Time and Life
Hush of silence enshrouding a modest room
With fair curtains drawn,
Simple lights switched on
Unwillingly illumine a clock
Hanging on a wall, Once badly broken
Nevertheless somehow working
To break the ice
By its faint ticking beats.
Straight beneath it someone bed-ridden
With closed eyes,
Agitating fingers and
Frequent deep breaths,
Meditating over the past
Cudgelling the brains.
Reopening many old sores
And a few palmy days
Of an onerous life
Torn up by rents of poverty
And
Stitched up by thread of survival
Which was be-all and end-all.
Childhood of scarcity
Youth of hardships
Oldness of insalubrity
With rare commas of joy
And ubiquitous full-stops of grief
Composed the chapter of life,
A moving laborious life
Which at present
Had taken a halt
And parked itself at a place
Where tears and smiles
Pain and pleasure,
Despair and hope,
Melancholy and gaiety
Clamour and silence
Solitude and companionship
Every moment of life is liked,
Held precious and invaluable.
Yet a piquant feeling
Of inactivity and vapidity
Fidgets, itches and incites a wish-
Wish to get up
Leave the bed
To be ambulant,
Revitalize the nerves
For breaking again
Arduous rocks of life.
But a fragile heart
With irregular pulses,
Eyes with feeble sight
And
Body with flaccid muscles
Clip the wings of this wish,
Cramp the style
And leave “compromise”
The only option.
The beats of a broken clock
The pulses of a fragile heart,
Unfold nonchalance of fugitive time
Reveal inequity of limited life.
World: an intricate oddity per se
Time and life its crossword
Man, its zealous solver,
Before conjuring any solution
Turns unqualified,
And dropped out!
Sense of nostalgia enveloping thoughts
His lips seem to whisper-
Afsoos Duniya Kahsina Lug Samsaar Sethi....
(I penned down this free-verse when my grandpa was very unwell and passing through the final stage of his life. It captures the emotional and existential crisis experienced during that painful phase. The sense of belonging and the sense of loss dominated. It still does since my grandparents were close to me than my parents).