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diptesh
diptesh
Indian
I pick up what is left of me. All day I’ve cut myself and bled. Suddenly the world is at war: Everywhere I step is a mine-field, Everything is wrapped in barbed wires. I sit in front of my window, pause. The trenches have taken their toll. The skirmish has gone too long. My old Enfield has proved useless, And I could never use the bayonet. In my pocket beats your letter. I have carried it all day, knowing. It rests, like a grenade, against my heart. You said nothing: but the dusk spoke With a sadness akin to your voice; I know what it says, but I wait. One last long puff… I pull the pin. Diptesh Ghosh
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Aug 18, 2013
Aug 18, 2013 at 9:33 AM UTC
Encounters
The seed of grief has found a way Into my heart; Darkness waits, like a winter night, Lurking, waiting; Just when I make peace with darkness You smile at me, Unexpectedly, in the darkness A lighted window. Diptesh Ghosh
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Aug 18, 2013
Aug 18, 2013 at 9:32 AM UTC
A Lighted Window
If we were in love And the government, in all their wisdom, Banned all conversations altogether A vast silence would reign In smoky coffee halls and crowded streets… Silent like libraries; There would be no way Of speaking of forbidden things except For writing them down in letters: Every day I would send Pages detailing out your smile, my love, Your beautiful dark eyes; But if the jealous bureaucrats Rationed the use of words, limiting spends, I would still write only to you One by one, till all words, Like precious bank balance ran out slowly, Like sunlight in winter; Even then I would not quite stop. I would send you these blank sheets of paper. Every day, till the last of days: If they took the sheets away My parched lips shall move silently Narrating to the wind; And my love shall be written in blank sheets. Only the wind and you Will know what they say. Diptesh Ghosh
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Aug 18, 2013
Aug 18, 2013 at 9:30 AM UTC
A Love Letter
A continent breaks up slowly And imperceptibly; Life is an album of old photographs, The prints are faded and dull. If only they could make a fresh copy… But the negatives are long gone. Questions lurk where answers lingered. They smile with uncertain eyes. The wine tastes unusually sour, And the cigarette smoke is stale. The stars above waiting, knowing. The two listen to the silence Grasping for something to say But they have nothing. Alas. The furiously beating heart Was nothing more than a moment: The house was built on a cliff The cliff was toppling, slowly. Diptesh Ghosh
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Aug 18, 2013
Aug 18, 2013 at 9:29 AM UTC
End of a Friendship
When I go to the woods I do not write “I was here” On the bark of some tree; I do not leave plastic bags, Or cups and beer bottles To commemorate my stay; It is enough that I see Unobtrusively, for a while, The forest aflame in autumn, As white water rushes down The green ancient mountains Under a benign blue sky; I do not need too much more: The deer will graze again, Here where I stand watching; The daisies will grow quietly, And rain will fall on this meadow When I leave without a footprint; So it should be with my life. Too much value is given To the quest for permanence; I shall be like the summer wind That passes through the woods Invisible but scented: It shall not matter when I’m gone. But I shall be glad to have seen All this beauty, and these woods, Though briefly, ah so briefly. Diptesh Ghosh
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Aug 18, 2013
Aug 18, 2013 at 9:28 AM UTC
Permanence
In the quiet lake of my heart I heard a poem flap its wings. It nested on the shallow edges Stirring its dark tranquil waters; It would not stay, it flew away. So I wrote your name on a sheet And cast it like a paper boat On the deserted waters: There it still floats, like a swan, Elegant and undisturbed, Far more perfect and complete Than any poem I ever wrote. Diptesh Ghosh
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Aug 18, 2013
Aug 18, 2013 at 9:26 AM UTC
A Poem
August A rain drop still lingers On the tip of a green leaf Long after the dark clouds Have dispersed from the sky; Like the drop that shimmers In the corner of your eyes, Silent, out of season, and beautiful; March The first leaf breaks free, quite unnoticed, Like the first boy back in school After a particularly long vacation; Soon the quiet hills will resound With the cries of those yet to come The forest that is yet to wake; December Steaming tea in hand I watch The wind blow through the green valley Singing a tune that must resonate With the young saplings of oak and Birch: They sway and flutter fiercely. They shake and tumble with the wind. If they were not rooted, They too would fly. Diptesh Ghosh
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Aug 18, 2013
Aug 18, 2013 at 9:25 AM UTC
Three Months
I see you busy in your work. Your hair, more white than black, is thin And falls loosely over your shoulders; There is a vein that beats prominently Above your forehead, and your hands Now gently shake when you are tired. Your clothes sit light on you, the lines On your face speak of the years in the sun; You are not now the same person you were. The back that bore the weight of three children Is somewhat bent with time; You had walked out of home to work Overcoming the loud small-town voices And your own shyness; they are silent now. You were made of iron, but that too rusts. I think of all this, and time, and sorrow. You see me and conscious of my gaze You smile your smile of missing teeth. You are old, like silver, beautiful: You seem to have walked out of a painting By Raphael or some Renaissance master; I cannot breathe, I am overcome: There are days like this when we live As if death or time did not matter, When it is bliss just to be alive; You tell me it may rain, to take the umbrella. Among the most mundane things to say; And all I think is how grateful I am For life and you and everything, And how old age should be exactly like this: To have lived a life doing the things you love Being the mistress of the small things, Watching what you gave your heart to take shape. Diptesh Ghosh
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Aug 18, 2013
Aug 18, 2013 at 9:23 AM UTC
Ma
Drunk with beauty, Wearing an old ache in my heart I have traveled the world. I might be fifty, I might be fifteen, But I have scanned the stars in foreign lands, And heard the wind’s voice in strange woods; I have no home. There’s tomorrow waiting and a little house. But I have felt the rains open up on me Unrestrained, never holding back; My soul has grown moss-fed in the rains. I have given my heart to the road. What do I want? I seek the lyrical curves of the wide road. It was bliss to stay awake on cold nights To watch how the new day slowly breaks. Be young forever, my roving dreams. Do not run out on me, untraveled road. Weary of the world, An exile from the tired towns I have come now to autumn in these woods. The leaves are falling on quiet roads Like sheets of paper tossed by wild students. I must write of these things. You write to me. Diptesh Ghosh
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Aug 18, 2013
Aug 18, 2013 at 9:22 AM UTC
Song of the Open Road
We stitch our days Into the fabric of our lives; I have lost the old craft. The design has gone awry; Instead of one theme I have many; Here is happiness and sorrow, A patch of regrets And this knot of indifference; I have put them together. It does not dazzle Like a brilliant tapestry. It is a patchwork quilt. Like me, shapeless and plain; But it tells a story, And it keeps me warm. Diptesh Ghosh
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Aug 18, 2013
Aug 18, 2013 at 9:21 AM UTC
A Patchwork Quilt