On a Vijayadashami day,
The evangelical angels,
With one focus in their minds,
Drive the festival of light
Into the darkest corners of the mind,
Not realizing that light was born just for this.
Cornered now, it's back against
The darkened panes of rudimentary thought,
Rubs off the soot of intolerance
As darkness and the angels disappear.
The light now hugs the fleeing mind,
And together, glued like in a dancing flame,
Skids through life's polished floor,
Mirror-finished like a ceramic coat,
Where you can see the complete life of
The virgin queen of purity
Give birth to a bird that recites poems
And sings songs of love.
The blast of country bombs,
Lit in glee by my neighbors' children,
Were made to chase animals
From the forest they once roamed free,
But now, devoid of the shola trees,
Look like the face of the teen after the first shave.
Some patches of the bleed
Stopped by toilet paper.
Almost a south-to-north transition.
The manicured tea plantations
Undulate, close-cut Afro hair,
In fashion, not
The dreadlock that was once preferred.
The rocket lit by the retired
ISRO scientist goes up
With a sequence not in any
Ascending or descending order.
The mild drizzle plays with the gunpowder,
Disappointing the young
As the octogenarians look at the heavens
In thankful prayer.
Another Diwali passes by,
I mark my calendar
And sip my Yamazaki 18-year-old.
It’s good to be alive.
A Poem by Shaji Nair
The Morning After
Now our smiles and hugs,
And desperate kisses,
Always remind me
Of the morning after.
When lovers, their nakedness
Now bare in the harsh light of day,
Feel the warmth between them slip away.
How did all the words of love—
The promises, the yearnings of our hearts,
Whispered between kisses—
Vanish like whispers lost to the wind?
The beauty of blossoms lies in their fall,
Withering softly as I spend my life
Searching for the bloom that never fades.
— A poem by Shaji Nair