Wild Elephants Poem by FABIYAS M V

Wild Elephants



Elephant caparisons none,
their enormous bodies cast black shadows.

Trunks stretch out
to pulling and plucking pleasures.

A grizzled tusker thrusts
its tusks into the mud wall of a rural shrine;

devotees drop
vacuous chants, vamoose.

People are in panic,
dash along dissimilar byways.

A young terrorist is trapped
in the tangle of mammoth legs, and trampled;

not brain, but some cruel seeds
with Afghan patent lie scattered around his skull.

An old
bulwark is bulldozed.

A coconut leaf
is flung at electric wires; fear sparks.

The herd of havoc
uproot a banana farmer's dream's corms.

They
forage in the toxic farms.

A rusted pesticide sprayer
is flattened under the gigantic foot.

Trumpet
splinters sleep.

*Kumkis and crackers
drive the elephants away.

They will come back,
for villages grow into woods.

Inhabitants rise
as they lose habitats.

*Kumkis are used for capturing, calming and herding wild elephants or to lead wild elephants away in conflict situations.

First published in The Literary Hatchet

Monday, April 22, 2019
Topic(s) of this poem: animal
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