The Soft, Soothing Song
Was it a cart rumbling over the cobbles?
Or a monolithic
man grumbling,
hobbling along on stout legs?
I could hear and
see men moving hefty kegs.
“Ho- ho-ho”
someone roared.
A balmy breeze
skimmed the lake.
The sun peeped
out in a gush of light.
The gulls
overhead emitted petrified cries.
Evening fell.
Now the inflamed
eye of the sun hurled a sullen stare at me,
from under a
glowering sunset.
“I will rise
again”, it raised a fiery finger towards me,
winked and was
gone.
The waves of the
lake were now in a jocular mood.
Suddenly I heard
sickening thuds and hoarse curses.
Were some foes
gripping each other’s throats,
their heads
battering rams?
Were they
clawing each other’s faces, gloating at their strength?
The night was
filled with hysterical screams and nightmarish dreams.
Then lo and
behold! A soothing song filled the air; the moon beamed.
A Lullaby Under The Bridge
A woman running.
Running on the
streets. Disheveled. Shabby.
One arm
bangled. A tad bloodied too.
Hair tangled, as
though
seaweeds are
hanging down her head.
Kids snigger,
hurling pebbles at her.
Groaning, she
runs away from them.
Pale. Lonely.
Sad.
Night falls. An
owl calls.
“A mad woman
lives under the bridge.”
Says a boy to
his friend.
“Really?”
“Yes. Come, I
will show you.”
Holding hands,
the ten-year-olds race towards the bridge.
Yes, she is very
much under the bridge,
clasping an
emaciated toddler to her shriveled up breast,
crooning a
lullaby, where the moon figures.
A mongrel cuddle
up next to them, half- asleep.
An abandoned
woman, under an abandoned bridge.
On her weary,
tear- streaked face, there is a look of maternal bliss.
She bends down
towards her child and on his cheek plants a kiss.
The moon
furtively peeps from behind the clouds, and grows bigger.
Transfixed by
the endearing scene, the ten-year-olds forget to snigger.
The Glowing Darts Of Dawn
It was a
chillingly cold winter morn.
The east was
pierced by glowing darts of dawn.
A yawning,
crimson abyss.
Ragged clouds
flaunting red hot linings.
Golden jets
dazzled eyes.
The sunlight
poured through the cracks of the poor man’s hut,
valiantly trying
to chase the gloom from his deeply furrowed face.
His two small
sons clung to their mother on the string cot,
who was draped
in a tattered saree.
They - the
living dead.
The living do
the same things as the unliving do.
Don’t they?
Even the
unliving breathe through every day.
Ragged, staccato
breaths, defying death every moment.
The living
sleep, snore, snivel and scoff. So do the unliving.
Incredible but
true, the steely glint in the poor man’s eyes
expresses
indomitable will.
His life does
not offer the luxuriance of gloom.
Seasons change,
his will grows stronger.
He no longer
broods, or curses his fate.
In winter’s
blanched, monochromatic hues
he looks at the
sun painting golden rays of hope,
on the faces of
his family, lying on the bed,
and is filled
with love ineffable.
With a soft
tread he heads out of the hut.
To make himself
and his family fit for survival.
He cannot
compete with the fittest- but survive he will,
with a strong,
overpowering will.
SANTOSH BAKAYA
SANTOSH BAKAYA: Winner of International
Reuel Award for literature for Oh Hark, 2014, The Universal Inspirational Poet
Award [ Pentasi B Friendship Poetry and Ghana Government, 2016,] Bharat Nirman
Award for literary Excellence, 2017,
Setu Award, 2018, [Pittsburgh,
USA] for ‘ stellar contribution to world literature.’ Keshav Malik Award, 2019,
for ‘staggeringly prolific and quality conscious oeuvre’. Chankaya Award [Best Poet of the Year, 2022, Public
Relations Council of India,], Eunice Dsouza Award 2023, for ‘rich and diverse
contribution to poetry, literature and learning’,[Instituted by WE Literary Community] poet, biographer, novelist, essayist, TEDx
speaker, creative writing mentor, Santosh Bakaya, Ph.D has been acclaimed for
her poetic biography of Mahatma Gandhi, Ballad of Bapu [Vitasta, 2015], her
poems have been translated into many languages, and short stories have won many
awards, both national and international. Part of her column, Morning
Meanderings in Learning and Creativity website, is now an e-book. She has
penned twenty three books across different genres.
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