English, asked by vrbestie, 6 months ago

summary of a trek through the himalayas. long with details. ​

Answers

Answered by 17501
1

The journey lasts for days and days.

We trek up valley, hill and slope

We carry with ourselves the hope

To traverse strange, untrodden ways.

We enter now a world of clouds.

Along the way we hear the call

Of mountain wind and waterfall.

The pallid mist is spreading shrouds.

At last we reach the final peak.

The summit beckons us to come

The air is cold, our feet are numb.

We climb to reach the grail we seek.

The path is steep and narrow there.

It snakes its way—these stairs of stone

Now mark the route we make our own.

The sunshine gilds the lucid air.

The peak is stark with gelid snow.

We look where sky and earth have merged,

From high above. Our souls are purged.

Forgotten lies the world below.

Returning

These, my days,

have stopped where I myself had stood

just a while ago.

Thus far and no further, they say—

we won’t go any more on foot.

I see them sitting by the river’s edge,

swishing vague feet

in the muddy silence of its water.

I sigh, and start once again.

My body trundles along wearily,

creaking and swaying

under its new, unfamiliar load.

My days, piled upon each other

as though on a bullock-cart,

jostling for space on my back.

Only my feet seem to know

where this rutted track is taking us.

I watch them walk on and on,

till they blur into the spokes

of my uncaring wheels.

The trees and bushes by the road

are overhung with wild creepers

matted and ashen into an ascetic’s unkempt hairs

by the murky light of this my evening.

Underfoot, the dried mud and slush

hardly conceal the stones and boulders

and make for a bumpy ride.

The black basalt shoulders of my road

have their skins stretched

across fleshless old bones.

From the leaves overhead,

clustered spaces of sky

count its ribs with the scraps of light

they sometimes let through.

Countless carts have returned this way,

stripping it of all its clods.

The knobbed tufts of grass

make up the only backbone

that has been spared by the ruts.

My axle wobbles on,

following the spoor of this green spine

into the beckoning darkness.

 

The Invisible River

In summer, the Phalgu

vanishes under the sand

near the temple town of Gaya.

As a tourist there in May

(India’s cruelest month),

with an empty water-bottle

and a parched throat,

I was at the end

of my trek

and my tether.

I scooped out four or five

handfuls of dust,

and there it was:

water clear as memory

under the smoldering sun

and delicious to the lips.

There is a legend

that the recalcitrant river

was cursed by Sita,

immortal queen of Ayodhya,

to flow beneath

the ground under her feet.

Or so says Valmiki

in the Ramayana.

Perhaps mythopoeic bards can divine

the sources of invisible rivers

without dowsing rods,

without the solipsistic necessity

of heat and thirst.

 

The Soul's Wilderness

1

An alpine peak

with its diadem of snow,

and a solitary mountaineer

abseils down the slope

leaning against the cloud-marbled sky.

2

The parajumper’s

heart in his mouth,

on the brink of surrender.

Earth’s turntable

rotates its mosaic of

trees farms fields houses

green yellow brown white

a landscape corrugated

with canals and streams

till his feet, turning—

a record needle

pointing in vertiginous axis.

3

A shark’s toothy smile.

The sharp sting

of an electric ray

shimmers in its whiplash.

An octopus stretches out

eight handshakes.

The diver descends,

his eye’s luster

seeking that of a pearl’s—

underwater, the loneliness

of scouring the sea-bed

for death to yield

its meager treasures.

4

Screeching tires scatter

a bouquet of sparks

Wind-roar

in the ears,

or blood:

pebble on a slingshot,

the tight arc

on the circumference

of the arena.

The motocross driver’s

essential aloneness

with only acceleration

and adrenaline

for company.

5

Machete in hand,

the poet makes

slow weary progress

through the foliage

and treacherous undergrowth.

Following the spoor

of words,

to where it leads on:lair of wolf tiger lion

all alone with the darkness

of the midnight hunt.

Of Poets and Potters

The wheel begins to move

under your hands.

Slowly at first, then it picks up speed.

Now your thoughts are only lumps of earth,

but water gives you ceramic

when poured and blunged.

The spinning rhythm of the disc

draws you into its orbit, and molds

a gyral form all about its emptiness.

Your fingers are words, and pattern themselves

on concentric curves and enjambed spaces

which, whirling, benumb your careful eye.

A shape, emerging, as imagery gathers

volume and heft in centripetal spin;

its fictile texture hardens with trope.

You have made nothing happen:

with this clay of language which your fingers knead,

you are shaping an essence of life, of being

as its vortex drags you into its madness . . .

Suddenly, it’s finished. Complete. You lift it up:

in your hands, the vessel is whole. And real.

Its surface is glazed, its colors are in place,

its edges male-hard, its contours lissome.

And each word sparkles

with a joy so beyond all other joys.

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