Showing posts with label antiques. Show all posts
Showing posts with label antiques. Show all posts

Thursday, 17 March 2016

A Park's Bench




A Park's Bench



From the most beautiful mornings,
To the most enchanting evenings,
From the spring to the frosty fall,
It's lived through to witness it all.


It's been there across generations and yet more to come,
Be it scientists or the philosophers, to it they succumb.
It has shouldered many a tired backs,
And more so of such kindly acts.


It has sheltered many homeless folks,
In many, a sense of nostalgia it invokes.
As it's always been there under the yew tree,
Open to everyone, without as little as a fee.


Scribbled across its surface are countless marks,
A sense of wonder in me every time it sparks.
A living history book it is for all, to see and touch,
Just be gentle with it... It's already aged much!


From a homeless man counting his days,
To a young artist experimenting his ways.
Carving in it animals and smiling faces,
It's wood has preserved their long left traces.


It sits there as it has always had: peacefully,
Under the yew tree, ageing beautifully.

*******************

Friday, 11 December 2015

End of The Road




End of The Road



It feels as though you've nothing more to give,
It feels as though you've nothing left for to live,
Left all alone without a comforting friend,
It's apparent that the road has come to an end.


The daylight is covered by a veil of darkness,
Life seems to you but a beautiful mess.
And to your open wounds with no one to tend,
It's apparent that the road has come to an end.


Where has all your strength gone you wonder,
Where did it all start to go wrong you ponder.
Wondering if your ways you'll ever mend,
It's apparent that the road has come to an end.

Standing at life's crossroads helpless,
With no words to express your distress.
When finally you run out of happiness to pretend,
It's apparent that the road has come to an end.


Just get out of your grief for an instant,
And fix your gaze on that 'end' not so distant. 
For what you yourself made a so called 'end',
Was actually nothing more than a mere 'bend'.

************************

Tuesday, 1 December 2015

The Ark of Good Hope







The Ark of Good Hope



Our ship; our vessel is battered and damaged,
Sleepless nights have left the crew famished.
And over each and every decaying log of wood,
My worthy crew, once pompously stood.


But now, they're thrown to every corner,
I beg of them to bear with me a little longer.
The raging storms have left us all battered,
And the black horizon above: hope's shattered.


Oh how we long to the warmth of the sun,
Oh if we could lay our hands upon some bun!
But I've got keep them from wailing and despairing.
You see? I say. Our hope, the Ark's still sailing.


We'll soon make it ashore, to the bells,
To the harbour, the sun and the sea shells.
Oh men get up and take your positions,
We won't abandon the finest of expeditions!


And ah! finally! Some hope within them stirs,
The storm we then faced, my memory it blurs.
Yet when we opened our eyes through our shrouds,
Our star; the sun, shone brightly through the clouds.


Oh wake each of you from your deathly slumber!
The Most Merciful has made the storm encumber.
And see! At a distance is an earthly piece of land,
Our ship will now only rest on its golden sand.


Our ghost ship was greeted with whistles and bells,
And although my tattered Ark now peacefully dwells.
It's safe in the harbour but that's not what it's for,
It's meant to sail the oceans, it's meant to explore.


Regardless of it being made of wood and scrap,
It's meant to sail beyond the edges of the map.

****************************

Saturday, 17 October 2015

The Radioactive Man






The Radioactive Man


This is my humble tribute to the radioactive man,
Who returned to the nightmare from which everyone else ran.
And for 4 years, he's been working hard,
In a region from which everyone is barred.


The Fukushima incident  brought great suffering,
Yet the survivors had someone for their comforting.
But what about those who were left behind,
Living souls like us, their salvation denied?


A great population, pretty much like us they were,
Then what? They were left all alone to suffer.
Some were left as they were, in cages or chains,
Others roamed helplessly, scouring the drains.


This was the plight of the animals of Fukushima,
About rescuing them? Neither a  plan nor a schema.
Their road was more or less heading to a dead end,
But there just happened to be for them, a luck bend.


By the way, who said heroes were young folks?
Naoto Matsumura is worth dozens of those blokes.
At 50, his family are the pitiable survivors,
Of the 12.5 mile radiation zone with no supervisors.


He'd returned for them, knowing the risk,
Whose effects on his body'd be quite brisk.
In a city where nothing's left but standing stone,
'The Guardian of Fukushima's animals' he's known.


Lives in his farm, surrounded by animals,
He being the admiral, they his generals.
Alone he takes care of not only cats and birds,
But of dogs, rabbits even cattle and their herds.


"I couldn't have cared less" he casually says,
When people point out radiation and his ways.
Redefining love and affection here comes a man,
We proudly call him, 'The Radioactive Man of Japan'.

***************************















Saturday, 22 August 2015

The Coin Interpreter




The Coin Interpreter 


A gleaming coin in his hand,
With an eyepiece he scanned.
And made notes of the same,
As if it were a puzzle game.


And on his desk sat other coins waiting,
Of gold and silver of the highest rating.
              He studied each of them carefully,              
For days and days, weeks rarely.


They were not merely restricted to his table,
Lying in every corner they were, yet to label.
A very peculiar man he was indeed,
But, where to would these coins lead?


A sea of coins he had in his possession,
His love for them had turned to obsession.
But it was not wealth that he was after,
He was a true historian, a history drafter.


He believed that every coin had it's story,
Which he'd patiently listen to in all its glory.
And coins taught him a lot about history,
About the things that'd remained a mystery.


About emperors, epic battles and noble men,
And common day things every now and then.
About financial and political conditions,
All told by the coins and their compositions.


He always felt that coins highlighted the past,
And reflected the future, in a glossy contrast.
So, as the world moved on and time flew by,
He ever sat there, with a coin to meet his eye.

***************************

The idea for this poem actually came from a dream I had a few days back! Never let your dreams die! Transform them into reality! If not, go to the cave of lost dreams! Haha I've left the riddle up to you people to solve!

As a matter of fact, take a look at these coins. They are basically Spanish coins. But, they are stunning!! Their beauty has literally held together my poem!