The Ferryman On The Dal

Ferryman-dal-madras-courier
Representational image: Public domain.
This poem narrates the plight of those who endure turmoil in conflict zones.

The ferryman on the Dal
berates the mercenary wind
for freighting back and forth

the reek of death. His cap of mist
is the colour of exile, his voice a wail
amidst the gunfire pouring across time

from all directions at once.
Beneath the canopy of his shikara,
trembling in the rough hands of cold

even with its floral-print curtains all drawn,
huddle the ghosts of yesteryears,
their names archived only in snow’s foolscap,

their memory a dagger
of ice melting into fire in nerve centres.
He rows past the detritus of twilight

and lovers’ promises of eternity,
lisping a prayer for the Dal
dressed in grief’s ill-fitting gown,

the necklaces of ripples too gaudy
and heavy around her neck as on a bride
jilted on her wedding day. He sticks

his oar into the water’s feverish mouth,
watching with dried eyes
the mercury of chaos shoot up

the blood-tinted column of bigotry.
He carves his own epitaph
on the water’s vast tombstone

as night comes stomping through the grass
with a curfew on dreams.

***

Madras Courier originally ran as a broadsheet with a poetry section. It was a time when readers felt comfortable sharing glimpses of their lives through verse. If you have a poem you’d like to submit, do email us at [email protected].

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