An Anthem for the Fallen
Once the storm has passed
Once the dust has settled down
Who remembers the blood-sworn vow?
The cloud serpent
Again, steals the water-womb.
The sacrifices made
At the altar of trade
An uneasy head wears the broken crown.
On the banks of Yamuna
A little girl writes feverishly.
Red lines on blank sheets drawn
We can’t hear what she says
We can’t read what she writes
Her unseeing eyes hold
The panic of a closing gate.
We act bold
But the weight,
Of not knowing what she meant
Strangles our hope.
We know how urgent this is.
We know how urgent.
We know how.
We know.
Why won’t she tell?
On the land is cast an imperious spell.
The old covenant has since been torn,
Slow-moving, tortured every thought
A python engorged on its kill
As it crawls-off, to spawn.
No light we see, though it is dawn.
Was this the blessed, signaled morn?
I dreamt of snakes
In a dance of love
On the floor of our terraced gardens.
Desquamated
Born again
Fangs bared
She rushes in
Her hot thighs beckon
The promise of instant nirvana.
Her bosom hints
The lusciousness of enduring youth.
Ya Devi Sarvabhuteshu…
Ya Devi Sarvabhuteshu…
Why does her indulgence scare you?
We all must now conform
With an old, aphoristic norm.
For obeying your commandments,
What have we to show?
We exchange,
Old fears for terrors new
Some keep searching for their garnets blue.
The eulogies we wrote
To those ordained chaste,
The songs we sang were born in hate.
We must assign our myths a date
History will make those murderers great.
Matinee
You are speech and I am the breath.
I am Saman and you are Rig;
I am heaven and you are earth.
-Brihadaranyaka Upanishad
6.4.20
As dusk mops up the blood
Of a day not yet dead
In a lane that goes nowhere
Your fingers slip from mine.
We say our goodbyes
Better unheard, better unsaid.
In that cheap hotel room
The sheets dampened by our lust
Beyond the wavy window panes
Hangs the dust
Rising from a thousand tired feet.
You sacrificed your breath
To tell me what I almost knew
Noises from the street filtered through.
We browsed through the burdened shelves
For the most ridiculous title.
A stolen glance; A shared smile
You wore oversized shades
Feeble attempts at anonymity.
The move was not suicidal
But in defiance
You decided, to take a stand.
A brief but very public embrace.
We were strangers, in a strange land
It raised no eyebrows.
Your laughter still tinkles,
When one opens the door
of that old bookstore.
The bridge between now and eternity
The narrow isthmus of time.
A past without your thought
A future without your memory
Just the burning now.
We are not free not to desire
Choose, without a choice.
A walk along the razor’s edge.
‘Don’t be so dramatic,’ you say
As you turn back and with half a wave
drive to the airport for your flight.
I take the next ferry out.
It is over, we shall pretend.
A story has no beginning or end.
Anamnesis
We were like young lovers
Breathless, feverish,
Teasing, laughing.
Now I watch your face
Coarsened by lard
Your once sweet breath
Laden with the nicotine
of too many clove cigarettes.
I could not hold on,
I was a fool
I was not strong
I had no help,
Against the storm.
I was not the barnacle
That clings to rocks in the tide pool,
Un-dislodged
Lashed by wave and kelp.
I hold the rosebuds
As they turn to ashes in my hands.
Run across,
The blood swept lands and seas of red
As they stain my thighs.
I lay on my bed
Dismembered.
I cried that night
And became one with the pain.
Anamnesis
Fragmented, Refracted
More felt than remembered.
(Blending meditations on time and the human condition in these thought-tormented times, these poems are part of diplomat Anshuman Gaur’s debut collection, entitled “Isthmus of Time.” Termed “a voyage of exploration” by the poet, Isthmus of Time comprises 28 poems, which flit effortlessly between free verse and experimental rhyme to illuminate a rich repertoire of emotions, ideas and myths, modern and ancient).
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