Saturday 14 August 2021

Finding way


Long am I lost,
The path in front of me,
May lead to the heathens of fire,
May lead to the wisps of heaven.

Long have I lost,
What I have held dear to me,
Children and mothers with hearty lovely smiles,
Torn apart to erect the new facade.

Long am I lost,
Toiling away in a rhythmic drone,
Lives trenched away by the so called superior race,
All for a tirading tyrants tempestuous taste.

Long have I lost,
The people that I left behind,
To save the ones who have fled with me,
Scraping and scavaging any opportunity for a new life.

Long am I lost,
Looking forward in this rail tracks,
To the land beyond,
To freedom, to my new kingdom.

Long am I lost,
But I hope I have found,
A new land and a new promise,
And all the courage to free the others left.

This poem was inspired by the hopeful and desperate escape of the Jews from the train to the concentration camps. We as the generation that succeeds the Tyranical dictator who oversaw the sad genocide should remember painful past and prevent any such ordeals to come past us in the future, for we are responsible for all that may lead to our further generations wellbeing. Learn more about the holocaust trains in the given link: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attack_on_the_twentieth_convoy

Wednesday 2 September 2020

Savage Summer Solace


I roam around these lush lands,
Seeking for something bereaved,
Of wilderness and the nature's touch,
And the unnatural serenity of the hunters path.

I roam around these lush lands,
Hoping to fulfill what once was,
Of the dreams of a little boy,
Running through the lands in joyous harmony.

I roam around these lush lands,
Humming to a tune so foriegn,
Of the land before times of sorrow,
And the time of the wild wild nature.

I roam around these lush lands,
Seeking to find the lost fauna,
Of animals and plants going extinct,
Kneeling in penance to my future kin.

I roam around these lush lands,
The distant future but a hopeful thought,
Of children playing and discovering something anew,
For we are but mother natures fledglings.

I roam around these lush lands,
Planting seedlings everyday with hope,
Of nature's might to bloom once more,
To see Gaia's true beauty once more.

Wednesday 31 July 2019

Chained



Staying still by this hill,

These invisible invincible intangible chains,

Roped around my neck, my hands, my feet, my breast,

Suffocating until tunnel visions all that's left.


Through this endeavor of peaks claim,

Going through these rigorous fires,

Pierced by these kinsmen's serrated glasses,

Dodging fusillades to reach my hopes end.


Through searing eyes of mock do I pass,

Into the abyss do I fall,

Never to wake up,

Never to dream.


Doubt and frustration call out as old friends,

In a tavern do we whirl,

In a frenzy of mad turns,

To spend the night with crazed baggy eyes.


Oh my chains how I wish,

To break from you to reach out,

Hold onto the horde identity,

To take the path commonly advanced.


Alas am I chained by myself,

The keys to which I swallowed,

Hope I find my words; my tongue,

Ingenuity to break through my own failures.

Sunday 30 September 2018

Unseen



I am lost in the sea,
Trying to break from reality.

I am stuck in the dark,
While the world precieves the light.

Gone in this forlorn path,
Dived deep in this shallow pool.

Heart sinks while pride gloats,
Shalt I not leave this reality?

Why this thorn filled path,
Why this heart breaking scene.

The fear of being left behind,
Unable to climb right back up.

Am I the backdrop among people,
Am I the unseen,
The unforseen in this life,
Judged for the things not done,
Judged for the things the heart desires.

Friday 3 August 2018

Transcendent Love




The stars twinkled in her eyes tonight,
As she grasped onto the memories so bright,
Each day looking past herself,
Onto the tiny tot that smiled aloof.

She pushed past her tiredness,
She rushed past her pain,
Each day each night she looked on,
With a face full of bliss at her child.

Her child; her life's love,
Her true love at first sight,
She reared him for 9 months,
Looking past the birth pain.

At last he arrived; her child,
Ah! What a miracle of life,
She looked mesmerized at her son,
Onto her beautiful creation.

She reared him in care,
Taking care of all his needs,
She remained silent in the shadows,
For her sons happiness she prayed.

She stayed with him through and through,
She watched the tiny tot grow and grow,
Her little baby now a man,
Stands before her for her blessings.

She watched him rush past for work,
For he had his own family of four to feed,
She watched him rear his own child,
And saw a reflection of herself in him.

She smiled blissfully,
She smiled contendly,
For she had reared a child,
For she had reared a wonderful human.

A human who knew the truths of life,
Who viewed things with kindness,
One who became a wonderful husband and father,
One who became a wonderful son.

Onto the stars she stared tonight,
Unreeling the scenes of her life,
Blissfully smiling at her past,
Sitting aloof under the stars.

The Capsuled Prisoner




A poem about modern life

The ticking clock of the morning bell,
The ringing chimes of this timed cell.

Tired bodies dragged across the hall,
For you wonder what has caused this fall.

The roads split as the blossoms bloom,
A canned stomach as a morning gloom.

Trudging through this beaten path,
Lost have I, my youths hearth.

Like a hunted prairie dog on sprint,
I have longed for the end of my stint.

But alas this is what it takes,
To feed mouths or turn into flakes.

This timed cell of wonder,
With high pressure and no blunder,
Catches one by storm,
Ending one's life along with the swarm.