Part Six – VOICES IN A HOSPITAL


The microcosm is a world of hunters.

Like hounds racing on a holt

Like bullets shot from a bolt

Virus, microbe, bacillus, germ

Sniffing the spoor overwhelm the quarry

All begotten of ova and sperm.

You may transplant the kidneys, for sure,

Replace the gene or the rib-cage,

Man will still be the prey –

Asthma, epilepsy, sheer old age.

So long as sun and moon endure

Some hunter in nature will have his day.

Morning In A Hospital Ward (A Patient Speaks)

Fetches of frizzled clouds blotch the sky.

Through the open window, a modena dawn

Bursts like a wound spreading its red dye

Upon crumpled linen, used pledget, lint,

 As the man with bronchial asthma dies in sleep,

The orderly covers his face, adjusts the screen.

The morning sunlight changes to a monotint.

Unlike a demotic Hindi film

Where the hero never fades from the scene

Without recompense from pain

Without a grand apotheosis

Patients in this hospital

Usually expire in silence thus, worse

Unattended by the nurse.

Sleep is not easy here

Where we always feel

Symptoms of a neighbour’s illness

In the stammel fold of blankets,

And fears like shadows fuss

Between our ruffled sheets.

A single death in the ward

Is a death of all of us.

The Cancer Patient

Standing alone

Like a tree in winter

Leaf-stripped, his arms

Skinny as snarled branches,

Body, a decrepit bole.

He spent

Excruciating days

Under the chemo rays.

Now walks and walks

A single cloud

Somnambulant

Beneath the stars.

The Arthritic

You can’t imagine what my plight is

Since being plagued with arthritis.

All my knuckles and knee-joints rattle

Like machine guns overused in battle.

Round the year I’m troubled, but winter,

Is by far my worst tormentor,

Reducing me to a paraplegic,

Then I can hardly walk with a stick.

Am at that senescent stage

Where medicine plays second fiddle to age.

Candidly, the doc let out,

‘You must learn to live with gout.’

Stitches On A Child

Bleeding and torn

They bring him in

Amid yells and screams

And suture him

By winding silk and catgut

Into his skin

Twice above the eyebrow

Thrice below the chin

His bawling lasts an hour…

Operation Theatre

Trephines, probes, bistouries

In slots of metal trays. Soiled

Swabs, bowls of enamel. Strong

Tang of antiseptic. The room

Resembles an abattoir. Attendants

Move as spooks around

Carpenter of the human frame who

With scalpel, trocar, saw,

Hacks and chisels – quite routine this

Amputation of a shank, as

Cartilage and gristle scatter

Like splinters and shavings of wood.

The oblivion of nitrous oxide

Permits not a twinge

On the sleeper’s face.

Monologue of A Captain, Shell-Shocked In Kargil War-1999

(Hospital Trauma Centre. Full Moon. Sounds of Music Beyond)

Wrapped in her shawl

Of astrophanous clouds

She draws me

As the spindrift in the sea

Her globed face floats

Like a minim among quavers of stars.

Celestial rout of notes

Mell with the music I hear,

Bars release me from bars

Song-key, time-barred, time-rusted,

Unlock far room of a young year.

Open door, song-key-stirred,

Time-cobwebbed, dusty

Shut window and shut shutter.

Song is a sunbeam

Light night, gloom of the room,

Frightened rat in the holed floor

Memory’s lizard lay

Song-day-sunbeam

Gazed dazed amazed

In a trancing glare.

Guns sound in my memory

Guns boom, blast, boom, boom;

Arms lost, legs lost

Groaning, moaning.

Guns boom, blast.

The tree is trunkless.

Its branches are burnt to cinders,

Its leaves are pulp, fire and ash.

What did you hear, my mind?

What did you see?

I saw drunken gods throwing dice.

One said, ‘That man is mine’.

Another, ‘No, he is mine’.

Then the boom and the blast of the guns;

One said, ‘I shall be the vulture

Feeding on his carrion’.

Another, ‘I shall be the dog

Feeding on his bones’.

Another I shall swallow him whole

And savour the sirloins of his soul.

They say at full Moon

Like a corpse from a grave,

The hypodermic will rise

By itself from the autoclave,

Pierce a hole in my head

And if I shriek

They will tie me down to my bed.

Lab Nurse

She comes with little vials

And a syringe wrapped in surgical cotton

‘What are these for?’ He asks.

‘To take samples of your blood

TLC, DLC, ESR’…. ‘God knows what!

He hardly understands her mumbo-jumbo

She will prick his arm below the elbow

Again and again, probe his arteries but not

Find a vein…. ‘Ouch’! He can scarcely hold his scream

‘One last jab’. There! And she brings out

The beet-red sap, emptying it into vials,

One by one, beaming as she leaves.

He only sees a vampire in her face.

A Pathologist’s View

III-health to some is a way of feeling important,

They are never at ease unless cut open.

Fractured limb, malfunctioning ventricles,

Tumour in the brain,

An MRI, ECG, Catscan

Can expose you completely on a plate. Almost

Every secret is known

About your tendon

Ligament, cell, tissue and bone.

Even a routine count

Of pressure and pulse can reveal your state. So

We welcome patients, who think they are ill,

Who always want a medical opinion

About every boil or bunion –

The hypochondriac foots the fattest bill.

ICU Attendant Speaks of A Patient On DI List

His near and dear they are not here

It is we who have been more close

In sleep he came, in sleep he goes.

We were the ones to withhold his drip

Or switch off the ventilator.

We were the ones to stop his blip

And send him to his Creator.

He arrived here in such a mess

We couldn’t stop a lizard climb his nose

Or a rat biting off one of his toes.

This is the resort of the last distress

Sooner or later

We all meet the Creator

Does it matter, then, if one toe is less?

  1. A young lieutenant who led an operation in Handwara in J&K in which two militants were killed, had his toe bitten off by rats at the Army Base Hospital in the Capital on Saturday. – Indian Express 22 October, 2012
  2. A 70-year old comatose patient on ventilator was bitten by rats at intensive care unit (ICU) of Mathura Das Mathur Hospital in Jodhpur. – Indian Express 12 January, 2012

The Diabetic

He is not on his bed

His blood-sugar level has risen steeply

Food won’t travel down his gullet despite

Shots of insulin before each meal.

A concatenation of hiccups

Denies him sleep. An ulcer

Festers on the big toe of his right foot,

Its shooting pain makes him

Snivel and wince. ‘It’s not

Gangrene, I hope,’ he says,

 ‘Else they will lop off my toe’!

‘If you are old’, he tells me,

‘And have a choice of disease, die

Of any other ailment but diabetes.

Out-Patient Department

An aged sikh has bouts of endless cough,

A patient wheels past in a chair,

Ankles in plaster, another carefully

Hobbles on crutches, afraid to slip

On the slick corridor, miasmic with odours.

An old woman holds her head between her hands

And wanting to vomit, retches, retches. Urobag

Sideways slung, an elder snails away with a catheter,

A girl with a polio-leg leans, half-hidden at the gate,

She is waiting, perhaps, for some boy to meet her.

A Tale of An AIDS Patient

‘Once’, the doc said, ‘we had admitted

An AIDS patient here – whom we treated

For months. Nothing worked, so he fled

Leaving a note. “If I have to be dead

Let it be elsewhere”.

A year later, he returned

Bereft of the ailment. We were stunned’.

‘I went to die in the mountains’, he said

But chanced upon a Swami, who learning my plight

Taught me yoga and sacred hymns to recite.

Within ten months or so, I became all right’.

Then one day he spoke, solemnly raising his head,

‘Healing is no complex science, my son,

But the intuitive art of wooing nature,

You were cured because you were willing to be one.

Man, indeed, is such a foolish creature.

* On Astha channel, a man who had once shown AIDS symptoms, confessed before an audience of Swami Ramdev, how he got rid ofthem, inspired by his teachings