21 October 2010
It was dark but
crowded at Thampanoor. People scurrying to and from the Bus stand and the
railway station did not notice the man lying on the pavement, among a few used
cartons.
The man lay there
watching his soul preparing to leave him, but could not muster enough strength
to prevent it. The inebriants he had consumed that evening revolted with his
innards and managed to escape through his mouth, though only partially. A faint
stench of yellow vomit pervaded everywhere.
His face and hands had
wounds, seemingly endured from a minor road accident. Blood had not yet
clotted; the man unwittingly spread it while wiping his face. He thought about
the Asan Prize award ceremony in Chennai in two days and could not decide on
which poem to recite there. May be he would recite his latest work which he had
started that day on a piece of paper now kept inside the folds of his shirt
sleeves. He could see the arrow that would pierce his soul and, in pain, he
closed his eyes.
Soon passers-by
crowded around the weary man, who watched them, with closed eyes and
unconscious mind, lifting him up and
placing in a cab that sped towards the General Hospital. The muddy old man with
unkempt hair lay patiently on the hospital bed till the Doctor arrived to
pronounce him dead. The people who brought the man to the hospital started to disperse
leaving the medical staff to complete their duties. The dead man was not in a
hurry. He was waiting for his dead friends with a calmness not ever seen while
he was alive, not even thinking about his daughter Meena and Mariam Beevi, the
unfortunate woman who carried his daughter in her womb for 9 months.
A sunny morning in the year 1971
The young man was
waiting for his girl, wearing a smile which concealed the agonies of a troubled
childhood; despite that, anxieties of a first love showed on his face. His mind
was searching for the precise words for opening a conversation which he hoped
would kick off a relationship lasting a life time.
The girl slowly walked
towards him, carefully trudging on the fallen leaves on the campus of
University College; she was nervous. With a half smile, she sat beside the
youth to hear him singing, “Oh autumn, my beloved…” The baritone voice of the
singer reverberated through the sleepy leaves of the elderly trees that
canopied the lovers.
As the young man
finished singing and drew a breath, the girl leaned over to him and planted a kiss on his cheeks.
30 May 1987
They were quarelling
on the street, as usual, two shabby men. One of them, a noted film maker, in
his customary rags, was talking about his forthcoming works which drew scant
attention from the other, a man in his late thirties. He made fun of the film
maker who rarely delivered on his promise which angered the director even more.
Knowing he would not receive a listening ear, the film maker started to leave,
with a promise that he would return, a promise he would never fulfill. He took
a loan of Rs 100 from his mate to cover the expenses of his evening drinks and
walked away to a building under construction where he, a few hours later, would
fly down from the parapet, like a dove, towards his destiny. Enduring the
negigence of the hospital staff all through the night who failed to recognise
him, John Abraham died a pauper’s death a day later.
The man in the
thirties would imitate his friend 23 years later.
A dark evening in 1950
A group of men brought
Arumugham Achari home.
Muthammal, his wife, carrying
a little boy, watched them with a dead face. A girl held on to the woman’s
hand, rather perplexed at what was going on. The men carefully placed Arumugham
on the verandah.
It was drizzling; the thin
threads of rain enveloped the house and the courtyard. As she watched the inert
face of the gold smith, Muthammal’s mind was wet, too. A murder and a suicide
and the incidents in between rained misery on her mind. Unable to bear the
onslaught of the excruciating thoughts, she hugged the little boy closer; the
boy had already gone sleeping by then.
A humid day in 2007
The poet was unusually
silent during the journey. He was feeling uncomfortable in the peaceful cool
interiors of a luxury car and missed the humid turbulence of the pavements. He
answered the questions of his companion in monosyllables or in a few words at
the most. He wanted the vehicle to arrive at the destination fast where his
mind had already reached.
Wind started to blow
as the poet and the interviewer sat in the courtyard waiting for Jenny and
Sathyan to appear. The poet’s face lit up when he saw his love emerged from the
house along with her husband. He became animated seeing his chokki.
The interviewer’s
questions were mainly directed at Jenny and occassionally at Sathyan. All
through the meeting, the poet regularly bothered jenny with his antics and
cracked miserable jokes to no one’s laughter. He was noticeably elated to be with
his love and laughed when Sathyan narrated the hardships during the shooting of
a documentary on the poet and how Jenny banished him and the poet from the
house. Though the poet was visibly active, his soul was elsewhere.
The poet was living
his poems with Jenny in his dreams.
October 27, 1949
Arumugham Achari
waited impatiently.
Muthammal was in labour.
He prayed for her health and he prayed for a son; his first born had been a girl. As
bad thoughts started clouding the nervous gold smith’s mind, he heard the cries
of a baby and smiled.
Ayyappan Acahari was commencing his torturous journey which would last 61 agonising years.
A. Ayyappan
October 27, 1949 - October 21,
2010
3 comments:
Good One - I know the Thampanoor incident , don't remember the person -
In toto I thought it was abstract which could be intentional.
You use a lot of metaphors - which is a little Shakespearian. But I feel it affects fluidity.
The Ernax History rolls on. Its lovely to read , but didn't know that u cant smell flowers now.
The great man in the street with extra ordinary visions and passions.
Post a Comment