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.)