In another poem 바카라Radhachura바카라, I was personally awestruck by the kind of imagery that was employed by Ghosh to assert the nature of seeking freedom and growth and defying the clutches of overused tradition when he writes, 바카라Even that seasonal flower-pot/ might burst suddenly/by the undercurrents of hesitancy,/the smaller heads spurting/ past the bigger ones,/ did the gardener say that?바카라
There were two poems in the book, titled 바카라Black & White바카라 and 바카라A Letter to Black Friend,바카라 which may suggest that Ghosh has had a socialist, egalitarian view of society. But the number of such poems is too less in the anthology so as to qualify him as a socialist poet for now.
The most dominant theme, however, which spans most of the poems in this anthology, is 바카라funeral pyre바카라 바카라 alluding to one바카라s transition to another world or death. To me, it is somehow the most representative element of Ghosh바카라s poetry which places him in the league of great existential Urdu poets such as Jaun Elia, Ahmad Nadeem Qasmi, et al. All across his poems, Ghosh wants to depict the struggles he has had with his constant companions like void, emptiness, blankness and how he carries the same to the funeral pyre. To him, the funeral pyre seems to be the culmination and beginning at the same time, of a new dance, newer dimensions, newer life.
In 바카라Funeral Pyre바카라, Ghosh writes, 바카라Go, run away,/saying this my body bends/Funeral Pyre바카라, thus wishing to detach himself from what is left behind and embrace what is to come, with utmost curiosity. Again in one of my favourite poems from him, 바카라Dharma바카라, Ghosh depicts the image of him being in the cremation ground while the funeral pyre is being prepared. It is here he speaks about one of the favourite symbol of existentialism 바카라 a void, as 바카라Tell them, let the void stand on my breast,/ spread her ankle-length hair,/ let the stars light up her crown. Let them run away/, communicating to us his inability to make sense of what is around and what is constantly within.