Poetry Is For Those Who Wouldn'T Read It Poem by Nilmani Phookan

Poetry Is For Those Who Wouldn'T Read It



A poet had stated
poetry is for those who wouldn't read it
for the wounds in their hearts
for their fingers where thorns are embedded
for the anguish and the joy
of the living and the dead
for the outcry that trundles
down the road day and night
for the desert sun
for the meaning of death
and the vacuity of living
for the dark stones cursed by ruins
for the red patch between the lusty lips of maidens
for the yellow butterflies with wings spread on barbed wires
for the insects, the snails and the moss
for the bird flying lonely down the afternoon sky
for the anxiety in fire and water
for the mothers of five hundred million sick and starving children
for the fear of the moon turning red as blood
for each stilled moment
for the world that keeps turning
for one kiss from you
that man of dust will become dust again,
for that old saying.

POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
[From: Sagartalir Sankha (Selected Poems edited by Hiren Gohain) : Publisher: Lawyers' Book Stall, Guwahati, 1994]
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Bijay Kant Dubey 27 October 2018

Really, an extraordinary poem. Here the poet tells it about what poetry is, how does it come to, the origin and birth of it and who the readers of it?

0 0 Reply
READ THIS POEM IN OTHER LANGUAGES
Nilmani Phookan

Nilmani Phookan

Dergaon, Golaghat, Assam / India
Close
Error Success