Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Black city IV: Black Ink

In broad day light
Shot, shot, shot, shot and shot again.
The noise of death
Silenced by the echoes of screams in comatose.
Raised by the underbelly
Of a metropolitan deemed sound for living,
He fell to blood hounds,
And was dragged to the end of the abyss.
Shrouded by his own guardians,
And incinerated
By the democratic miscarriage.
This is how years of sweat was wiped off
By blood-rivers striking down the streets.
What a price to pay for lighting up
A path of misdemeanours with black ink!

Like you were never gone...


The tall glass of white wine,
Standing in my eyes,
The cafe, your favourite in town,
The bus stop, the walk,
The midnight pavement talk.
It’s for real.
But I look into those eyes and become
One with your dreams,
Standing on the boundary
Of truth and illusion.

The moment melts away in the darkness
Of the long night,
Fades away in shadows
Growing longer by the day.
A blur now, the memory finds
A home in the alleys of my mind.
When I close my eyes
You come back to me
Like you were never gone.

Black City

Black city I
You have been used, abused
And exploited by your own.
Mistreated and humiliated
By those who’ve been inside you.
Raped and assaulted
By your own pimp,
And even by those you’ve fed
Your own milk and those who reached
New highs by stepping
On your corpse-like remains.
Yet flooded in tears, wounded by arms,
Slit into pieces, into sects and segments
By those who’ve grown up in your lap,
You crawl to them with open arms
And give them your last breath—
To those who took away from you
And never gave back.
(June 30, 2009)

Black City II
To the sweet sound of horn
I dance, no spot to hold
My foot.  Work, work, everywhere.
I sell my feet, for you to build your tomb.

I wake to drills, and sleep to shrills;
Every season, a new reason
To cheer the falling apart
Of me, the machine
And the rich fat mansion.

I come to feed my womb,
An ant stuck in a hive of bees
I’m stung, hurt and crying for help
But the Lords just raise their hands
Bringing me down on my knees.

Surrendered to laws,
I cut my children to pieces.
But save them from the lethal water,
The guns and bullets of their father
And the hopelessness of the air.

Then they build me wings to fly,
Tracks to race and barns to feed my soul,
They show me height, only to cushion my fall.
Dying to live in a paradise sold
I survive, I dig myself a hole.
(April 17, 2010)

Black City III
The Sith whispers
The darkest scene on the brightest star—
The fashionistas, frugalistas, the arc lights,
The beefcakes and social butterflies.
The stars, the sons
And the moon-lit heights.
All shine, no glory,
They wrap their story
In a bubble of lie.

It’s no star wars, no heroes,
No Jedi.  Just a shadow
Of the old, gold era of a galaxy of hitchhikers.
There is no sign of truce, no peace
No freedom fighters,
No idols for mere mortals,
Pawns in the hands of democracy.
Pawn, the twenty-first century soldier,
The winged horse with an idiosyncrasy,
The habit to look for a white queen,
A mad-hatter. No Alice,
You just see red and see clean,
Don’t weep for the coming of the Gods.
Pray for the return of the dark lords.
(April 17, 2010)

Monday, June 13, 2011

Words

I try to mumble
but my broken tongue and paralyzed lips
Fail.
Can every emotion find its way
into the world of words?
A world with confused grammar,
Punctuated sentences
And organised paragraphs—
from one chaotic world into another.
tangled up in the “rules”.
I try but the wild insane overflow
Of feelings speaks in tongues
Alien to you
and powerless against the wall
you build around your senses.
I wish you could fly you blind
Filings with stray dreams
And build a nest inside
The heart of the one
Who can’t understand
the language of love.

Fireflies in rhyme

Those crooked unstructured words,
Bound together by pure nickel
Sing in your eyes.
Shine in the darkness
Of a silent poem called 'night'.

Broken strings mend,
And the lines dance,
On tree-tops, in a breezy lullaby.
They discover a home
In the distant whispering sparks.

Sparks carrying love notes
And flying into the open skies,
Writing a lyric,
A sonnet, an epic
Of a million fireflies in rhyme.

Stillness

Stillness I

Stillness can be unnerving.

It can toss up a few dead feelings
And bring them back to life.

It can take you back,

Sometimes to a rainy afternoon
When you and I lay down next to each other.
I stretched my hand and tried to touch your finger
I heard you say something
Now I don’t quite remember what.
but I remember I closed my eyes and felt the kiss
Even before you came close enough
For me to feel your heart beat.
When I opened my eyes,
You were still fiddling with my fingertips.

Sometimes on a rainy afternoon

In an idle moment of unusual calmness
I close my eyes
And listen to the rain touch the ground,
Sense some drops running down the shed,
Some caressing the trees, the leaves on their way.

I imagine the pictures as my ears

Wander off to the sound
Of a speeding auto,
Distant voices and shouting children
And I wonder if they are playing a game of muck football.
And then all fades, bringing the music
Of the downpour back into foreground.

Stillness II


Stillness stirs you,

Makes you see things
You wouldn’t see with open eyes.
It pushes you to follow
The footsteps of your heart,
Tells you to find yourself in being lost.
Makes you feel longing,
Makes you feel your own breath,
And makes you seek the company of your own soul.
It tells you that sometimes it’s alright
To have nothing to do but think,
Or sit around listening to your own heartbeat,
Which so often stays drowned
In the noise of things you surround yourself with,
Just so that you feel alive.