The Garden of Fand


Published by the Writers Workshop, Calcutta in 1973

Contents

LET ME GET WET 2

THE MOUNTAIN PASS 2

WHO WILL STAND 3

SINNERS AND WHERE THEY GO 4

MY WANDAN GIRL 4

GIANT’S CHILD 5

SEASCAPE 5

TODAY THE KING 6

WORDS DO NOT SPEAK 6

BLOW OUT THE CANDLE 6

MONOLOGUE OF AN INDIAN MOTHER 7

LANDSCAPE 7

THE FIRST LOUD WALL IN THE TWILIGHT 8

SONNET 8

REALISATION 8

SONG 9

GATES OF HORN 9

DANCE 10

LAMP-LIGHTER 11

WHEN I REACH 12

RIVERSCAPE 12

DREAMS 13

RUINS 13

LET ME GET WET

Let me get wet

In the fall all day

Be the rain’s bad child and

Rolling stone of my town

Run wild and stark as the flooded drains

Like school-let children and unchained slaves.

Let me get wet

In the fall all night

Be the rain’s glad fool or be

The shivering cold tree with the

Rootpool in the park and the drenched

Branches and leaves dripping to the unquenched dark.

Let me get wet

In the fall always

Be the rain’s sad clown and

Pantomime joy with a gay

Dance of the peacock with his hazy

Blue eyes and ocelli’s fanpice and crazy-crown.

Let me get wet

As the winds in my eye

And as these winds keep singing

In the rain’s high fun

Nor hope for my clouds ever bringing to the sky

Pied parabolas of rainbows set fire to my sun.

THE MOUNTAIN PASS

bands of nomads

inch up the steep

towards its gargoyle-mouth

dragging

herds of stubborn goats

and mules who will not budge

till lashed.

bent-backed, the women

pause midway

burdened with baskets

of geese and children, watch

sloomy-eyed

coveys of listless swifts

dart in and out of arcane

crannies of rock and scarp

kites circle and scream

wind-wafted over the cliff‘s

neck which wears striped

scarves of minatory clouds.

night comes

gradually

as they reach the Pass; then

tired wing

limp hoof

drooping lash

all vanish one by one

in the oral darkness

of its sempiternal yawn.

WHO WILL STAND

Who will stand in the dark rain falling

Be gashed by the knives of cold winds blowing

Be still as the frozen streams of his blood

Feel free as a frog or earthworm crawling

Feel bright though the night be upon him growing

Feel light with both feet stuck in the mud.

Yes, who will be drenched in the dark rain’s shower

Be wet and dripping as the twig leaf blowing

Withstand the wind, withstand the thunder

Be firm as a tree or a strong steel-tower

Be still as the thorny cacti growing

Be low as the blades of grasses under.

Forever, forever is the dark rain falling

Perpetually are my chill winds blowing

Freezing the atrophied streams of my blood

All my days are like earthworms crawling

All my dreams are like twig leaves blowing

Swept away by the perennial flood.

SINNERS AND WHERE THEY GO

they will not wonder when they reach

the telf of hornet and of bat

the zone of torrid, turgid heat.

there vultures do not flap or screech

but perch themselves on lints of fat

and mounds of bones, and maunds of meat.

they dare not tell the sights to each

of fint and folt and what they eat

of common rodents like the rat

and blood-pimps such as vampire, leech

they must expose their legs and feet

to be sucked and stung, and gnawed at.

dead as centaurs on a beach

they as festal food elite

MY WANDAN GIRL

My wandan girl lies homehid now when I need her

Two hands and healing tongs to save my burning self

To pick the auburn coals of my yarring fire and yet

I feel my talanced palms have rivers carved in them.

I, in her search dance with the witch of atal eyes

Learn magic, say abracadabra, keep awake whole nights

As through the unstilled mist and slanted haze of my skies

She showers stars, then vanishes, like the glint in her smiles.

I sing with the sambing wight, viking among girls

And bark in chorus with other sad dogs of the earth

And at the orchestra’s end my siked dawn shows to the

world

A crowd of sick dogs fight one bin of dust.

Now I smile at the new chance-comer nazy and slim

GIANT’S CHILD

The giant’s child plays with mini toys

His monstrous hands are only meant for breaking

The tiny limbs of goggling dolls and gewgaws

(The giant’s child is a giant in the making).

Limp tadpoles lie gasping in his pockets,

Small whelks and minnows with piteous eyes ;

He plucks the filmy irises from their sockets

And treasures them like some school-won prize.

And, speechless in his aviary perch the crowned

Cockatoos and blue budgerigars in a cage

SEASCAPE

Your body

Naked and tall as a cliff

Breasts like crags

I cling to now.

My face

Hard as a carapace

Wedged in the quoin of their cleft

Lips

Razor-sharp brush

Hachures of areolae, kiss

Tips stiff like jags.

I am poised for a fall now

Precariously hung

To this pectoral scarp

Littoral of thighs

Shelving corals of loins

Reefs of calves

I’ll be broken

First among

Then piecemeal swallowed by your tide.

For if they tweet or chirp or make any sound

He chokes their downy throats in a rage.

Crushed flowers lie in the leaves of his book

Stiff butterflies with fractured wings close furled

He views each page with a contented look

The giant’s child owns the whole dead world.

Nondancer, who in her laughter scatters flowers to the

wind

Then leaves me with het nancy goofman and seeing all this

I wonder where my wandan girl lies homehid still.

pander to the maggot’s clat,

rare as milk of python’s teat.

the silence there is loud as speech

the darkness cunning as a cat.

TODAY THE KING

Today the king of dwarfs of rain

Throned on his chair of strokeless five

Clasps two hands in squandered madness

And scatters the winds of clockless time.

Today the adon of road and town

Hogs hotdogs on cobra’s hood

Swallows his pride in poisoned baldness

And keeps his silence till his mouth is full.

Today the lord of lust and bone

Makes loud miles of love himself

Rubs two stone of flaming hardness

And blazes dead fires of his dun hell.

Today the melech of song and pain

Proclaims himself in a polar gale

Freezes to death in the world’s coldness

And where he lies his breath can’t tell.

WORDS DO NOT SPEAK

words do not speak

in the silence of pride

shut lips, clenched teeth

make fierce those eyes.

words do not please

in the speech of pride

hard-lashed, foul-leashed

they watch love dying.

BLOW OUT THE CANDLE

Blow out the candle with the phallus flame

whose melting wax is dripping like semen

piling a heap of sterile waste

like coitus with some atokous woman

in the halo of flame is an angel’s wraith

in the candle’s shadow the shape of a demon.

lean, white and erect the candle burns

consuming the wick of time inch by inch

wind blow it out before it turns

to futile wax, its trivial spark

reveals still vaster emptiness.

o, each dying light brings greater dark

each candle shows our helplessness.

MONOLOGUE OF AN INDIAN MOTHER

Good or bad children must never be denied.

Twisted in shape or deformed from the womb

These beings of flesh are ghosts of my mind.

I place daily

The eldest a dwarf, down from his bed, walk

My cripple on his crutches, teach

Speech to my dumb, to my deaf

Be a lifelong pantomime.

And daily lead my blind into the blinder alleys of this

world.

Hard is the lot of a woman.

She must endure it with patience and pride

Year after year I bear fruit like the earth

I am tired of the agony of labour

I am tired of my children’s birth

Yet being a woman, I must not deny

The call of my man every night.

Now pregnant again I am told

Good or bad children must never be denied.

LANDSCAPE

The folds of your belly

are furrowed

like tumbling fields in a valley

where your navel slopes in

like the hollow of a well.

The ravines of your sex

are burrowed

in the hills of your hips convex

where desire gropes in

like an oyster in a shell.

THE FIRST LOUD WALL IN THE TWILIGHT

the first loud wail in the twilight

and the day seemed darker than night

and I wondered at the shouting and singing

that heralded my day into being

and when the fearful dawn was done

tanned my soul in the eclipsed noon-sun

motioned to the clouds of eve

prophesying me to leave

and while I passed the shadows, homing

through dim lands of pristine gloaming

wondered at the wailing crowd

shut my short day in the shroud.

SONNET

No one should ever know where I my secrets hide

Let all these trees grow private in my park

Unnurtured by the sun, watered in the dark

Sheltered against winds of tongues from every side.

Their boughs by bee nor bird be occupied

No honey hive nor nest of listening lark

Betray their leaves’ whisper 3 their fallen bark

Should light no fires lest they be my secrets’ guide.

And year by year let them be multiplied:

These secluded groves in darkness wholly built

Shy growths in my park harboured permanent

Trees of all my folly, all my shame and guilt;

And when these fall, the world remain ignorant

Some thing in me had ever lived and died.

REALISATION

Shut up in the bronze prison of his horizon

He sees no lands or seas that lie beyond his vision

But only the languid wisps of factory smoke

That steal up the sprawling stairs of the blue

And shuddering wings of cold birds strike his view.

Is there nothing there, he says, and nothing beyond

As he shivers in the cold of a wintry dawn

Jostled by streams of traffic which evoke

One recurring thought “Are they all oblivious

That each road leads to the same hiatus.”

Perhaps they know but pretend to be unaware

Of the great hiatus in the dead’s hemisphere

(Each keeping a clock but stifling its stroke)

Immersed in the chiaroscuro of their tide

They have mastered the art of being preoccupied.

SONG

Let the laped sam split

Poled sides with laughs

From his lame pelled wit

Open mouth exhibit

Bare teeth like giraffe’s.

Let the biped pam sit

On his grave’s paraphs

Have a tearfilled pit

Have a pale dole writ

On its cold epitaphs.

Let my lean nam flit

On pam’s cenotaphs

Beat death’s ghost in it

Greet sam lost in wit

Draw new life’s graphs.

GATES OF HORN

Grief of my life there’s no room for you.

In the billion bels and frantic phons of sound

You will die in the deafening din of this mad town

Nor find one vacant grave or dumb tomb for you.

No, nomad grief there is no home for you

No open door in this city’s vast bounds

‘Where two blood-hounds snarl at the gates of horn

And ten armed men spell the doom for you.

My beggar grief, keep your sandglass by the side

There is no place to hide, no place to run

Each foot is lit by million lumens of the sun

Each fiend watches from his window wide-eyed

Ten armed men take their firing stance with the gun

And two bloodhounds tear every pound of your hide.

DANCE

Room green darry

Gondolas on the sill

Wide river road

Gliding waterless

Leaping little deer

Lasses love-silly

Room green darry

Elbow tall fan

Lamp blue reed

Sharp steel knife

Dashlight on door

That is not enough.

Gondolas on the sill

Bough bird’s shield

Dazzled above else

Boats wind-lashed

Below neem, sal

Clumps all shady.

Wide river road

And shoe ash-trays

Frozen floors dare

Boatmen at oars

Laughing lads raid

Love under trees.

Gliding waterless

Swans on the wall

Sailing the palace

Built on grieved love

The river’s wet soul

Was a king’s regal will.

Leaping little deer

Toys and teapoys

Peacocks from arid

Place in pose too

Parrots very dear

Perfect at poise.

Lasses love-silly

Trim-slim-saried

Bangled, blouseless

Nothing is sadder

To see song sell

When love is a dross.

Room green darry

Gondolas on the sill

Wide river road

Gliding waterless

Leaping little deer

Lasses love-silly.

NOTEs ON “‘DANCE’

Interpretation

The poem sets out to recreate the movement of six dancers. Each line of the opening stanza (in which they all appear collectively) represents one dancer. In the subsequent stanzas, they fall out one by one and enact their performance individually. Thus the second stanza represent the movement of the first dancer, the third that of the second dancer, the fourth that of the third and so on. In the last stanza they all regroup and reunite and form the same pattern of movement as in the opening stanza.

Prosody

  1. All lines have 3 stresses for scansion. The number of slacks may vary.
  2. In each stanza, end words of alternate lines are all reverse consonantal rhymes. For example in the first stanza, the end word of the first line is “darry” made up of consonants “d” and “r” which are reversed in “road” the end word of the third line. The same is true of the end words of even lines (sill, less, silly).
  3. A similar scheme is followed in the remaining stanzas.

LAMP-LIGHTER

lamp-lighter lamp-lighter please come now

there is someone walking my blind night hark

to the sounds of harpies calling in the dark

to the cloven foot-falling by the demon’s bough.

i sit here crippled, mouth dumb, eye blind

to the time strangled day and the heart beating drums

quick, light the wick, lamplighter in my mind

ere the claws clutch throat and the cloven foot comes,

WHEN I REACH

When I reach the end of desire

Frozen snows at the pales of silence

My breath’s revival past sun’s fire

Then I know will Death make sense

And truth like a mine explode in my face

And hurl me far beyond the fence.

Now suspended I lie in space

Between these stars and the earth’s night

Plotting serenely my meteor’s trace

Among tiers of darkness in the vacant height

‘Waiting for the world to be set ablaze

For a moment at least in its sinking flight.

RIVERSCAPE

In the san river

The calder rings of daking fill the daver, fly past

The cold sunstones, the neeking dalers

Over the spangled mounds of croted shingle

Then lean like lolts listening to palavers

Of cloming shelts teafed in dark dingles

And on the bank’s teal where the river turns

Tilers dart and shoot like shafts of brilliant steel

Out of the rolling flanges of liquid wheels

And lumens of spuming light, split

Scatter, break, fall asunder

Among the tansy stones.

Later when the light changes

In the kaleidoscopic talc of the skies

The river’s wavering mirrors break into laming prisms

And far beyond

The ploming tides are limned with chimeras.

NOTE ON ‘‘RIVERSCAPE”

The poem is an effort to describe in minute detail the river Brahamaputra as it flows at Neamati Ghat- 9 miles from Jorhat. This visual experience for me seemed to correspond closely to hearing of some profound musical composition. In trying to recapture its symphonic flow, therefore, I had to resort to neology. Thus the poem contains many words which will not be found in the dictionary.

DREAMS

i, too, had shelves in my room

(part of an old house which had

windows with glass-panes broken

crumbling walls

and cracks in the ceiling)

stacked with reams of dreams

until a swarm of rats descended

and gnawed them out of shape

now nothing is left;

for, even that heap of bitten scrap

is blown away by the blast of years.

RUINS

a swarm of bees

hangs round my honey-spent hive

bees who neither build nor seek

but only hover

and hum there incessantly

and never leave its hollows.

and never long any more

for nectar cups of flowers

nor care for coming springs

but like phantoms hover

within heart’s gaping hollows

— drones of shattered dreams.