




                               33
My sister

The flowers bloomed in our unkempt backyard;
My little sister clapped for their quick’ning.
The pumpkins grew fat with glowing textures
She asked why our palm had withered like that.
Her water –snake shed his scales on the fence.
She scooped out a handful of the soft earth,
Made it into tiny balls and quickly caught
A grasshopper by its wings and made it
Hold the balls, one by one by its tiny legs
That was a milkmaid carrying milk-pots.
When the season came of the butterflies
She counted the cocoons and watched them
Break out one by one as winged wonders.

Our coconut lost its frond in lightning.
This season wild flowers have grown all over.
Noisy cicadas from invisible crevices
Made exquisite music for us at dusk.
But there is now nobody to count those cocoons
When the butterflies will finally emerge.




                               34
At the Kumarakom lake resort(Kerala)

While poetry struggles for beauty-words
Wind and water hold sway over senses.
The green of the coconuts gains control
Over the shimmer of the boats and stillness.
Houses are nature in red tiled stature,
As are tall golden boats which are houses
Devoid of vulgar city crowds who come
To burp on oiled foods and play loud music.
Modesty prevents houses from showing up
Above unending horizon of coconuts
Their shadows merge into the brown walls;
Their corrugated tiled roofs have rain in them
Collected painstakingly in monsoon
Their patches become first green, then gray.




                                 35
Midnight music

Midnight music is the rising ocean
Called by a reddening of the moon.
Midnight music is the pipal leaves
Playing the wind’s exotic hill music
As its fingers touch the spiked leaf-ends.
Midnight music is the invisible cricket
Singing from the dark silence of the bush.




                                 36
A train journey through Kerala

A sea of coconuts smothered, sultr’ly,
The most unwilling moss-painted houses.
The banyan raised its feet high enough
For hundreds of creepy monsoon-creatures.
The journey then began in silver rain
Waiting for streaks of golden sunshine
To crawl through upright areca nut tree barks.
As the telephone wires went up and then down
A floating bird quickly froze in the sky.
First the coconut fronds ran to the hills
Then the chilly plants went red in the face.




                                37
The sea

Thought heralded a boatful of laughter
In spray-powdered and sprinkle-diffused
Froth seething with white salt and marine blue
As though the sea horizon heaved in
Musically many-colored and sound
Steeped in musty dead -and-dry fish smell.
A boy walked away from the sea-sun
And idly prancing about beach crows.
Vasco Da Gama’s stone tablet stood mutely
In history’s powdered rock and beach sand
And broken –colored flying old boat masts.

At the corner glistened wet sand and trees
Their shadows partly falling into the sea
Their dark hair hid in red rag agenda.
These white buildings sat idly in history’s
Tiled canopies witnessing communism’s
Capitalist fortunes and flight to oil lands.
Their French windows hid beauty and drama
In the shadows of jaded mosquito nets
Hot pepper creepers snaked all the way up
The statuesque teaks standing tall and proud
In the slush coconuts proudly stood there
Spreading dark hair in the moonless nights.
Here, rain happened quickly rocking moist
Coconut fronds hiding hairless sea-eagles.

(A poem which happened on the Kapady beach in Kerala)



                                38
Hail

Now the rains are here ,balls of snow
We catch them in our palms ready
Only they are slipping through the spaces
We cannot hold our fingers together
And our white- clouded glory fizzles soon.




                                 39
Morning in Hyderabad

The morning slowly dries wet clothes,
Dripping, they smell of blue detergent
The house there wakes up bleary-eyed
Hesitating shadows emerge from the walls
A varnished gate, the midget of a woman
On the concrete bench, in the garden
Measuring the length of her shadow.




                              40
Moths in the first rains

At the dead of the night, they embrace
Their shadows on the frosted glass
The window –sill is carpeted with wings
Our entire garden walk is strewn with
Countless carcasses of one-day glory.

Last year the weather was warm
Nowhere was the monsoon in sight
These creatures crouched under the earth
With half-sprouted wings for take-off.

This season it is entirely different
These are long wet nights followed by
Rich raking of their gossamer wings.




                                41
The Wind

The wind blew in our direction, shadows played
It is the eyes that lacked the answers, in the contrast
At the eye of it all I knew my borders when the sun blazed
The morning sun went quickly, the noon would soon come
There was wind in the hair, my thoughts fell into the skin
When everything happened nothing actually occurred.
Up there the cosmic egg flickered beyond the trees
The blue emitted golden rays in the silky clouds there
As if I could collect all that in my past canvas bags.
Yesterday morning a little bird shrieked on the wire
My garden was full of them and below the wires
Meanwhile the loops continued endlessly in my mind
While the summer season seemed to be undecided
When the monsoon would begin in the salt water and hills
And journey across mountains and windy coconuts.
My words are silly giggling girls playing in the moon
Together they do not sing but hum like the pipal leaves
When the wind comes from across the the distant hills.




                                42
A gust of wind

The night advanced slowly casting
Its ominous shadows on our faces
Outside her house the neem tree shook
By the gentle tug of a dreamlike wind
Rustling through its autumn leaves
The sky rumbled vaguely in the distance
Silver lined clouds dissipated in the hills
The wind fizzled down in the stillness.




                                   43
There is defiance in the air

A girl in white stands in a far corner of the road
Her right pigtail defiantly slung on her left shoulder.
There, bleary-eyed moms stand impatiently waiting
For yellow buses to take kids to reluctant schools.

It had rained heavily last night on the neredu tree
There was violent wind and violet rain from the tree.
The puddles under the tree were violet with ripe fruits
Mashed under walking feet in rain water and mud.

The woman takes the white dog out for a walk
But the dog pulls her sideways for sniff-sniff.
Apparently the dog has fiercely independent views.

An old man with his lungi duly tucked above the knees
Is dragging the bawling brat grandson into the house .
The three year old is defiantly dragging grandpa away.
He does not see eye to eye with grandpa on all issues.

(Events in the morning walk)




                                   44
Images in the morning walk

In the morning walk, images slowly filled the pocket
To be emptied , on return, on to the home computer.
Two outlines of men sat in the middle of the road
Their faces turned up and their hands hurled into the air.
Chicken waited timelessly in the coop with death in the air.
On the other side of the road long shadows from trees
Played kindly with the kitschy colors of storied buildings.
Plastic pitchers of red and green waited at the roadside tap
For their turn to fill water along with bright red polyester sarees.
In the corner of the road burnt a heap of dead neem leaves ,
Their gray smoke ascended slowly to the electric wires.




                                   45
Thinking poems

Thinking poems are autumn-falling
In criss-cross patches of golden sun,
Actually these are pallid ghosts
Pulled out of unlit eastern skies.




                                 46
The tree pretends to be alive

We have seen lightning and a burst of thunder.
The monsoon is finally here on our fragrant earth.
The tree leaning on our balcony is facing streams of water
On its brown back without any leafy protests.

Two blue birds which come to it some times
Continue to sit on its brown branch for a while
And shout their songs against the blue sky.
The crow keeps its caws going on the branch
And continues to announce arrivals of guests.

The tree is a stump standing in the earth and the air
Pretending it is still alive but the blue birds still call.
The guest -announcing crow still caws in its branches.




                                   47
The afternoon sounds

A lonely worker chipped away at the neighbor’s roof ,
A leaking roof between the sky and my neighbor
When the sky poured torrents of rain on his head.
The hammer-beats echoed in the hollow afternoon ,
Interspersed by a yellow-black bird’s tireless notes.
The notes came from our dead standing brown tree
Which was still hosting beautiful yellow-black birds ,
While awaiting final execution by the municipal Axe.




                                 48
Unspent spring

In the lagoon birds sit in threes,
In black and white complacency,
On sticks as though they were there
By somebody’s design, not surely
Of the government tourism bosses.
These are the golden ships with masts
Floating about in unspent spring
Which is my wealth for this season.
An ebony body is etched against
The amorphous green of coconuts
The moist green that spills all over
My camera lens and luminous monitor.
It is the body that is ridding the lagoon
Of the water hyacinths on the boat
For stomach and more stomachs.
A little white girl crawls all over the grass
Behind the sinuous coconut tree
Chasing the white-leaping rabbit
As though she came out of storybook.
In the evening a flute plays high notes
On the sun-gold of the boat’s head
And a tabla in a red shirt shakes head
In perfect musical agreement and nod.




                                    49
Women in the afternoon

The afternoon sun was warm and bright in the blue sky
With bales of white cotton clouds piled one on the other.
The eyes are heavy with sleep amid intermittent sounds
Of women’s laughter from the street and crow-caws.
In our childhood our eyes were heavy with sleep in the afternoon
With alternate sounds of pounding of rice and crow-caws.




                                50
Our village home

Our home was soft corners, diaphanous shadows,
A ghost-home tamarind tree of dark midnights
That used to shed many tiny leaves and bird-twigs,
A well deep in darkness and shrieking night crickets,
A wet coconut rope slithering on its stone rim.

The water shivered on its perked up surface
At the dark touch of the dimpled metal pail.
The pail got pulled up quickly spilling water
To the banana which squealed with green joy.
The thorny fence wound its way in the moonlight
Quietly disappearing in the hillock without trace.




                                 51
The hillock with a hole on the top

We squatted in our river, our heads above the water
And our folded legs firmly on the bottom sand-bed,
As the bottom sand pulled away we held on to the bed
And looked over the waters, toward the far reaches of space,
Toward the triangular hillock with a hole on the top.
There was long ago a circular monastery where the hole is.
The water here smelled good, as we took it to our lips.
It smelled of the distant mountains of Orissa, our river’s home.
Our ears echoed with the boys who jumped into the water.
The brass pitchers of the women on the other side came floating
As they were filling with brown muddy water till their rims.
Beyond the brown stretch of waterless river were the boats
That stood waiting for the passengers returning from the fair.
Some times we played under the cashew tree on the hot sands
There were yellow fruits, on which hung kidney-shaped nuts
Yellow fruits half-eaten by the birds, that smelled so fragrant
Mom says don’t eat the fruits which are not good for your throat
But mom, said we, they are so fragrant! So delectable!




                                52
Nisheedhi's Nature Poetry

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Nisheedhi's Nature Poetry

  • 1. Nisheedhi's Nature Poetry Nature Poetry nisheedhi
  • 2. Nisheedhi's Nature Poetry Nature Poetry nisheedhi
  • 3. This file was generated by an automated blog to book conversion system. Its use is governed by the licensing terms of the original content hosted at meghadutam.wordpress.com. Powered by Pothi.com http://pothi.com
  • 4. Contents Houses 1 Tree 2 The power of knowledge 3 Hampi rocks 4 Morning images 5 Morning walk 6 There will be no rain 7 Morning at the Palm Hotel,Vizag 9 The parijat flowers 10 Moths in the first rains 11 This festival 12 Our childhood 14 Tonight 15 The blade of grass 16 The Dam 17 Corners 18
  • 5. Winter shadows 19 Borra caves 20 In the blue mountains 21 Flowers 22 Our Parijat tree 23 A night in the Topslip forest 24 Our cuckoo friend 25 Twitter 26 On a boat in the Ganga in Kolkata 27 The Ambhir lake 28 At the Park Hotel on the Vizag beach 29 This September 30 Our Pipal tree 31 The Palm Trees in Our Village 32 The moon 33 My sister 34 At the Kumarakom lake resort(Kerala) 35
  • 6. Midnight music 36 A train journey through Kerala 37 The sea 38 Hail 39 Morning in Hyderabad 40 Moths in the first rains 41 The Wind 42 A gust of wind 43 There is defiance in the air 44 Images in the morning walk 45 Thinking poems 46 The tree pretends to be alive 47 The afternoon sounds 48 Unspent spring 49 Women in the afternoon 50 Our village home 51 The hillock with a hole on the top 52
  • 7. Houses Houses we think of, in sun and rain- Those houses which live, cheek by jowl, With maternal mango trees of summer. Their shadows paint their white canvas. In monsoon the houses are painted green In delicate taffeta of luminous moss. The squirrels climb the tree looking Curiously into your bedroom window. 1
  • 8. Tree It had stood there bare and brown and stone dead And waved in the breeze pretending to be alive. Evening birds had still been sitting on its branches. Yesterday it became a mere image in my mind Two axes did a fine job in the day and from balcony I now have uninterrupted view of the blue sky. 2
  • 9. The power of knowledge Yesterday evening, as on all days, The banyan briefly dallied with river Its tiny fruits floated on the waters Glistening in the sunlight like rubies The woman-bather, while disentangling Flickering stars of pieces of driftwood From her floating amavasya-like hair , Took no notice of the fruity overtures. The last ferry did not bring him here Nor did the five ‘o clock circular train Which disgorged people in sweaty bush shirts Onto the dusty Bagh Bazar platform . The mongrel got up from its disturbed sleep Sniffing at the coal-smell left by the train Went back to its sleep under the cement bench. The beggars on the river steps ate their Early dinner and retired for the day Somehow they had scintillating knowledge That nobody was actually expected On the train or by the ferry that day Or for that matter , on any other day. 3
  • 10. Hampi rocks The evening swapped the orange sky For a silver-lined cloud in tatters. The rocks had sizzled in the day; At sundown their fever subsided. Their blazing orange desires ebbed In the nucleus of their inner being. Time had burnt them to perfection Beyond the pale of a petrified self. Their sun-smell touched the bushes Quickening life in their brown limbs As the sun sank behind world’s edge Their shadows vanished in the sky. 4
  • 11. Morning images There the parijat flowers lie on the earth , Their faces in the dust, feet to the sky. Someone’s cut flower creeper still fills The air with previous night’s fragr’nce. On the hills ,from a balcony ,a dark woman Looks down as if expecting the milkman. There a man is up in arms against the sun. A w’man froths at mouth with toothpaste. Words remain,as many scraps of memory. An image or two vanishes in the wilderness; Its fragrance stays as unrealized poetry. 5
  • 12. Morning walk The night moon turned pale at the sight of a Significant sun, rising after nights of low rain. There a car comes laden with rich ripe people. A heavy auto-rickshaw overflows with body parts . With the winter round the corner, the monsoon Says goodbye from the dried up street puddles. We see the last of the frog carcasses on th’ road. 6
  • 13. There will be no rain The sky is deathly pale With no birds and fluffy clouds The cold flows from clamminess Not out of possible silver rain- Pearl-white and smooth But not encouraging emotion. Monsoon floods loom like Imminent possibility and then The ocean’s belly may become The seat of a violent storm Bringing wind at high velocity And rain lashing my awning. From the road the lake shimmers Blue and crystalline, with dark Figures of cormorants on the rocks Protruding in the middle of the lake. They hang above the edge of the rock Flapping their restless wings. Trees brood on the edge of the lake; Their shadows gyrate on the ripples. Then suddenly the sun breaks Through the gray clouds Painting their edges in gold There is lightness in the air, Cool breeze and scattered clouds 7
  • 14. There will be no rain after all. 8
  • 15. Morning at the Palm Hotel,Vizag Six A.M. the crimson orb Bursts from the sea’s vastness A red-and-white old lighthouse With patches of chipped-off paint An apparition of a coconut tree With its frond struck down By last year’s lightning. 9
  • 16. The parijat flowers There someone picked up parijat flowers From the earth where they lay in dust With their ghost-white faces down To the earth , their red feet to the sky. The man’s back bent over the earth as if He wished to smell them straight from the earth. The parijat tree looked on unconcerned. The flowers now belonged to the earth. 10
  • 17. Moths in the first rains They appear from nowhere And at the dead of the night Embrace their shadows On the frosted glass and die. The window-sill is carpeted With their transparent wings. The garden walk is strewn With innumerable carcasses Of their one-night glory. 11
  • 18. This festival Wear your soul on the sleeve Paint the roadside bushes red Catch the grass-hopper by wings Make it hold a tiny pebble. When the fly sat on your nose It was celebrating monsoon. Think of the fly’s perspective. You are a mere nose, a surface. This festival let your hair down Roam the countryside in bare feet Sniff the rain-smell on the earth Spread your tongue to catch hail Scoop them up and feel them melt In your enclosed finger-spaces. Those red velvet insects from the earth Live only for a few transient days Take them into palm to feel them crawl; Fear for the fragile velvet of their backs. This festival, catch the cow by its udders Gently coax them into thin silvery streams Feel the milk flowing on puffed up cheeks But leave some nourishing milk for the calf. 12
  • 19. Stand under the guava tree after the night’s rain Shake its trunk to let the raindrops fall on you. Lie on the open ground facing the unlimited sky. Take in its fresh mint breath of the blue sky Close your eyes and see tiny fish-worms swim. This festival, squat on the shallow riverbed With its cool water touching your happy chin Look at the far mountains over the water Find them shaking as if the end of the world. Stand on the sea with the waves beating the shore Your feet sinking softly into the wet brown sand. Sit on the cement bench in the garden of your house And watch the shadows slowly emerge from its walls. Climb the wide-spread banyan on the lazy river bank And jump from its branches into the currents below. This festival celebrate being alive, being aware. 13
  • 20. Our childhood In those days, consciousness flowed unbroken; What went on in minds stretched to the horizons. The mountains had no blue veil of secrecy And the lakes seemed pure and crystalline. The vegetable creeper bloomed in backyard In yellow flowers that seemed like many moons. We knew there would soon be plump gourds On our thatched roof basking in the autumn sun We would watch them growing every morning. The afternoons were red-hot and weary. The smell of charcoal in our kitchen stove Somehow connected to our daily lives. We dug patches in our garden thro’ the day And when dusk fell we planted little beans Just under the skin of the soaked earth. We had not slept the whole night waiting For the miracle of the sprouted seeds. We had covered the tumescent guavas With white cloth against marauding squirrels. We watched them grow bigger and bigger Hour to hour , morning after morning At night when the jackals howled at the moon We lighted our winter fires of dry twigs And stood with our cold palms against the fire As giant shadows played on the compound wall. 14
  • 21. Tonight Tonight you shall climb your roof To lick jellied moonlight and catch Flickering asteroids falling from the sky To put them one by one in shirt-pocket. When you walk in murky paddy fields You shall be taken for a willow-th’-wisp. Along the mud tracks the thorny bushes Shall wear a black veil of moonless dark. You shall peep into the dark steep step-well And lower the metal pail tied to the rope To gather pieces of a spectral moon. 15
  • 22. The blade of grass I cannot focus awareness on the winding road The distant hill is covered in a blue haze There is all-around oblivion felt in my unbeing Only the other day I was a blade of grass Today I cannot wave in the mountain breeze Uprooted from my mother I do not know my being Like that hill covered in a haze of forgetfulness. 16
  • 23. The Dam Then, at the dead of the night The waters rose and swelled To the high mud embankment And spilled over to the village. The mountains calmly looked on While a flying chariot-in-flames Had sheared their edges smooth. The river swelled with pride As rain poured into catchments In the rugged mountain ghats. The river is now bound within banks Tamed by men in plastic helmets. There is no excitement of spate. It is now so much brown sand And thin streaks of shallow water. These days funeral fires rage On the sun-baked river-bed. On the annual festival days Thousands of merry- making Peasants and townsfolk, alike, Congregate on the brown sand To celebrate their God’s birthday. 17
  • 24. Corners Light poured through the corners; A gentle breeze blew over them. The corners had their own soul They were sleeping in half light Creating own silhouettes. The jasmines whispered Through soft jellied moonlight. Their fragrance held’us in thrall. Our old til’d house had its corners Soft and purring like our kitten They cast such fine shadows Dusky, deep and mysterious. We looked into our abandon’d well To fathom the depth of its corners The water there was a mere shadow Shadow of a reality that once was. 18
  • 25. Winter shadows The shadows were liquid and sensuous Dense in the core, undefined in the edge. They were not like the morning shadows Warm and expectant under the April sun. They were not like the afternoon shadows, Stentorian shadows striding behind you. They touched your heart, tingled your skin Tousled your hair and teased your mind. 19
  • 26. Borra caves It is as though I was there the other day Only they have grown bigger and taller And their inner spaces more cavernous. That time I tried writing pretty pictures On their scraggy walls in stunning hues To mark leafy arrivals of the silver oak And jackfruits sitting heavily on the bark. I drew lovely pictures of charging bison. Our tribeswomen danced dimsa all night As we drank cup after cup of palm wine And our dappu beat in rising frenzy. Aeons ago I saw this very mountain Gurgling to form a gigantic gas bubble This very bubble hides the parchments Of my ancestors’ glorious history. They all went beyond the mountains Never again to return to our land. But I can still see all their dark specters In the cavernous womb of this mountain Clinging to the moss-laden roof upside down. They shrieked out the secrets of the other-world And of life beyond the mountain-peaks That piled, one on the other, on sunny days. (Stalactite caves dating back to the pre-historic times , some distance from Vizag) 20
  • 27. In the blue mountains In the blue mountains Passions do not rise high The mountains gently shake Shimmering silver oaks off The wind in their hair. These matronly mountains Squat pretty in the valleys Wearing their best velvets . The air here is tea-fragrant As magical woman-fingers Pluck two leaves and a bud To hurl into baby-baskets . There is no anticipation here. Time but hangs lightly ‘tween Sips of tepid C.T.C. tea . (in the tea gardens of Coonoor) 21
  • 28. Flowers These flowers spoke nothing Waiting for indifferent lovers. Their soft colours climbed the sky. Their existence was close-ended Being closely trapped in th’ sun. Drinking moon-beams, they want to Fly like birds in the higher zones. 22
  • 29. Our Parijat tree Our parijat had dropped all its flowers At night when we were fast asleep The tree had found its flowers too lovely Too fragile ,to itself, to keep. The flowers ,their tender faces all downcast, Fell one by one on the earth to weep With their orange feet to the sky, their faces To be darker by the sun ,sad and deep. The (Parijat) tree is sometimes called the “tree of sorrow”, because the flowers lose their brightness during daytime; the scientific name arbor-tristis also means “sad tree” (Wikipedia) 23
  • 30. A night in the Topslip forest All through the stillness of the night The wind howled in the bamboo clump The bamboo bushes danced in rapture In the inky darkness our searchlight beamed On shadowy forms of giant-sized bison Their luminous eyes stared in unconcern The creatures of the wild refused to appear A night safari was just not their idea of fun . 24
  • 31. Our cuckoo friend In early spring our mango burst into flowers And filled our verandah with fragrance As our swinging feet touched the sky. By May mangoes appeared in the foliage. Then, one dark night, when we were fast asleep. The monsoon came with fierce wind and gale Spoiling the kid’s fun and promises of fruit. We blame this entirely on cuckoo friend Who brought in premature rains this season By his persistent musical supplications. 25
  • 32. Twitter My birds twitter constantly; Their colors refuse to climb the sky Amid scattered sounds and sunrays. My mornings are many-hued skies Rising from treetops of birdsongs. 26
  • 33. On a boat in the Ganga in Kolkata Near the Babughat the Ganges wore A splendid necklace studded with images Of inverted candle lights under the bridge . The flickering flame of the lantern In our boat refused to dance to the Winds death-tune in the inky darkness. Near the jetty stood a dark monstrosity Brooding in unillumined lon’liness . Its cavernous stomach ache’d with The darkest secrets of the high seas. 27
  • 34. The Ambhir lake From the road the lake shimmers Blue and crystalline, with dark Figures of cormorants on the rocks Protruding in the middle of the lake. They hang above the edge of the rock Flapping their restless wings. Trees brood on the edge of the lake; Their shadows gyrate on the ripples. 28
  • 35. At the Park Hotel on the Vizag beach The coconuts with their weathered fronds At times obtrude on your consciousness. They stand resolute but gently shaking Alongside the abandoned lighthouse While the sea is unmoved and smiling, Where it reaches out toward the far sky. A pretty puffing steamer pops up Like it is part of the un-human sea Like the hordes of the feverishly flying Dragonflies on the fringe of the blue sea This red-tiled canopy structure Makes a last-ditch vainglorious attempt To merge seamlessly into the sea-scape A small wicket gate with rusty hinges Opens out into the sea’s expanse . The red-and-white lighthouse is now a ghost Which has lost its licking orange flames You may stand on its top and wave your scarf Command the ghost ships to rise instantly I know you come here thrice each year To rejoin the broken splinters of your self. 29
  • 36. This September This air is still crisp and there is promise of Excitement on the leafy floor of the forest As the mongoose scurries among the yellow leaves Tens of thousands of zany butterflies of many hues Have burst out of the bushes on the Tirumala hills Striking the stunned panes of the passing cars . 30
  • 37. Our Pipal tree Our moss-laden backyard wall played host To hundreds of creeping-crawling creatures A little Pipal with thick-green conical leaves Spread its roots in its entrails leaving a crack The widening crack soon became home To a wild creeper with tiny red flowers That set our entire backyard sky ablaze The Pipal grew quickly in horizontal space Little blue birds from far lands visited the tree Hundreds of big busy black ants crawled All the way to its top dangling in the air Our proud Pipal swayed, blissfully unaware That its burgeoning growth brought havoc It is a matter of time before the crack widens And the bricks give way spelling its doom . 31
  • 38. The Palm Trees in Our Village The palm trees cogitate in groups, Just as our mild-mannered cattle do , Casting their dark brooding shadows On the limpid waters of our paddy fields . In the sowing season their shadows Tickle our women’s delicate feet Submerged in soft knee-deep slush . When our fields are shorn and brown Our palms proudly sport golden fruit This male one in the shadowy corner Sports no fruits , only leafy extensions We love it all the same for its shade 32
  • 39. The moon This season our backyard coconuts Hid it under their swinging fronds Behind our asbestos-sheeted shack, Its presence marked by the pale shadow Of our cow swishing tail on the insects In the backyard’s lonely darkness. The cow looked in the water trough Giving out a low plaintive moan. Her eyes shone through the night As the rope of the pail seemed to move. Actually it was a mere water snake That had made the well its home. Our hibiscus stood mute by the well; Its flowers went gray by the moonlight. Tiny flowers bloomed on the creeper That had climbed our red-tiled roof. Their fragrance filled the night air. It was as though it was the moon That smelled good in our backyard. 33
  • 40. My sister The flowers bloomed in our unkempt backyard; My little sister clapped for their quick’ning. The pumpkins grew fat with glowing textures She asked why our palm had withered like that. Her water –snake shed his scales on the fence. She scooped out a handful of the soft earth, Made it into tiny balls and quickly caught A grasshopper by its wings and made it Hold the balls, one by one by its tiny legs That was a milkmaid carrying milk-pots. When the season came of the butterflies She counted the cocoons and watched them Break out one by one as winged wonders. Our coconut lost its frond in lightning. This season wild flowers have grown all over. Noisy cicadas from invisible crevices Made exquisite music for us at dusk. But there is now nobody to count those cocoons When the butterflies will finally emerge. 34
  • 41. At the Kumarakom lake resort(Kerala) While poetry struggles for beauty-words Wind and water hold sway over senses. The green of the coconuts gains control Over the shimmer of the boats and stillness. Houses are nature in red tiled stature, As are tall golden boats which are houses Devoid of vulgar city crowds who come To burp on oiled foods and play loud music. Modesty prevents houses from showing up Above unending horizon of coconuts Their shadows merge into the brown walls; Their corrugated tiled roofs have rain in them Collected painstakingly in monsoon Their patches become first green, then gray. 35
  • 42. Midnight music Midnight music is the rising ocean Called by a reddening of the moon. Midnight music is the pipal leaves Playing the wind’s exotic hill music As its fingers touch the spiked leaf-ends. Midnight music is the invisible cricket Singing from the dark silence of the bush. 36
  • 43. A train journey through Kerala A sea of coconuts smothered, sultr’ly, The most unwilling moss-painted houses. The banyan raised its feet high enough For hundreds of creepy monsoon-creatures. The journey then began in silver rain Waiting for streaks of golden sunshine To crawl through upright areca nut tree barks. As the telephone wires went up and then down A floating bird quickly froze in the sky. First the coconut fronds ran to the hills Then the chilly plants went red in the face. 37
  • 44. The sea Thought heralded a boatful of laughter In spray-powdered and sprinkle-diffused Froth seething with white salt and marine blue As though the sea horizon heaved in Musically many-colored and sound Steeped in musty dead -and-dry fish smell. A boy walked away from the sea-sun And idly prancing about beach crows. Vasco Da Gama’s stone tablet stood mutely In history’s powdered rock and beach sand And broken –colored flying old boat masts. At the corner glistened wet sand and trees Their shadows partly falling into the sea Their dark hair hid in red rag agenda. These white buildings sat idly in history’s Tiled canopies witnessing communism’s Capitalist fortunes and flight to oil lands. Their French windows hid beauty and drama In the shadows of jaded mosquito nets Hot pepper creepers snaked all the way up The statuesque teaks standing tall and proud In the slush coconuts proudly stood there Spreading dark hair in the moonless nights. Here, rain happened quickly rocking moist Coconut fronds hiding hairless sea-eagles. (A poem which happened on the Kapady beach in Kerala) 38
  • 45. Hail Now the rains are here ,balls of snow We catch them in our palms ready Only they are slipping through the spaces We cannot hold our fingers together And our white- clouded glory fizzles soon. 39
  • 46. Morning in Hyderabad The morning slowly dries wet clothes, Dripping, they smell of blue detergent The house there wakes up bleary-eyed Hesitating shadows emerge from the walls A varnished gate, the midget of a woman On the concrete bench, in the garden Measuring the length of her shadow. 40
  • 47. Moths in the first rains At the dead of the night, they embrace Their shadows on the frosted glass The window –sill is carpeted with wings Our entire garden walk is strewn with Countless carcasses of one-day glory. Last year the weather was warm Nowhere was the monsoon in sight These creatures crouched under the earth With half-sprouted wings for take-off. This season it is entirely different These are long wet nights followed by Rich raking of their gossamer wings. 41
  • 48. The Wind The wind blew in our direction, shadows played It is the eyes that lacked the answers, in the contrast At the eye of it all I knew my borders when the sun blazed The morning sun went quickly, the noon would soon come There was wind in the hair, my thoughts fell into the skin When everything happened nothing actually occurred. Up there the cosmic egg flickered beyond the trees The blue emitted golden rays in the silky clouds there As if I could collect all that in my past canvas bags. Yesterday morning a little bird shrieked on the wire My garden was full of them and below the wires Meanwhile the loops continued endlessly in my mind While the summer season seemed to be undecided When the monsoon would begin in the salt water and hills And journey across mountains and windy coconuts. My words are silly giggling girls playing in the moon Together they do not sing but hum like the pipal leaves When the wind comes from across the the distant hills. 42
  • 49. A gust of wind The night advanced slowly casting Its ominous shadows on our faces Outside her house the neem tree shook By the gentle tug of a dreamlike wind Rustling through its autumn leaves The sky rumbled vaguely in the distance Silver lined clouds dissipated in the hills The wind fizzled down in the stillness. 43
  • 50. There is defiance in the air A girl in white stands in a far corner of the road Her right pigtail defiantly slung on her left shoulder. There, bleary-eyed moms stand impatiently waiting For yellow buses to take kids to reluctant schools. It had rained heavily last night on the neredu tree There was violent wind and violet rain from the tree. The puddles under the tree were violet with ripe fruits Mashed under walking feet in rain water and mud. The woman takes the white dog out for a walk But the dog pulls her sideways for sniff-sniff. Apparently the dog has fiercely independent views. An old man with his lungi duly tucked above the knees Is dragging the bawling brat grandson into the house . The three year old is defiantly dragging grandpa away. He does not see eye to eye with grandpa on all issues. (Events in the morning walk) 44
  • 51. Images in the morning walk In the morning walk, images slowly filled the pocket To be emptied , on return, on to the home computer. Two outlines of men sat in the middle of the road Their faces turned up and their hands hurled into the air. Chicken waited timelessly in the coop with death in the air. On the other side of the road long shadows from trees Played kindly with the kitschy colors of storied buildings. Plastic pitchers of red and green waited at the roadside tap For their turn to fill water along with bright red polyester sarees. In the corner of the road burnt a heap of dead neem leaves , Their gray smoke ascended slowly to the electric wires. 45
  • 52. Thinking poems Thinking poems are autumn-falling In criss-cross patches of golden sun, Actually these are pallid ghosts Pulled out of unlit eastern skies. 46
  • 53. The tree pretends to be alive We have seen lightning and a burst of thunder. The monsoon is finally here on our fragrant earth. The tree leaning on our balcony is facing streams of water On its brown back without any leafy protests. Two blue birds which come to it some times Continue to sit on its brown branch for a while And shout their songs against the blue sky. The crow keeps its caws going on the branch And continues to announce arrivals of guests. The tree is a stump standing in the earth and the air Pretending it is still alive but the blue birds still call. The guest -announcing crow still caws in its branches. 47
  • 54. The afternoon sounds A lonely worker chipped away at the neighbor’s roof , A leaking roof between the sky and my neighbor When the sky poured torrents of rain on his head. The hammer-beats echoed in the hollow afternoon , Interspersed by a yellow-black bird’s tireless notes. The notes came from our dead standing brown tree Which was still hosting beautiful yellow-black birds , While awaiting final execution by the municipal Axe. 48
  • 55. Unspent spring In the lagoon birds sit in threes, In black and white complacency, On sticks as though they were there By somebody’s design, not surely Of the government tourism bosses. These are the golden ships with masts Floating about in unspent spring Which is my wealth for this season. An ebony body is etched against The amorphous green of coconuts The moist green that spills all over My camera lens and luminous monitor. It is the body that is ridding the lagoon Of the water hyacinths on the boat For stomach and more stomachs. A little white girl crawls all over the grass Behind the sinuous coconut tree Chasing the white-leaping rabbit As though she came out of storybook. In the evening a flute plays high notes On the sun-gold of the boat’s head And a tabla in a red shirt shakes head In perfect musical agreement and nod. 49
  • 56. Women in the afternoon The afternoon sun was warm and bright in the blue sky With bales of white cotton clouds piled one on the other. The eyes are heavy with sleep amid intermittent sounds Of women’s laughter from the street and crow-caws. In our childhood our eyes were heavy with sleep in the afternoon With alternate sounds of pounding of rice and crow-caws. 50
  • 57. Our village home Our home was soft corners, diaphanous shadows, A ghost-home tamarind tree of dark midnights That used to shed many tiny leaves and bird-twigs, A well deep in darkness and shrieking night crickets, A wet coconut rope slithering on its stone rim. The water shivered on its perked up surface At the dark touch of the dimpled metal pail. The pail got pulled up quickly spilling water To the banana which squealed with green joy. The thorny fence wound its way in the moonlight Quietly disappearing in the hillock without trace. 51
  • 58. The hillock with a hole on the top We squatted in our river, our heads above the water And our folded legs firmly on the bottom sand-bed, As the bottom sand pulled away we held on to the bed And looked over the waters, toward the far reaches of space, Toward the triangular hillock with a hole on the top. There was long ago a circular monastery where the hole is. The water here smelled good, as we took it to our lips. It smelled of the distant mountains of Orissa, our river’s home. Our ears echoed with the boys who jumped into the water. The brass pitchers of the women on the other side came floating As they were filling with brown muddy water till their rims. Beyond the brown stretch of waterless river were the boats That stood waiting for the passengers returning from the fair. Some times we played under the cashew tree on the hot sands There were yellow fruits, on which hung kidney-shaped nuts Yellow fruits half-eaten by the birds, that smelled so fragrant Mom says don’t eat the fruits which are not good for your throat But mom, said we, they are so fragrant! So delectable! 52