Monsoon Raga
Could a day
Be moreÂ
Dull, flat, listless
Even pain seems frozen
The ache indifferent
Listen to the falling rain listen to it fall. The monsoon in books and films is such a sentimental thing. What it doesn't tell you is the endless dreary routine it imposes. When one cannot step out for a walk, a tired gaze becomes damper than the clothes that never quite dry. And then, think of the sentient beings whose nooks get flooded. And yet, we can't but celebrate its milder cousin, rain.
Monsoon Raga
Could a day
Be moreÂ
Dull, flat, listless
Even pain seems frozen
The ache indifferent
Then, a peacock cry
Keening sounds echo
And echo again
Calling out to rain
To restore the world
If ever there was
A sound to gladness
This would be it
Frogmarch in DharamshalaÂ
It rained frogs inÂ
Dharamshala today
Or so they said
You can바카라™t always
Believe what you see
Especially in the woods
But leaves glisten with
Hidden life
And unspoken songs
(should that be unsung)
Hover over a walk
I guess anything is possible
In a snail-eat-snail world
Pani Puri
A breathless orchestra
Swings betwixt hand and mouth
One saying more! more!
T바카라™other crying, hold on!
Impossible clearly to articulate
You accept your pungent fate
As your leaf turns coracle
Of spicy green waters
And inexpressible bliss
Jamun
Stormy sky, sudden downpour
A mischievous glint, a voiceÂ
Akka, let바카라™s go!
Like conspirators on the verge
We sneak out, each minute an hour
Till, safe from the all-seeing eyes Â
Of our mutual grandmother
We hit the road running
Till we get to the tree, hoary
Arms wide, home to a dozen birds
Gnarled fingers reaching down to where we knelt
Gathering our annual treasure of rain-washed fruit
This colour of childhood, and lost cousinship
Only seen on a vendor바카라™s cart now
(Lina Krishnan is an abstract artist and poet in Auroville. Her work has featured in literary journals, arts magazines and in nine anthologies of poetry.)