To
Me Sorrow’s Like
To me sorrow’s like the last winter’s
cold,
Could be worse and even the worst.
In Cambridge I was about to die in October
But amazement took me to November
And then emanated white Christmas.
Carols reached me into the duvet,
Jingle bells rang simultaneously—
Coldness turned to white lights.
In January icicles began flashing in the
sun,
Green hopes peeped through smiling here
and there.
Pity me, the tiny insects frequented to
haul up
Through the snow-ladders!
I hated to be a Scrooge
And opened my door to the morning chill.
You bade me good bye at the Trinity Street
Where Ramanujan had died of double
pneumonia
But I responded to the beckoning of the
Newton’s Apple Tree too.
To me sorrow’s like
The lonely cob in waiting on the Cam,
I knew the pen would be joining in a
while.
A
Rare Encounter
The scene suddenly flabbergasted me.
On the ill-lit pavement
The boy among the strewn clothes, papers
and knick-knacks
Was stretching his hands towards the shiny
paper bags
Sprawled out around him.
Pleasant smell welcomed me,
An invisible aroma wafted away from the
boy
And diffused in the smoke of the four-star
kitchen.
From deep inside me
An urge of an intense vehemence
Craved to proffer on his shoulder for a
moment
While passing through in that split
second.
But I could not,
He was not my son, only a lookalike!
Mohibul Aziz was born in Jessore, Bangladesh in 1962. He permanently lives in Chattogram where he is a Professor in the department of Bengali Language and Literature, University of Chittagong. He is the author of more than fifty books of various genres such as fictions, novels, essays and poems. All of the books are in Bengali. Private Moments and Resurrection of a Reformist are his two books of poetry.
Thanks a lot dear and respected editor. I feel greatly inspired.
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