Sunday, January 8, 2023

Part 2: Whisper in December By M.A. Rathore

Part 2: Whisper in December

By M.A. Rathore


(1)
icy storm-
a silent ghost comes to
hover the rooftops

(2)
a snow drifted land-
I can only see the bright eyes
of the white kitten

(3)
December sunrise-
the bathroom geyser chocks down
with ice

(4)
December sun set-
the cricket forgets to sing
the lyrics of love

(5)
December hailstorm-
Grandma asks for more blankets
and a cup of tea

(6)
chilled December-
she asks for a skin care cream
to protect her body

(7)
stormy December-
her white lips require
a lip guard

(8)
snowy winter-
a kitten tries to sit
beside the heater

(9)
snowy winds-
my mother peels the skin of
a sweet potato

(10)
December sunshine-
she spreads clothes and makes
stand her baby outside

(11)
holiday season-
my father suggests me to
cover the syllabus

(12)
December closing-
a tailor bird makes a nest
before the sunset

(13)
heavy snowfall-
a woodpecker forbids to
fallout from its nest

(14)
Winter drizzle-
am just enjoying my days
with a paper boat

(15)
dense fog-
a snail mistakes
the lane

(16)
foggy morning-
my mother carries me to
shower

(17)
Winter sets in-
she reminds me of weekend
in her close company

(18)
icy city-
she gathers flour
while kneading

(19)
after snowfall-
the sun breaths
in the open

(20)
sad demise-
the son finds no alternate
of mother

(21)
A heavy loss-
destiny closes the
calendar

(22)
a heavy loss-
the calendar closes
at the end

(23)
winter snow-
the cook coughs outside
the kitchen

(24)
winter twilight-
Grandma keeps close
her specs

(25)
Winter night-
snow falls slowly,
slowly…

(26)
December ends
with success and sadness-
memories influx

(27)
December 31-
a bride bids farewell to attend
her new abode

(28)
heavy snowfall-
Christmas tree bears no stars
for decoration

(29)
dense fog-
a snail reaches
nowhere
                                                                                                            Copyrighted 2023
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AN INTERVIEW WITH THE POET M.A. RATHORE By Bipul Kalita

 

AN INTERVIEW WITH THE POET M.A. RATHORE

By Bipul Kalita

[With Team Writers’ Mirror, Assam]

Good morning dear Sir. Please respond to the following questions specially designed for HAPPY SATURDAY WITH AN EMINENT POET, a weekly interview program organized by WRITERS' MIRROR, ASSAM, INDIA. Questions for Happy Saturday with an Eminent Poet.

Q1. Good morning dear Sir. I'm happy to have you as our guest of honor today. You are already a popular poet of international repute. Our adorable readers will be happy if you say in brief about yourself.

Rathore- Very good morning all of you, my dear friends and followers! It’s my pleasure to have a talk with you here in this portal. I congratulate all the members of WITERES’ MIRROR, ASSAM. Let me introduce myself first. My name is M.A. Rathore. I come from Rajasthan which is the land of sands, saints, and warriors. Professionally I am a teacher at Mahatma Gandhi Government (English Medium) School at Kohla in Hanumangarh. I am the author of more than half of dozen books including Pathless Woods, Pearls of Repose, The Voice of Silence, The Essence of Life, Worlds Fail When Silence Speaks, and The Voice of Humanity. I have been awarded many national and international awards including World Icon of Peace, felicitated by the World Institute for Peace, Nigeria in 2017, Enchanting Muse Award 2017, Hyderabad, ‘Kalam ka Sipahi’ Samman 2017, The Best Poet of World by WUP Cultural Form, Germany, Poetography International Contest Winner 2016, The Best Poet of the Week by so many Facebook Groups. My poems have been published in many national and international anthologies and magazines, including some of the online portals viz. atunispoetry.com and Writers’ café.

Q 2. Why do you write?

Rathore- As a poet, what inspires me to write poetry is only to search out the potentiality in man and the question of redemption of man’s soul. Poetry has a closer voice to reach the depth of the hearts of the readers.

Q 3. Who/What inspired you to be a poet?

Rathore- My poems are the notes of Vedanta philosophy which I can understand while reading Indian and Western Philosophy. Especially Osho inspires me. I am an avid reader. What I read, I write with the thought. Each of my poems is the product of the blend of thoughts and emotions together.

Q 4. How would you like to define poetry?

Rathore- Poetry cannot be described well. It is felt and smelt when something eatable is put side by side and we are unaware of the thing where it is. For me, poetry is the discovery of man’s soul which is closer to the heart than the use of intellect as we often do in writing a piece of prose. It is also the music of pangs of heart. I often find myself hopeless to make people understand life which results ultimately in the form of poetry.

Q 5. Who are the Classical, Romantic, and contemporary poets that you like the most?

Rathore- My first interview was with Shakespeare, Milton, and Donne. Keats and Shelley impress me. Wordsworth paves my way to think about nature and the general themes of my poetry. In the contemporary poets, I use to read Dr. Jernail Singh Anand’s poetry.

Q 6. What do you prefer- rhymes or free verse?

Rathore- When I started to write poetry I used to try to rhyme. Two of the books which I wrote at the beginning of my career as a poet were written in rhyming form entitled The Winged Seeds and Divine Love which was inspired by John Donne. Later I learned to write haiku from Jen Walls, Minnesota, and Caroline Cecile, California, USA. Both the poet's friends and mentors inspired and taught me how to write haiku poetry which resulted in my haiku poetry book entitled Drizzling Dales. These books are still to be published.

Time changes with the band of the striking notes. I came across the poetry of Dr. Jernail Singh Anand and became his friend on Facebook. This friendship got a name and fame also. In my college days when I started to write English poetry Professor L. K. Sharma, sir inspired me to write poetry in free verse but I was a budding poet at that time and was suffering from the basic knowledge of the English language, Later this inspiration got a shape in the hands of Dr. Jernail Singh Anand. He always inspires me to write in free verse with a particular thought. Most of my books are written in free verse. Rhyming poetry bars the running thoughts which otherwise throughout the free verse.

Q 7. How does Facebook poetry differ from the others?

Rathore- A great deal of people uses social media especially Facebook these days. Facebook poetry gives way to instant recognition and there are so many friends like Dr. Anand who inspire budding poets a lot to be successful writers. Most of the writers show their inner conflict or the stuff they are stuffed with. Facebook is just like a rough notebook where they can write their thoughts and feelings without fear of what people say about it. In between such thoughts, there comes a noble and elevated thought in the form of modern poetry. Time has been changed. People prefer online study or reading to print. With the revolution of thoughts, a great class of writers has come into effect. In the olden days, they had the rare opportunity of being a writer or expressing themselves in so high with such great openness.

Q 8. Would you say in brief about your published books? What about your upcoming books?

Rathore- As I have told you. More than half of a dozen books are in my credit including Pathless Woods, Pearls of Repose, The Voice of Silence, The Essence of Life, Worlds Fail When Silence Speaks, and The Voice of Humanity. I am now working on my 7th poetry book entitled The Wings of Poesy and Bhatner Duaggatha, a book of my Hindi poetry.

Q 9. Please share one of your latest poems.

Rathore-

1: THE SONG OF ETERNITY

 

I am a withered leaf;

When the breeze blows

It carries me far away in the distant lands

And drops me there;

I arise with the blow of the winds.

 

I am a paper boat;

When the breeze blows

It carries me on the splashing waves

Which push me towards the bank;

I float on the surface of the ocean.

 

I am a stream;

Though it is not easy to flow

Against the obstacles of the mountains

Yet I try to be simple and innocent

Like a three year child.

 

I am a child of innocence;

When the breeze blows

It carries me into the land of mermaids

And in the realm of Albatrosses

Where the mariner sings the song of eternity.


2: DIVINITY

 

The smell that I could inhale

Was unidentified passing through my nose;

I travelled far and wide

To know the fragrance;

The fragrance of the flower of meditation.

 

The flame was lit yet I could not see

The light of knowledge;

It was just like a dazzling spark

As if my eyes were blind

Which could not observe, though burning.

 

The earthen lamp of self-recognition

Was under the flame

When I beheld it while the day broke

And yet the sun was about to rise;

The rising sun of hope and bliss.

 

I needed eyes to see the unseen;

I tried to search all the ways conscientiously;

I made all the best I could;

I found it was all my ignorance

While being silent I felt the divinity.

Q 10. Do you think that Facebook poets and their poems have been properly appreciated? How do your appreciators have inspired you to keep writing?

Rathore- There is some literary groups such as Philosophique Poetica, headed by Dr. Jernail Singh Anand from India and Ade Caparas Manilah from Sydney where we had critics like Cijo Joseph Chennelil from India who had made intensive research on reviews and criticism. They appreciated their fellow poets and writers. Writers’ Mirror, Assam is also one of the best platforms for literary reviews and motivation. The critics like Bipul Kalita have done great reviews of eminent poets and writers around the world.

 

Q 11. Do you think that govt. and non-govt. organizations have done their best to promote world-class literature?

Rathore- Yes. The Ministry of Culture and Resources has time to time published its journals and books and anthologies to assist the literature of almost all languages. There are so many other non-government organizations that try their best to preserve world-class literature. They promote writers and poets to compose their best works. So many awards and certificates have been given.

Q 12. Do you think that Facebook and other social media have challenged print media?

Rathore- Yes. Of course. Facebook and other social media have challenged the print media but it also provides the base and stuff for budding writers. Thousands of trees have been cut to prepare a sheet of paper but still, print media has sustained its existence in the modern world.

Q 13. What is your opinion on the awards and certificates issued by various Facebook groups?

 Rathore- Facebook groups are formed to assist the works of fellow poets and writers and thus they encourage each other by reading their poems and articles at the same time; commenting and reviewing instantly which ultimately provides them good counseling, and when they work well with their matter and manner they are encouraged with awards and certificates until it becomes a game of making money and all other such issues and misuse of belittling the other fellow writers in any way.

Q 14. How do you feel when you interact with poets from different countries, especially through Facebook?

Rathore- I joined Facebook in 2012. It was the time when I was appointed as a government teacher far from my hometown. I was alone and had no way to interact even with my family members besides phone calls. My son made an email account and Facebook Id to spend time on it. This gave me the opportunity to see through the world. I had made so many friends around and across the world. I preferred older friends to young ones for the reason they had a lot to guide and share their experiences. I got an elemental change in my style of thought and writing. I would like to tell you about some of my best friends and mentors who have devoted their time and love to the development of my soul and style of writing. I can’t help remembering my close friends like Caroline Cecile Godgal from California who introduced me to how to write haiku poetry with and without a particular syllable of 5-7-5 pattern,  Sister Jen Walls from Minnesota, USA who taught me how to count syllables for haiku writing. She used to check and cross-check my haiku. When I used to make mistakes she rebuked me to have my duty done with dedication. Dr. Jernail Singh Anand is my all-time mentor and checker of each of my poems without caring much about the time of the day or it is night.

Q 15. Do you experiment with your own poetic creations?

Rathore- Not any special but I think every poet has the experiment with the way and style of composing poetry creatively. He gets his stuff from around his life, scriptures, and mostly from the extensive reading of the authors, philosophers, and thinkers. Following one and the other styles of composing poetry is just like creating a barricade in thoughts and feelings.

Q 16. Do you think that Facebook poets have contributed to bringing peace to war-prone zones?

Rathore- That’s a fine question indeed. Yes. No doubt. Facebook posts have contributed a lot to bringing peace and harmony to the world. Through their creative works, they have appealed to the people who have prolonged to face the world under threat of war.  Poetry has the voice of heart and appeals much more than words of prose.

Q 17. Do you have any suggestions for our group?

Rathore- As for as your group, Writers’ Mirror, Assam is concerned; all the members of the team have been working with dedication to uplift the flavour of literature worldwide. They are appreciating and motivate the seasoned as well as the budding poets and authors to compose more and more creative pieces.

Q 18. What suggestions do you have for your co-poets?

Rathore- I would like to suggest to the co-poets that they should read more and more books before writing a piece of poetic creation. Reading makes them aware of the general facts of composing poetry and other creative arts. They should keep in mind that what they had read has been expressed and now it’s their duty to add more flavour to literature.

I would like to thank all of the members of the team Writers’ Mirror, Assam for giving me time to share my thoughts and feelings here with you. Thank you very much. (Copyrighted)

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