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#ganges
despite the macabre march of corpses straight into the raging funeral pyres, it’s the icy waters of the Ganges from your matted locks which shiver my timbers amidst mellifluous incantations, one thousand and eight lamps floating on this mystical river sparkle in an anemone glow here, a great sage was taught a befitting lesson in humility and spirituality as i melt hearing this soulful octet in praise of this ancient city, its most important inhabitant smiles...... truth be told i’m in a Varanasi state of mind © 2022
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Apr 3, 2022
Apr 3, 2022 at 9:23 AM UTC
from your matted locks
In their eyes she, is the holy river and I, am a doubtful sinner. I drowned myself deep in Ganges. Now she, is a holier-than-thou and I, am a confessed sinner.
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Sep 29, 2020
Sep 29, 2020 at 7:52 AM UTC
Crows of Banaras
Ushered from lips divine are sweet symphonies - potent in composition.  A flaxen breath wielded forth  to fissure the pillars of Babylon.    Her temperament quakes, sending shivers across terrain  my frame stays staunchly rooted to.   I'm jolted conscious by might to scar mountain stone,  a statue with the presence to balance the weight of bearing.    Her pigment bleeds a bronzine hue,  every pore succulent with sun from a land afar - dialect closer to home.    Our cultures synergise  in the smouldering *** of diverse urbanity; surrendering to harmony in juxtaposition.    I wish us be, though I doubt my willing fruitful -  I'll swallow the bitterness of division, just to manifest it true.
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May 11, 2018
May 11, 2018 at 1:12 PM UTC
~ ECHOES ACROSS the GANGES ~
Soundless stays my river, still, calm, no wind blows. Dark sky and horizon, and wave-twinkling bands, A distant din, faint stars and a crescent that glows With city lights orange over silver-black water, sands. Black is the colour of darkness they say. Black is the colour, at night and in day. Black, it’s black of many an un-fixed hue. Some nights there are, when the silent river flows Under the moonless sky: the black of tar. Some are the nights when black goes with blue, The colour of night while the young moon glows. Some are the nights when lights near and far, Spangle the river’s black, red, yellow, blue, Lights hurled into sky black; black river too.
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Jun 30, 2017
Jun 30, 2017 at 12:17 PM UTC
My River
Dancing the swelled waves of the deep, swimming clouds leap out to reach over the sunny sky. Blow out a cool kiss on the bank of the blue Ganges of the skies. The lips that kiss the bottomline play the flute. Listen, singing chorus rains down, bouncing back to earth the only open-through planet!
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Jun 9, 2017
Jun 9, 2017 at 11:54 AM UTC
An Ode To The Blue Ganges
"Will you marry me?” whispered her sly slivers of purple, prestige and occasional lie five years later. And had we not been asunder that very same altar we’d sought fallen stars on several days prior, I’d have said, “no.” Sure, she’d brought a bounty oranges, but could he, if ever, answer with the hand that’d waived like the incense before? He said “yes.”
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Nov 15, 2016
Nov 15, 2016 at 9:56 PM UTC
Pontius parallel Ganges
High above the Holy River Ganges where the water flows like Brahman itself,   is an ancient cave, a place of sacred pilgrimage. Entering silently, our small gathering sat together, meditating here where the great sage himself transcended in deep samadhi. Wrapped in warm shawls, dhotis and saris, eyes closed gently in the stony half-light. Early hours had seen us awake, readying for this auspicious day, and the sleepiness of a little child began to overtake me. With that same innocence, a childlike feeling, I curled down into a woolen bundle, asleep in the inner depths of that holy, dark place. Sleep was sleep, and not sleep, as awareness shone within me. Limitless akasha unfolded inside me now, and the ground where I rested expanded into that same unbounded, cosmic space. From far beneath the cool, damp earth, a radiance travelled into my small frame. Renewing energy suffused and blessed me. Bowing in my heart, I touch the lotus feet of Maharishi Vashistha. His darshan shines on into our present day, and throughout all of Ved Bhumi Bharat.
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Apr 21, 2016
Apr 21, 2016 at 12:16 PM UTC
Falling Asleep in Vashistha's Cave
I first cried where freshness itself struggled to breathe. Outside the Ganges, asthmatic, began to cower back in fear, in disgust, in disease, browning like the discarded banana peels on the roadside below. I first cried in a dirt town where kings and queens drank to grass avenues and swaying music in the realms of history books. I first cried where those books aged quietly in forgotten rooms. I first cried where the streets bled out crumpling homes and cardboard stores with misspelt names, spilling children in dust dresses and hair matted into rust pieces. I first cried where those children hung babies on their arms like my mother swung her handbag, a flag of Valentino, while stumbling on crushed cans and dog **** and foetid mud-water on the way to the dentist. And the children cried out snot, their arms perpetually reaching for a rupee from the traffic. I first cried where white-lit department stores sprouted in defiant sanitation between eczema-covered apartment blocks in which washing lines drooped and parking was always a problem. I first cried where many gods and goddesses resided on the footpaths decked in glitter and cloths of rouge as old men with skin weathered into mottled leather shook beneath sheets of jute on the roadside below and offered tiny flames to their gods as morning bellowed and their coughs grew worse. I first cried where stareless men burnt their fingers on the Chinese noodles with too much chilli powder they cooked and fried and cooked for those who never saw them but to haggle over a ten rupee note, on the roadside, on every corner. I first cried as thread-blanketed teenage girls with wrinkled faces squatted amongst cows in the middles of roads, chanting prices, in voices full of tar, of the mound of peas they were selling for that week. I come every year. And I'm ashamed to say I'll never live here but in my verses because I can't stand the smell of the place where I was born. I first cried here. I first cried here.
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Dec 19, 2015
Dec 19, 2015 at 2:55 AM UTC
I First Cried Here
I first cried where freshness itself struggled to breathe. Outside the Ganges, asthmatic, began to cower back in fear, in disgust, in disease, browning like the discarded banana peels on the roadside below. I first cried in a dirt town where kings and queens drank to grass avenues and swaying music in the realms of history books. I first cried where those books aged quietly in forgotten rooms. I first cried where the streets bled out crumpling homes and cardboard stores with misspelt names, spilling children in dust dresses and hair matted into rust pieces. I first cried where those children hung babies on their arms like my mother swung her handbag, a flag of Valentino, while stumbling on crushed cans and dog **** and foetid mud-water on the way to the dentist. And the children cried out snot, their arms perpetually reaching for a rupee from the traffic. I first cried where white-lit department stores sprouted in defiant sanitation between eczema-covered apartment blocks in which washing lines drooped and parking was always a problem. I first cried where many gods and goddesses resided on the footpaths decked in glitter and cloths of rouge as old men with skin weathered into mottled leather shook beneath sheets of jute on the roadside below and offered tiny flames to their gods as morning bellowed and their coughs grew worse. I first cried where stareless men burnt their fingers on the Chinese noodles with too much chilli powder they cooked and fried and cooked for those who never saw them but to haggle over a ten rupee note, on the roadside, on every corner. I first cried as thread-blanketed teenage girls with wrinkled faces squatted amongst cows in the middles of roads, chanting prices, in voices full of tar, of the mound of peas they were selling for that week. I come every year. And I'm ashamed to say I'll never live here but in my verses because I can't stand the smell of the place where I was born. I first cried here. I first cried here.
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91
Myself caught in the heatwave sunlight, brown eyes furrowed in the sun, scarf loose on my neck/ the transcendental Denpasar morning-birds are playing their melodies in my head still, three years post-Indonesia.         All of my soul to India now,         sky the pink of painted elephants         on Jaipur dawning,         my afterlife was somewhere here         perhaps two generations ago, chances are.                Vijay Raghav Rao and Alla Rakha                playing the Tabla/via earphones/treading the                Funary Box City (Kashi) future Spring                hands held together keeping calm pace.                Looking about, my twenty-two year old face catches humid wind S I L V E R S H O P tattered bike leaning on the gated guest house entrance      PERENNIAL AZURE SHIVA SITS CROSS LEGGED/      COBRA NECKLACE IMITIATONS ON THE GODDESS THROAT/      MEDITATING SHIVA/ dulled from years and corrosion. Brahmin center of the market street flapping it's tail, sweat beads from my forehead bleeding to oily pavement. At last the months have come for the river Ganges, April penumbra/savage thunderclap while school children uplifting the heart                  AND MIND are ROARING in their laughter the CONTINENTAL DISCORD OF JOY sleeping with their eyes open while others are too tired for the Earth. Sidney Bechet floating swan songs during the black hour cremations/ “Bechet Creole Blues” CATERWAUL IN THAT              VOID THE METAMORPHOSIS OF DEATH/ LUNACY OF LIFE                      (I've arrived at the simultaneous crossroads                                                         of both) searing flesh in open air pyramids/ Manikarnika Ghat, Asia  F           L          O          W           S through dreams like inevitable prophecy and as ash blends with stars the CITY seems fulfilled and mystifying in it's                       (((((RESPLENDENCE)))))
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Jun 24, 2015
Jun 24, 2015 at 3:40 PM UTC
Self-Made Prophecies (Of Varanasi)
Myself caught in the heatwave sunlight, brown eyes furrowed in the sun, scarf loose on my neck/ the transcendental Denpasar morning-birds are playing their melodies in my head still, three years post-Indonesia.         All of my soul to India now,         sky the pink of painted elephants         on Jaipur dawning,         my afterlife was somewhere here         perhaps two generations ago, chances are.                Vijay Raghav Rao and Alla Rakha                playing the Tabla/via earphones/treading the                Funary Box City (Kashi) future Spring                hands held together keeping calm pace.                Looking about, my twenty-two year old face catches humid wind S I L V E R S H O P tattered bike leaning on the gated guest house entrance      PERENNIAL AZURE SHIVA SITS CROSS LEGGED/      COBRA NECKLACE IMITIATONS ON THE GODDESS THROAT/      MEDITATING SHIVA/ dulled from years and corrosion. Brahmin center of the market street flapping it's tail, sweat beads from my forehead bleeding to oily pavement. At last the months have come for the river Ganges, April penumbra/savage thunderclap while school children uplifting the heart                  AND MIND are ROARING in their laughter the CONTINENTAL DISCORD OF JOY sleeping with their eyes open while others are too tired for the Earth. Sidney Bechet floating swan songs during the black hour cremations/ “Bechet Creole Blues” CATERWAUL IN THAT              VOID THE METAMORPHOSIS OF DEATH/ LUNACY OF LIFE                      (I've arrived at the simultaneous crossroads                                                         of both) searing flesh in open air pyramids/ Manikarnika Ghat, Asia  F           L          O          W           S through dreams like inevitable prophecy and as ash blends with stars the CITY seems fulfilled and mystifying in it's                       (((((RESPLENDENCE)))))
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65
a lupine prayer to bear and bull cry wolf cry wolf cry wolf now look into his eyes until you think like I do and then take a desperate man for his last penny (finance options available) go long on a cheeky Nando's followed by no inflation constant expansion short the small print and profit from the fight against pollution by investing in the future but as returns don't come cheap diversify and purify the self the Ganges is so polluted it has gall bladder cancer the main economic indicators are telling us that inflation is set to jump, while British statisticians are optimistic that the housing ladder will continue to defy gravity as it is an export barometer with a blue eyed quant inside crying wolf crying wolf cry wolf
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Jun 1, 2015
Jun 1, 2015 at 3:05 AM UTC
In it for the money