English, asked by maidangshriswargiary, 8 months ago

how is the native land in the poetry?​

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Answered by PriyanshuDAV
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Archive > Countries > India > Robin Ngangom > NATIVE LAND

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© 2008, Robin S. Ngangom

NATIVE LAND

First came the scream of the dying

in a bad dream, then the radio report,

and a newspaper: six shot dead, twenty-five

houses razed, sixteen beheaded with hands tied

behind their backs inside a church . . .

As the days crumbled, and the victors

and their victims grew in number,

I hardened inside my thickening hide,

until I lost my tenuous humanity.

I ceased thinking

of abandoned children inside blazing huts

still waiting for their parents.

If they remembered their grandmother’s tales

of many winter hearths at the hour

of sleeping death, I didn’t want to know,

if they ever learnt the magic of letters.

And the women heavy with seed,

their soft bodies mown down

like grain stalk during their lyric harvests;

if they wore wildflowers in their hair

while they waited for their men,

I didn’t care anymore.

I burnt my truth with them,

and buried uneasy manhood with them.

I did mutter, on some far-off day:

“There are limits”, but when the days

absolved the butchers, I continue to live

as if nothing happened.

© Translation: 2006, Robin S. Ngangom

From: The Desire of Roots

Publisher: Chandrabhaga, Cuttack, 2006

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