Category: man, love, poem, poetry

  • Doubt

    I stare at the sun
    And yet think of the shadow
    Sharing my feet;
    A pale performer, all fading in fire,
    The last friend to answer
    And first foe to greet

  • Roots

    When the sunflowers gather
    Around my grave
    Let the roots run deep
    If only to save
    Those eyes of mine; far from free,
    Closed forever
    Yet willing to see.

  • Ignus Fatuus

    Seek no more houses O Child
    All walls are things of sorrow
    Let us be orphans
    A homeless light;
    Neither a gift nor a cause to borrow
    But a fire that awakes
    On unmoored ships in the middle of the sea
    And a dappled world asleep neath
    Moonlight through canopy

  • Poet Without Paper

    They say to make a man;
    Break him first
    And only then the broken pieces
    Ever becomes poetry
    Alas no poet worth his salt
    Has ever felt sorrow
    For his feelings
    Are bound to words
    Which he passes down the morrow
    So others could see it too
    Like dry puddles of rains long past;
    The shape; a shadow faded
    Into brittle skin
    And wounded wind
    And a disguise that weighs too vast

    There is no shame in being silent
    As the world marches on;
    To step aside the rails
    And lay down in the fields
    Be buried in sands of wheat
    Or an ocean of daffodils
    Or catch clouds in their azure kingdom
    And lift wind with lifeless arms
    Touch sky with tender lips
    And grow stars in burnt down farms;
    But nothing will, come of this quite,
    No wrong that remains, shall turn right
    Alone, here, in chambers
    The ashes would glow
    Broken pieces in an unbroken flow.

  • Awaits an Eternity

    To know that a forever
    Exists before me too
    And to believe that a forever
    Shall come after me anew
    Is perhaps a gift I gave myself
    Sans writing my name
    ( Or else I would not so wonder
    At the moment of this surrender)
    That my past, and what passes is the same.

  • Jury

    Why they lament
    In the cemetery;
    Who have buried
    Bodies in their backyard?

    O how the mortal mind mock
    It’s own sense of symmetry.

  • Cynic

    Where in this world
    Of baffled faces; pouring oil in eyes to alight a change
    Must I a man of hollow cast
    Should await;
    To remain unchanged

    For unlike Othello I listen
    To old monks murmuring beyond the riverbank
    Their hands joined to a common flame
    And blind eyes closed to light
    So all could see the same
    But my hands are not stained with grease
    Nor my feet grown in the shape of keys
    For doors yonder where the sunlight’s thick
    And a greener pasture the old monks seek

    I am here amidst the fallen hands
    In its wilderness once termed divine
    What thought a meager man could grate
    That an oracle wouldn’t deem a sign
    Of a tragedy of our own device
    Build by fallen hands, without a voice
    To be interred cold beneath a veil
    This seminal thought, that none may feel

    Where in this world
    Of baffled faces; pouring oil in eyes to alight a change
    Must I a man of hollow cast
    Should await;
    To remain unchanged

  • Cocoon

    My old hands were like butterfly
    Once beautiful and delicate
    A million grains of imprisoned skies as
    One thousand thoughts; intricate,
    But what now they remember
    Is only the crushing weight,
    Of cold steel left to rust
    And rough edges of granite slate
    Till one day they tremble
    Like withered wings to feel no pain
    And fall asleep sans memory
    In a cocoon, to be a moth again

  • Seance

    They all left in silence
    With a hope of being reborn
    To wear new clothes come this time
    And not washed ones already worn

    Can beauty be kept alive
    In a bell jar
    To never wither
    Are dreams; going cold today,
    From tommorow any better.
    Will the seeds sowed and sheltered
    When flowered shall remember
    The last touch; it had felt
    Before being buried in September
    Or the journey shall sell it all
    For that chance to breath once more
    To see the sun in a different light
    And find it the same as before
    What afterlife claim no ails
    In Meadows of Asphodel
    What treasures can hold the sunken ship
    Which in memory never set a sail

    Perhaps in some distant way
    The wind must too feel
    Those flower which swayed with it
    And the towers that stood ever still

  • Id

    Only the blind man believes
    In no man’s land
    The rest of us
    We see
    Each cast away stone
    As our own
    Whether it never was
    Or ever should be.