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    Enchantress Lanka

    Page 2
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      MONSOON HAPPENS

      Drip drip drip…

      Water seeps in

      Trickles down

      Leaks back out

      Drip drip drip…

      Water leaps in

      Creeps through

      Drops further down

      Drip drip drip…

      From one second to the other

      The clouds’ jaws open in unison

      And the sky vomits rain

      There’s a hole in the sky bucket

      And the result is heavy rain

      The heavenly shower was turned on

      And you’re washed by rain

      Monsoon happens

      From one second to the other

      Drip drip drip…

      Water rushes in

      Pools around you

      Is wiped back out

      Drip drip drip…

      Water gushes in

      Soaks everything

      Escapes back out

      Drip drip drip…

      From one second to the other

      The sky starts to weep uncontrollably

      And we mourn the rain

      The clouds all sob continuously

      And the sun turns to rain

      The storm joins in on the crying session

      And wind thrashes the rain

      Monsoon happens

      From one second to the other

      Drip drip drip…

      Water sloshes in

      Drenches everything

      Dribbles further down

      Drip drip drip…

      Water splashes in

      Bathes everybody

      Flows back out

      Drip drip drip…

      From one second to the other

      Holes in roof and ceiling are discovered

      When they let in the rain

      Tarpaulins are drawn over three-wheelers

      But don’t keep out the rain

      Umbrellas are opened, sarees are lifted

      No help at all against the rain

      Monsoon happens

      From one second to the other

      Drip drip drip…

      IN THE AFTERNOON

      Lying spread-eagled flat on your back

      On a scratchy coconut-fibre-mattress bed

      Naked but for a film of afternoon sweat

      Desperate to catch some of the wafting air

      Which the ceiling fan releases only fitfully

      Rotating squeakily in the overall dampness

      Beads of perspiration adorn you like jewels

      A treacle-like trickle over slippery skin

      A single drop crawling over cheek and chin

      Dripping slowly down into our cleavage

      Like the moist tongue-tip of a tender lover

      Idly your mind wanders and then wonders

      Whether to have the third shower of the day

      But getting up is too much of an effort

      When the afternoon heat invites sluggishness

      You catch a sweat pearl with your tongue

      Taste saltiness and think of the vast ocean

      Longing for a soothing sea breeze to build up

      To make the half dried-up palm fronds

      Click and rasp against slender coconut trunks

      To bring with it the typical afternoon smells

      Of sweet frangipani flowers and arid earth

      To flutter the curtains and enter the room

      By squeezing past the iron window grills

      To do what the languid fan can’t anymore

      And rip into the fabric of sultry inside air

      To scatter the heat and ruffle your hair

      Creating a delicious illusion of coolness

      By refreshing you in your half slumber

      But no, you’re too far from the sea here

      To profit from its blissful tangy breeze

      So there’s no escaping the afternoon heat

      Even life outside seems to be inert now

      Leaves drooping listlessly from dry stems

      Crows screeching in protest up at the sky

      Infinitely blue and mercilessly cloudless

      No ever-curious squirrels scurry about

      In search of fruit and rice grains offered

      The mangy stray dogs all lull in the shade

      Without their usual barking symphony

      And the streets are devoid of any humans

      Lucky those in air-conditioned offices

      And lazy tourists lounging by the poolside

      Sipping ice-cold bitter-sweet lime juice

      Unlucky those trapped in oven-like houses

      With non-insulated baked-tiles roofs

      Languishing on bed sheets soaked in sweat

      Clinging to the body like a salty second skin

      You lie there with sticky eye-lids blinking

      And will time to tick forth a little faster

      To skip right from post-lunchtime to the

      Somewhat cooler period of pre-dinnertime

      When dusk and sunset promise less heat

      And the shower becomes a real possibility

      For the scorching sun will eventually retire

      But now you’re still trapped inside heat’s net

      In the afternoon of a tropical island far away

      GOSSIP

      Have you heard, have you heard?

      Bluntly, stumbling over each word

      What-what? Tell me, please tell me!

      Breathless, bending forward eagerly

      You won’t believe what I’ve found out!

      Boisterous, in a voice twice as loud

      Hurry, hurry, I can’t wait to hear it.

      Beseechingly, in a real curiosity fit

      Bodies lean close, heads tilt even closer

      Stories unfold, rumour machine’s ferocious

      The malu-man’s fish stinks to heaven

      But gossip’s stench seems even worse

      It reeks of fresh and old blood and the sea

      But the rumour’s smell penetrates it all

      The fisherman’s wife has knit a net of tales

      And a scandalous fish escaped the web

      Isn’t it bad, say, isn’t it terribly bad?

      Boldly, implying the other person’s mad

      Yes-yes, of course, you’re oh-so right!

      Blankly, distracted by a daring sight

      I always knew, told you from the start!

      Belligerently, piercing the confidant’s heart

      We all thought so, it was to be expected.

      Believing, search for truth is neglected

      Tongues click in disgust, brows rise to the sky

      Rumours are working though no-one knows why

      The elavalu-man’s vegetables are wrinkled

      But the well of gossip will never dry up

      He’s tipping the scale in his favour only

      Just like gossipers manipulate as they will

      The vendor’s daughter has sowed vegetables

      And with them has been reaped a tragic tale

      Gossip leaps from tongue to tongue

      Like a hungry stray dog hunting

      Equally immersed in filth

      Gossip creeps from house to house

      Like a greedy fat crow menacing

      Equally egoistic in its nature

      Gossip sprints from person to person

      Like the dangerous dengue disease

      Equally devastating its results

      JOURNEY

      Foot on accelerator – head knocking against roof

      Shake to the left – elbow jamming into door

      Thrust to the right – knee jutting against gear

      Foot on breaks – head crashing into seat

      All neck muscles straining

      All back muscles paining

      Would you consider complaining?

      Bends like jutting elbows

      Rocks like jammed knees

      Narrow hair-pin passages gone astray

      Hair-pin removing jolts on the way

      Passengers openly swearing


      Car and body need repairing

      Would you come close to despairing?

      Pot holes with bits of road in between

      Bumped and dumped into ditches

      Thoroughly shaken and stirred

      Whipped up limbs reassembling

      While the car continues scrambling

      Up a mountain and down a hill

      Two paces forward, one lapse back

      It’s a journey full of aches and pains

      But a reward awaits the daring traveller

      It’s a relief from all ills and burdens

      When the destination is reached at last

      A sigh of contentment, a breath of fresh air

      A sight for sore eyes, a treat for your ears

      When you eventually behold this miracle

      Endless fertile plains – greener than green

      Rolling hills and soaring mountain ranges

      Paddy field terraces – natural symmetry

      Singing birds, mooing cows, a dog or two

      Fruitful labour – hands harvesting crops

      A lonesome hut with a self-fulfilling life

      Oh, how you indeed behold this miracle!

      Gazing up high – birds flying colourfully by

      A glance to the left – a farmer in the fields

      A glimpse to the right – elephants stomp along

      Staring out ahead – a scenery so worthwhile

      You rub your back and you rub your eyes

      What a torture endured, what a view enjoyed

      Would you not embark on this journey again?

      SHARPEN YOUR SENSES

      Hear the crows screeching from the palm-tree top

      Hindi songs blaring from the nearby all-round shop

      Hear the scuttling of curious squirrels in the trees

      The singing of birds and also the humming of bees

      Hear the honking of trishaws, of busses and cars

      Stray dogs barking and howling at moon and stars

      Hear the street vendors selling their products loudly

      Buddhist temple loudspeakers preaching proudly

      Hear the crashing of the waves and the pelting rain

      The terrorist bombs exploding on the evening train

      Sharpen your senses and listen to your country

      See the sun burn down on beggars and mansions alike

      The hungry workers claim the busy streets in a strike

      See the tranquil beauty of a beach scenery down south

      Exotic vegetables and ripe fruits watering the mouth

      See the famished cow lying in the middle of the road

      Sweating soldiers carrying their heavy weapons load

      See the ruins of ancient cultures and their sacred sites

      Four different religions practicing their religious rites

      See rocky mountains, mangroves and luscious planes

      Billowing exhaust fumes next to overflowing drains

      Sharpen your senses and look at your country

      Smell the salt and tang of the once tsunami-bearing sea

      The superiority of those going abroad with a degree

      Smell the fragrance of flowers only blooming at night

      The bloody sweat and crazy ardour of terrorist fight

      Smell camphor in sarees and coconut oil in long hair

      Precious teak and mahogany notes carried in the air

      Smell the reeking of burning garbage on the street

      Exhaust fumes and flies settling on street-sold meat

      Smell incense and oil lamps at a temple and at home

      Perfumes of exotic plants that in this country roam

      Sharpen your senses and smell your country

      Taste the richness of a fruit plucked right from the tree

      Indulge in a myriad of aromas of famous Ceylon tea

      Taste hot curries prepared in clay pots as cookware

      Asian cuisine enjoyed in this neatest tropical flair

      Taste appetizing food with a zillion of ground spices

      Discover your taste buds left to their own devices

      Taste various seafood daily caught in the Indian Ocean

      The bitter-sweetness of an Asian mother’s devotion

      Taste roasted spicy snacks and most delicious sweets

      Truly Asian flavours in anything sold on the streets

      Sharpen your senses and taste your country

      Feel the gentle breeze contrast with the heat-waves

      The sheer horror of witnessing unearthed mass graves

      Feel the leathery skin of richly decorated elephants

      The misery of a thousand poor hard-working peasants

      Feel the sand and the mud beneath your bare soles

      The utter despair in the war victims ravaged souls

      Feel the joy and reverence in religious processions

      The falseness in so many recent political confessions

      Feel the pride to belong to the Sri Lankan Nation

      Longing for a better future of the young generation

      Sharpen your senses and feel your country

      PLEASE, SIR

      Sir, you have money for me?

      A pleading voice falteringly asks

      Begging in one-sentenced English

      Taught by the teenage food vendor

      Who watches her from across the road

      And often needs to use the same plea

      Sir, aney, please, sir?

      An outstretched hand added to the voice

      Dusty calloused bony little fingers

      With mud-caked blood-caked nails

      Attached to an even bonier dark arm

      Belonging to an emaciated child’s body

      With a face hollow, dirty and still so young

      Sir, one rupee, sir?

      The puffy reddish-white face turns to her

      From high up above and so far away

      She starts her litany in Sinhala words

      Rapidly a life story unfolds, incomprehensible

      Of a fate so tragic that it’s never believed

      Sir, my mother died from starvation

      Evoking with truthfully tearful eyes

      A haggard skinny woman in stinky rags

      Who looked more than twice her age

      Who loved her unwanted daughter

      But couldn’t provide for her at all

      Sir, my father died from an accident

      Telling of a weary poor old toddy tapper

      Who fell from the palm tree one day

      Who didn’t love his unwanted daughter

      Beating his useless wife every night

      Because the money was never enough

      Sir, my brother was sent to prison

      Remembering with longing and terror

      The elder boy giving the finishing stroke

      Who started stealing to fill her stomach

      Who never considered her unwanted

      Yet ruined both of their young lives

      Sir, I’m all alone, hungry, thirsty, sick

      Concluding the tragedy depicting her life

      Looking up with big black blank eyes

      Stretching her small hand a little further

      Silently admiring the mysterious tourist

      Her life depending on his doubtful mercy

      Aney, please…

      The little girl is out of words to plead

      And the foreigner out of time to spare

      Impatiently he waves her plight aside

      Another fly to swat away carelessly

      Another nuisance to spoil his holiday

      Sir!

      But he’s already half out of sight now

      Cursing the government hypocritically

      For not eliminating the beggar problem

      Off to his splendidly cool 5-star Hotel room

      Ignoring his guilty conscience stubbornly

      No more desperate words from the girl

      Defeat doesn’t come easily though known

      Maybe she will be luckier next time…

      SRI LANKA


      Silk sarees, wrinkled sarongs, and crisp school uniforms

      Raucous laughter, betel chewing, home-brewed toddy

      Indian movies, Korean daily soaps, and immortal singers

      Luscious paddy fields, sturdy buffaloes, stately elephants

      And let’s not forget the elusive Sri Lankan leopard’s lure

      Neatly swept temple grounds, ramshackle railway-side huts

      Kicking off cricket matches in sweltering heat, pouring rain

      And munching devilishly spicy snacks while discussing politics

      Sizzling seafood, crimson chili, more bananas than imaginable

      Rivers snaking through mountains, waterfalls like hidden gems

      Island-wide celebrations where neighbours offer oily sweets

      Lightning strikes, power outages, nevertheless toothy smiles

      And always a readiness to share what little one may have

      Natural splendour, heritage sites, ruins with stories to tell

      Kings never forgotten, horns never silent in traffic from hell

      Afternoons full of afterthoughts, washed down with black tea

      RAIN SONG

      A distant din, drawing defiantly nearer

      Like a wetly whispered warning roar

      Then the discordant, disrupting drumming of drops

      Hammering on tin roofs and hard-baked earth

      The deluge destroys the calm, uncaring, indiscriminating

      Clamouring, crashing through, courting calamity

      Heaven has unleashed a many-headed beast

      A monster’s saliva greedily dripping down, down

      A hundred hungry tongues, licking, lapping, lashing

      The beast’s hoofs beat the ground, stir up trouble and mud

      Its breath a whooshing wind, whipping trees into new shapes

      Palm fronds bending to its will, glistening green

      As the ravenous rain hurtles down at a rakish angle

      To twist here, to toss there, to splatter everywhere

      Cacophony of monsoon, chaos, cursed blessing

     


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