#historical
Link to poetry reading: https://suno.com/s/F38UE9ItNZEJWHnW
[Intro]
[fingerpicked acoustic guitar arpeggios]
[Verse 1]
[baritone male spoken word enters]
Unsung heroes number two. Manuel, paternal grandfather. They also came for you in the middle of the night, but found that you had gone to Buenos Aires. [cello enters with low sustained notes] The Guardia Civil questioned your wife in her home, surrounded by your four young children, in loud but respectful tones. They waved their machine guns about for a while, but left no visible scars on your children or on your young wife, whom you left behind to raise them alone.
[Verse 2]
You had been a big fish in a little pond, a successful entrepreneur who made a very good living by buying cattle to be raised by those too poor to buy their own, who would raise them for you. They would graze them, use them to pull their plows, and sell their milk, or use it to feed their too numerous children. When they were ready for sale, you would take them to the market, obtain a fair price for them, and equally split the gains with those who had raised them. All in all, it was a good system that gave you relative wealth and gave the poor the means to feed their families and themselves.
[Verse 3]
Your reputation for unwavering honesty and fair dealing made many want to raise cattle for you, and many more sought you out to settle disputes. On matters of contracts and disputed land boundaries, your word was law. The powerless and the powerful trusted your judgment equally and sought you out to settle their disputes. Your judgment was always accepted as final because your fairness and integrity were beyond question. If Manuel says it, it is so.
[Verse 4]
[violin enters with high melodic accents]
You would honor a bad deal based on a handshake and would rather lose a fortune than break your word, even when dealing with those far less honorable than yourself. For you, a man was only as good as his word, and you knew that the greatest legacy you could leave your children was an unsullied name. You were frugal beyond need or reason, perhaps because you did not want to flaunt your relative wealth when so many had nothing. It would have offended your social conscience and belied your politics. Your one extravagance was a great steed on which no expense was spared. Though thoughtful, eloquent, and soft-spoken, you were not shy about sharing your views and took quite pride in the fact that others listened when you spoke. You were an ardent believer in the young republic and left of center in your views. When the war came, you were an easy target.
[Verse 5]
There was no time to take your entire family out of the country, and you simply had too much to lose, a significant capital tied up in land and livestock. So you decided to go to Argentina, having been in the United States while you were single and preferring self-exile in a country with a familiar language. Your wife and children would be fine, sheltered by your capital and by the goodwill you had earned. And you were largely right. Despite your wife's inexperience, she continued with your business with the help of your son, who had both your eye for buying livestock and your good name.
[Verse 6]
Long years after you had gone, your teenage son could buy all the cattle he wanted at any regional fair on credit with just a handshake, simply because he was your son. And for many years, complete strangers would step up offering a stern warning to those they believed were trying to cheat your son at the fairs. El hijo del café, he is the son of the café, a nickname earned by a distant relative for his habit of offering coffee to anyone who visited his office at a time when coffee was a luxury. That was enough to stop anyone seeking to gain an unfair advantage from my dad's youth and inexperience.
[Verse 7]
Once in Buenos Aires, you were a small fish in a very big pond, or more accurately, a fish on dry land. Nobody was impressed by your name, your pedigree, your reputation, or your way of doing business. You were probably mocked for your Galician accent and few listened or cared when you spoke. You lived in a small room that shared a patio with a little schoolhouse. You worked nights as a watchman and tried to sleep during the day while children played noisily next door. You made little money since your trade was useless in a modern city where trust was a highly devalued currency. You were an anachronistic curiosity and you could not return home.
[Verse 8]
When your son followed you there, he must have broken your heart. You had expected that he would run your business until your return, but he quit school, tired of being called Rojo, red, by his military instructors. It must have been excruciatingly difficult for you. Dad never got your pain. Ironically, I think I do, but much too late.
[Verse 9]
Eventually, you returned to Spain to a wife who had faithfully raised your children alone for more than 20 years and was no longer predisposed to unquestioningly view your will as her duty. Doubtless you could no more understand that than Dad could understand you. Too much pain, too many dreams deferred, mourned, buried, and forgotten. You returned to your beloved Galicia when it was clear you would not be persecuted after Generalissimo Franco had mellowed into a relatively benign tyrant. People were no longer found shot or beaten to death in ditches by the side of the road. So you returned home to live out the remainder of your days out of place, a caricature of your former self, resting on the brittle, crumbling laurels of your pre-civil war self. Not broken, but forever bent. You found the world very different from the one you had built through your decency, cunning, and entrepreneurship, and you learned to look around before speaking your mind and spent your remaining days reined in far more closely than your old steed and with no polished silver bit to bite upon.
May 17
May 17, 2026 at 8:58 PM UTC
Their love began
like contraband
passed between cells.
A glance.
Then another.
The city dragged its chains behind it.
Wet rope streets.
Workhouse windows glowing faintly
through November smoke.
He carried loneliness
like a term with no remission.
She spoke little,
kept her hands folded
as though someone had taught them fear.
Around them, doors shut.
Bolts entered iron.
Names disappeared into ledgers.
Still—
their shoulders touched once
in the narrow weather of evening,
and something unlocked itself
without permission.
Not happiness.
Not yet.
Only the strange relief
of hearing another pair of footsteps
matching your own
through the corridor.
May 8
May 8, 2026 at 8:15 AM UTC
Unsung Heroes
Although I stand on the shoulders of giants,
I fail to see much farther than the bridge of my nose.
The fault in mine. The shame is mine.
For I am unworthy of you, my beloved dead.
Emilio (Maternal Grandfather)
Your crime was literacy,
And the possession of a social conscience,
That made you yearn to see your beloved Spain remain free,
And prevented you from suffering fascists lightly.
You did not bear arms,
For you abhorred all violence,
You did not incite rebellion, though you
Rebelled against the foreign and domestic enemies of freedom.
As best I can tell you were an idealist who,
In a time of darkness,
Clung passionately to the belief,
In the perfectibility of the human spirit.
You would not abide the lies the regional papers carried,
And translated news from American and British newspapers,
About the gathering storm,
Sharing the truth freely with all who would listen.
You gave speeches, and wrote speeches delivered by others, in support of a doomed
Republic collapsing under the weight of its own incompetence and corruption.
You were warned by friends of your imminent arrest and offered passage back to the U.S. or to
Buenos Aires where so many of your friends had already found refuge.
But they would not get your wife and nine children out,
And you refused to leave them to their fate.
They came for you, as always, in the middle of the night,
These cowards with stern faces hiding behind machine guns.
They took you prisoner, not for the first time, to the Castillo de San Anton,
A fortress by a most beautiful, tranquil bay,
Where they tore out your nails, one by one, and those their
Gentlest caresses while they asked you for names.
You endured, God knows what there, for months,
And were sentenced to be shot as a traitor at La Plaza de María Pita.
But the Republic had friends, even among the officers of the fascist forces,
And one of them opened your cell door on the eve of your execution.
You had contracted tuberculosis by then, yet, according to grandmother, you
Managed to swim miles across the bay in a moonless night, to safety in the home of
Another patriot who risked his life and the lives of his family to hide you in
His root cellar and made a trip of many miles on foot to find your wife.
He found your home and told your wife of your unexpected reprieve,
And asked her to send some clothing and some shoes to replace your ***** rags.
You eldest daughter, Maria, insisted on accompanying the stranger back on foot, taking
Clothing and what provisions she could quickly gather and carry to you.
From time to time you accepted the hospitality of an overnight stay In the attic or hay loft of a
Republican sympathizer as these were not hard to
Find in the fiercely independent Galicia under the yoke of one of its own.
But mostly you lived in the woods, with active guerrillas for years.
You lived with all the comforts of a hunted animal with others who would not yield,
Your only crime consisted of being on the wrong side of a lost cause.
I hope it brought you some comfort to know you were on the right side of history.
It brought none to your wife and none to your youngest children.
As you paid the long penance for your conscience, once a month or so, after some
Time passed, you visited your wife and children. You were introduced to the little ones
As an uncle from afar. They did not know the bearded wild man who paid these visits
In the middle of the night and left wearing dad’s old, clean clothes.
The older ones, Maria, Josefa, Juan and Toñita, all in their teens, told the little ones
That their “uncle” brought news of their dad. The younger children, still wearing the
Frayed cloaks of their innocence, accepted this, not questioning why he stayed in
Mom’s room all night and was gone before they awoke the next morning.
Your grief at playing the part of a stranger in your own home, of not embracing your
Children on whom you doted, one and all, for their protection and yours, as there were
No shortage of fascists who tried to ply them with pastries and candy,
Seeking to use their innocence as a weapon against you.
Your parents were relatively wealthy business owners who farmed the sea but
Disowned you—perhaps for your politics, perhaps for choosing to emigrate and
Refusing to join the family business, or perhaps for marrying for love in New York City
A hard working girl beneath your social station in their eyes.
You lived just long enough to see Spain delivered from war,
Though not freed of her chains.
You were spared the war’s aftermath.
Your wife and children were not.
No books record your name. Most of those who knew you are dead.
Yet flowers have long perpetually appeared on your simple above-ground burial site in
Sada that holds your ashes, and those of your eldest son, Juan, and second-
Eldest daughter, Toñita, who died much younger than even you.
Your wife has joined you there, in a place where
Honor, goodness, decency, principle and a pure,
Broken heart,
Now rest in peace.
Author's Note: This is the first part of my longest free-verse poem to date retelling the lives of my personal unsung heroes--grandparents and parents--who lived difficult lives of quiet heroism through wars and peace overcoming real personal tragedy and privation overcoming obstacles that would crush lesser humans like me. They faced adversity head-on, never complaining, never blaming others, and never seeing themselves as victims. When kicked down, they got themselves up, dusted themselves off, and got right back up, and kept going, always following their unwavering moral compass and never, ever surrendering to despair or self-pity. They never enjoyed the 15 minutes in the sun most of get--some of us much longer than we deserve--but they mattered. The lessons they taught by their example to those who knew them perdure long after God called them back home, their memory indelibly marked in the hearts of all who worked with them, learned from them, benefited from their generosity of spirit, and were fortunate enough to be in their orbit. May they rest in peace.
Feb 27
Feb 27, 2026 at 2:12 PM UTC
I tripped on the divine roots
As I was fleeing from anything
Now I, architect of spirits
From albino-light to hell-light
Scripting cortex design’s deluxe
What a bird brain too dreamy
Enfiguring continuously new continents
From Pangeas to Quaternary
A new Sun, an extraterrestrial abecedary
Walkin’ way distant n’ starry
Lost miracle driftin’ thru’ the interstellar night
Here I stand waitin’ to blend with the aetherial veils
Jan 9
Jan 9, 2026 at 5:05 AM UTC
i shall make proper preparations for the grandeur of the task,
i shall tighten the laces of my boots (for there will be hazards aplenty, i assure you)
like, say, crepuscule hardening into molten metal,
and depths that might, should fate decree, betray me.
these details shall conspire quietly,
like the bulwarks of hisarlik before the horse, like the icebound rivers of volga.
by light seeping in at an indecent angle,
the floor becomes a frail page
of an epic i am ill-equipped to read.
woebegone and woe betide,
o chest of mine,
if the long narrow way should finally decide
to crush the hasty by crossing the immovable alps...
yet here i stand, undiminished,
reckless before the mark-stepper’s shadow,
in the midst of fear, i cry aloud:
“oh, tell me, o slithery brine and inert earth,
will achilles begrudge my hesitation,
will joan nod at the rigorous tremor of my heartbeat,
will the walls of raigad themselves disapprove
of a man who feared all and did none?”
i do not don gloves, what armor is enough
against the terrifying threat of immotile infrastructure?
the air barely swirls, the soil is still as ever
yet i think of war like on the eve of krasnoi, already knowing no one will arrive.
you think i am the first to shudder
before the agonizing trickling of inevitability,
to perform bravery in a place content
to remain quiet, impartial, mundane?!
recall, if you will,
the iliad, the sinking of the vasa,
the diary of a girl in hiding,
all marvels of courage in disproportionate space,
and know that my shuddering is but a footnote,
but a minor trifle in the presence of these legends!
and then!--
ah.
the danger remains intact,
and i, improbable as it seems,
survive with the faintest sense of victory,
over absolutely nothing.
no medal is awarded.
no epic will recount this struggle.
everything will probably be fine.
i am only slightly embarrassed.
Dec 25, 2025
Dec 25, 2025 at 5:01 AM UTC
Was Pompeii lucky to find an empty room?
Could God be hiding in an empty tomb?
We'll push until we meet our doom.
Curiosity can't be erased.
Until we find the next place.
But it is not all for good,
Disease & bombs just cause we could.
Famine without starvation.
Salvation through stimulation.
Can we ever stop this race?
While humanity still has its case.
Dec 3, 2025
Dec 3, 2025 at 3:31 PM UTC
The grey Themes flows like molasses
Key figures bustle about the impending law
Like ants on a crumb of coffee cake
What seemed so important on that dark day
Flutters past like wind through a forgotten rake
What is more treasured than this entanglement?
The men with insipid wigs evidently
The public does not compare to Parliament
Bicker until your tongues swell into pink sausages
Time is a hair, caught on a nail in a plank, laying in the field
Insomuch as your ignorance to the turnshoes clacking underneath you
The porcelain haired fellows unfortunate to yield
Barrels of whiskey they are not
It’s a keg of a different sort
Guy thinks the fight is worth being fought
To worship is to be free after all
In the minds of zealots that’s justification enough
It was free reign in Eden before the fall
There’s no formality strike the brimstone
Cognition upon the floor erupting beneath them
Cricket in the corner little black legs hone
Not insects, yet footsteps close
Law prevails no fireworks tonight
Religious freedom prevails? Who knows?
It was foiled, ruined by one member
Gunpowder plot posse found the gallows
Perhaps no one will remember the fifth of November
Nov 5, 2025
Nov 5, 2025 at 11:15 AM UTC
His men still,
All at arms,
Young of age
Not readied for all harm.
"Fire the artillery,
Send for the Calvary,
Get them there,
Hold the line!
Die not for yourself,
A simple trade:
Life for eternal glory,
No soul is wasted,
In these fields of death"
He watches, he waits
He thinks, he stumbles
All in vain
As his plans fall the drain
"What now?" they say,
All is lost, none stand,
Great autumn orchids
Stained red
With youthful pride and vigor,
Gone for a pointless dream.
Guiding hand
To earnest and certain doom,
He sits on a throne of corpses,
Wasted genius, wasted effort,
All for naught, all far gone.
Tactician, intellectual,
Butcher, fool
Hero, Angel,
Villain, Devil,
A man of no equal,
A man of all folly,
A leader and a killer,
A man , in his hands
The hopes of nations
And empires,
A man with no where to go,
"There's nothing we can do.",
He says at last,
"Here's my Waterloo ; all is lost.".
As he stands in surrender,
Both flawless general
And flawed man.
May 27, 2025
May 27, 2025 at 5:06 AM UTC
If these walls could talk,
many stories will unfold,
From the past, present and future,
Is history being told!!
Just look around and just see,
The Vintage, and the quality,
of how long things have lasted,
To this day, is well kept beautifully!!
A House that's of the old,
a lineage, from way back when,
for many generations have come and gone,
that has so much history within!!
If these walls could talk,
they would tell you,
about your ancestral, historical past,
It is now passed down to your era,
So, that your Ancestry will Last!!
B.R.
Date: 5/10/2025
May 10, 2025
May 10, 2025 at 1:35 PM UTC
I challenge you to broaden your views
If you are one who is adversarial,
But should you shun competition
I welcome you to engage in cooperation.
That we may learn from each other,
Sharing our personal perspectives.
If I had ventured to say
That there is no such sturdier foundation
From which upon to build on,
Would you call me crazy?
Perhaps, in a pitiful way,
You would refer to me
As an optimist
Or as daydreaming & faraway.
It's just not realistic, not here or today.
Cooler heads do not prevail,
Safety leveraged over risk is gay,
Precaution is something for *******
What bullish nonsense and pigheadedness,
Are you not freely disposed toward exercising
Those of your most sacred rights & liberties?
Is too heavy the weight of vulnerability?
Feb 9, 2025
Feb 9, 2025 at 3:24 AM UTC
inspired by Enid Dame and her poem Lilith
i walk the streets that you used to walk when you were young.
they’re still filled with the ear-splitting traffic of streetcars and taxis,
and the heavy footstep of man
as he trudges along in the gray sludge of old February ice.
i spy on him sometimes, mama.
i watch him slouch against the ice fire breath of the winds
huffing down his neck.
i peek around the lamp-post and watch him shuffle against the dreary gale
that blows him backwards for every step he takes,
just like how he was blown from Eden.
i saw him mama.
the man who threw you out.
the man who abandoned you.
i watch him walk every day,
he seems lost.
it’s cold here mama.
this place is nothing like the paradise you described to me.
you told me that you lived in heaven
and that you were loved,
just as much as you said you loved me.
oh mama, why did we come here?
it rains all the time.
i cried so much in the
apartment you managed to find
on the corner between that deli shop
and the pharmacy owned by a
man who never stopped smoking.
you held me close and said,
“shh baby, it’s alright.
we’ll get through this together.”
the day you died,
i cried like I did when I was in that apartment,
only this time,
there was no one to hold me close
and whisper in my ear.
mama, Lilith,
you’re gone.
history has never remembered you.
you’ve been erased
by the broad sweep of mankind’s hate.
they don’t want to remember you.
but I do,
i do.
i whisper your name to the trees on fifth street
and look at the stars on faded concrete steps at night,
trying to find you among the
constellations
of the history you should have been
a part of.
Sep 2, 2024
Sep 2, 2024 at 8:39 PM UTC
From Publius to Livia
Livia, I write to renounce your fields,
My sweat no longer yours to claim.
My harvests fed the eternal city,
Yet you see only Gaius and his shadow, Marcus.
...
Blind to the furrows I plowed,
The terraces I raised, the grapes I nurtured,
I tamed wild Ceres before you came,
Turning forest to field, field to farm.
...
Then you arrived, trailing discord’s hound,
Gorging on Gaius’s hollow praise,
Stealing credit for my toil,
Casting me as a shade on your wall.
...
I prayed to the Capitoline Triad,
Offered a white bull to Jupiter, king,
Begging radiant Sol to burn through your guise,
And bless my path with brighter horizons.
...
To Juno, I burned frankincense and myrrh,
Pleading ****** to sweep you astray,
Your pets adrift on Sicilian shores,
Left to Polyphemus’s wrathful gaze.
...
To Minerva, I poured my own wine,
Urging her to unmask your arachnid soul,
Your arrogance a web of self-woven lies,
Dagger-tipped legs stained with stolen blood.
...
The gods have heard, Livia. Your weave unravels.
My fields await under noonday sun,
While yours wither in my absence,
Your perfection a fading, frail deceit.
Signed, PERTINAX
Jul 7, 2024
Jul 7, 2024 at 10:44 AM UTC
Some Conway Cabal;
It's a regular circus,
In the capitol.
Jul 2, 2024
Jul 2, 2024 at 8:19 PM UTC
This is not a poem, however, it is an invitation to everyone. Many years ago in a galaxy far away. No, that's not it. lol. Blt and I came up with the idea to write poetry from the viewpoint of a historical figure or a fictional character's viewpoint. I wrote one from Humpty Dumpty's point of view. Jesse James and Bill had some great ones too. The ideas are endless. Anyone is welcome. Join the fun.
https://hellopoetry.com/collection/132874/lost-poetry-from-history-challenge/
Jun 9, 2024
Jun 9, 2024 at 3:28 PM UTC
I look down from blue skies on high.
Birds fly,
And sing.
Clouds make their rounds.
Shifting shapes,
Take the form of peace,
Content with itself.
The wind whooshes and whirls my hair.
I smile at its gentle caress,
Happy to receive an old friend.
Together we surf the heavens,
Bid our greetings
And farewells,
To the Gods above.
Feeling safe and protected.
Arching across the firmament,
I become separated from the wind.
Frantic,
I search the sky for any sign
Of my wayward friend.
I ask of the birds:
"Do you yet glide upon the breeze?"
"No," said they,
"We must flap and flap
Just to stay a flight."
Worried,
I look down at the clouds;
Still moving,
Shapes still.
...
And dark.
So... Dark.
Lights flashed within.
A terrible boom sounded,
Causing me to loose focus on my peace,
Leaving me to fall downward,
Ever downward towards the raging storm.
Panicked, I yell to the Gods in the heavens:
"Please, I have lost the wind,
And without it,
I am left to plummet!"
I was scared.
Would the Gods save me?
Would the wind?
My prayers unanswered,
I plunged into the abyss.
My hairs stood on end
As electricity arced.
The sound of thunder,
Deafened my ears,
Leaving a hollow ringing,
Screaming,
Thinking it's the end I begin
To sing:
"Above the clouds I knew peace,
Tranquility,
The love of friends,
And songs of birds.
I was free to smile,
And happy with my lot,
High above the human rot;
But now I fall.
The Gods too cruel.
The wind is gone;
And storms duel.
If this is the end,
Then perhaps I will rise again."
As the last lyric left my lips,
I broke through the clouds,
Fighting off hail and sleet,
As I spun out of control.
Rain began to soak me,
Leaving me shriveled
And wrinkled,
As if I'd aged a century.
I can see the earth now;
My sweet mother,
Who had nurtured me,
And taught me to soar.
She too was also sodden.
Rivers flooded the ground.
Trees were being torn from their footing.
Lightning struck repeatedly.
A blinding cacophony,
That left dark scars on her skin.
Humans ran where'd they could.
Some climbed mountains,
Other dug into her flesh.
Parasitic cowards,
Unwilling to face their fate.
Their greed and avarice
Were what led me to the skies,
All that time ago,
When I cried to the great mother:
"They take and take and take,
Yet never do they give to you.
Once they worshiped you
With offerings of laurel
And incense.
Now they insist upon stealing your life."
Warmly, she brushed away my tears,
Saying:
"My dear nymph,
They know not what they do.
Just like you,
They too are searching for peace.
Though, they are not a part of me;
They do not pray to the Gods.
They do not dance with the trees.
They do not sing with the birds.
They do not blow with the breeze.
Much like lightning,
They are static,
And ever racing.
Life is a competition they feel they must win,
Regardless of the cost."
As the memory faded,
So too did that feeling of falling.
Looking around,
I saw light that was bright,
Instead of dark.
Clouds parted to shine brilliant rays,
Pristine,
A rainbow curved over a mountain top,
And birds sailed once more in leisure.
Looking down,
I see that I'm floating
Just inches from the ground.
Then feel just the slightest cool kiss
Brush across my cheek:
"My friend! You've returned!
And not a moment too soon!
For if you had been just a single second later,
I would have reunited with the mother,
Six feet under."
A new smile bloomed on my lips,
Relieved to be alive,
Yet also sad to see the state of Gaia;
Flooded and scarred.
She was unrecognizable.
I whispered to the wind:
"Set me down dear breeze,
For I must commune with the forest,
And help heal the damage
Caused by murderous men."
Unexpectedly, the wind lifted me up,
But not towards the heavens.
No,
The wind raced me to the nearest mountain;
Rainbow still curved over,
Where the humans huddled
In their ragged masses.
Stricken, I fought against the wind,
Wanting only to fall again:
"Those men and those women,
Threw me away so long ago.
They made me feel such pain and sorrow
As they hewed my forest
To satisfy their insatiable hunger,
Forgetting those days of peace,
Where nymphs helped lost humans,
And humans composed beautiful poems
About nymphs.
... And their great mother."
The wind did not listen,
Setting me down in the center of the pestilence.
I cowered,
Wondering why my friend
Would act so cruel?
The humans around me shied away.
Some yelled "demon".
Others "fiend".
I cried then,
Feeling other than,
And yelled at them:
"Stay away you barbaric heathens,
I will not let you cut me again!
Nor witness you harm my mother!"
Then, I felt the wind...
It nudged me towards a crying child.
She wasn't much taller than myself.
I felt... empathy for it.
Together we cried tears of fear,
And sorrow;
Both victims of life's losses.
Mine, in the past.
Hers, in the present.
Sobbing, I asked her:
"Why do you cry young one?"
She wailed:
"I lost my mommy!"
My tears redoubled as I said:
"I too have lost my mother,
But it is not the same.
You see, dear child,
I have been watching my mother die
For far longer than you have lived,
Or will live.
So do not cry.
Instead, go offer some incense and laurel
To the spirit of Gaia;
Pray to the Gods.
Dance with trees.
Sing with birds.
Blow in the breeze.
Find peace in nature as your people once did,
And compose a poem for me,
To read in Elysium.
...
If you do this,
A mother you will find.
I know, because I asked the Pythia,
Long ago,
In a different time."
May 9, 2024
May 9, 2024 at 10:27 PM UTC
And he had said,
"Ladakh is a barren piece of land,
Let the Chinese have it,
Nothing grows over there,
And it's a useless piece of territory,
The lesser the liabilities for my government,
The better."
And the Chinese still sit in Aksai Chin,
That part he called barren,
It's our lost land that China usurped,
Yes, the expansionist China,
And how shamelessly he escaped his duty,
His responsibility to maintain the integrity,
Of our nation he ought've known the nitty-gritty.
But now we face an uphill task,
That Hindi-Cheeni Bhai-Bhai,
It's now a laughing stock,
Yes, sir, people laugh at it,
Albeit less than they do at your scion,
The same scion who has nil experience,
And simply a negative IQ, perhaps.
But that was just one of your mistakes, sir,
How can we forget your ambition to be the Prime,
Even at the cost of the national integrity,
You let them unleash a rein of terror,
Both the sides suffered civilian casualties,
Not just the dead I refer to,
I also refer to the ***** and mutilated.
You behaved so power-hungry,
So irresponsible and immature,
So ignorant and inexperienced,
So unwise and unintelligent,
Of that post, oh sir,
That position that you won by your clout,
You knew that Bhai made a better choice.
Yet you felt entitled to the post,
By the mere virtue of your birth,
Born with a silver spoon in your mouth,
Linen sheets underneath your body,
Much like your dumb scion,
Yes, the very same one who fumbles.
He fumbles in his speech,
And in his lack of preparation,
The Grand Old Party, it trembles,
Trembling under the unwanted burden,
Voices of dissent grow louder,
The Party you usurped is slipping away,
Drifting further everyday.
Apr 7, 2024
Apr 7, 2024 at 1:07 PM UTC