Literature

Poetry: Time, the Slave Driver

Born to earth they too are

Slaves of this slave

Which dances to the tunes of Angels,

Though makes us humans helpless.

Jernail S. Anand, an eminent poet from India, shares his poetry

Jernail-Singh-Sindh CourierDr. Jernail Singh Anand, based in Chandigarh, is an Indian poet and scholar credited with 170 plus books of English literature, philosophy and spirituality. He won great Serbian Award Charter of Morava and his name adorns the Poets’ Rock in Serbia. He was honored with Seneca Award LAUDIS CHARTA by Academy of Arts & Philosophical Sciences, Bari, Italy 2024. He is Founder President of the International Academy of Ethics and conferred Doctor of Philosophy (Honoris Causa) by University of Engineering & Management, (UEM) Jaipur. Email anandjs55@yahoo.com 

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Time, the Slave Driver 

Who can forget time’s tantrums

How it shapes

And then dis-shapes

It plays truant with wisdom

When passions run high

And when the flood has spent

Circles its tail

And settles in a doggy trance.

 

What rattles me is

The dual processing of time

How it gives youth its glow

And then quenches

The glimmer blow by blow

A proud mover yet

A slave to the divine scheme

Cannot sidestep its own flow

 

You can see how helpless it is

Though looks very powerful

It cannot stop for anyone

It cannot take a step backward

Nor can it go fast forward

Does it exist for the sun

Winds and the earth?

 

It affects only the things

Created on the earth

A tree has a life, so does a flower

So is the case with men,

Born to earth they too are

Slaves of this slave

Which dances to the tunes of Angels,

Though makes us humans helpless.

***

Supermen

Killing a person is a murder

But killing people

In the name of war

Is a justified act.

 

A man after his death

Received the shock

Of his life

When the earth refused to open

 

He was taken to cremation ground

Where the wooden logs

Revolted

And fire refused to burn

 

They took him to a river

The water stood up

Like a god

And said…take away this rot.

 

At last they took him

Atop a mountain

And left his body

No birds came to feast on him

 

Soon winds lost their patience

And refused to fight

With primal stench

I am nobody’s slave the sun declared.

 

They went to Delphi

To know

Why nature had turned

Against this man.

 

Is ambition a wrong passion?

What if he killed people

Don’t they die!

In famines?

 

He saw a note

In an Angel’s hand

Thus the text ran,

Are you sure he is a man?

________________

 Read: Pizza Times – Poetry from India

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