Skies
In
singularities of space and ground,
In
canary hues and crimson tinge,
Our
skies appear so strange at times.
Those
that shade those trembling fears,
And
those that cover the bare bodied men,
They
appear with streams of floating dust,
Out
of which each was born and raised,
Before
and after the million steps.
Our
skies seem dense with unclear trails,
They
attempt to struggle to hold out the sun,
Ablaze
at times with gleaning streams,
To
revert our follies and break the moulds,
Or
cast afresh a new timeline.
I
never looked up so often before,
I
never felt the need to stare at the sky,
But
something taught me to value the blues,
For
its not the ocean that transliterates our tears,
But
it is born out of a clear lit sky.
Each
day I count the leaves on that tree,
But
each time I stop before the last one,
I
leave it for the day grey clouds appear,
For
I know it won’t rain each time I am out,
While
we walk carefree under the stormy skies.
Since
last year I often get up at nights,
Or
look up each morning before the sunrise,
And
the skies appear more strange to me each time.
Dreams
Each
time I close my eyes and dare to sleep,
I
see those dreams that haunt my days,
I
see the dead that walk around,
Crying
in pain and screaming out loud,
I
try to call back with a silenced voice.
I
see a road beside a lake,
Where
I am running across to reach some place,
Unsure
I keep circling around,
And
none appear upon the crowded scene.
At
times I see the flowery pots,
That
I water each day,
They
turn to tall Eucalyptus trees,
That
I never planted in my yard.
I
see a child in a fancy cradle,
And
I see myself calling out to his mom,
She
appears nowhere and I see the child,
Left
alone with only me around,
And
I abandon him as the cradle falls.
I
wake up each time with a tear,
And
the dreams continue to haunt.
Green
Flowers
When
I touch the ice below his feet,
Upon
a desolate ground that is yet to heel.
I
tread those scars and an image appears,
I
fetch a colour each time to paint,
Or
attempt to overwrite upon the blank cards,
There
is no outline to fill or refill.
My
favourite colour these days is the same,
As
the one upon which I wrote your name,
But
I often forget the colour as I paint,
But
I shall gift you a flower the day we meet,
Of
the same colour as that,
But
I wonder where would I find a green flower?
Amrita Sharma is a Lucknow based writer currently pursuing her Ph.D. in English from the University of Lucknow. Her works have previously been published in Earth, Fire, Water, Wind: An Anthology of Poems, CafĂ© Dissensus Everyday, AWS E-zine, Literary Yard, Trouvaille Review, Confluence: South Asian Perspectives, Women’s Web, Borderless, , Tell Me Your Story, Muse India, Rhetorica Quarterly, GNOSIS, Dialogue, The Criterion, Episteme and Ashvamegh. Her area of research includes avant-garde poetics and innovative writings in the cyber space.
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