Dear Readers,
Walls throttle. They restrict. When they are raised, we fight. When they fall, we are buried in the rubble.
A scene from an old Hindi film that I watched as a child is strongly etched in my mind. It shows a four-walled structure being raised as a punishment, around a woman, inside which she is suffocated to death.
Walls, no matter how high or wide apart, are walls. Sometimes we build them around ourselves and sometimes our political/social landscape builds walls around us.
This week, Namratha has invited us to try the Hermit Crab form. I have done this before where my poem borrows the shape of a recipe, and it has yet to find a home. But in this Poetic Adventure, we have been invited to try the dictionary poem. To read more about it, please visit Namratha’s page here.
I have probably deviated a bit. It was supposed to be a description/meaning as we understand it. But for now, that’s how the prompt spoke to me. Maybe on another day, I’ll revisit it.
And now, over to my attempt for this week.
WALL
(noun)
- a continuous vertical brick or stone structure that encloses or divides an area of land.
the neighbour set up one without a chink, when I was six,
so there was no way the cows could stray,
and the dogs were kept out, and the children
who yelled, until the winter jasmine trailed over it
braving the frost.
2. a thing regarded as a protective or restrictive barrier.
borders
build sanctuaries/raise regimes
wall out enemies/wall in dreams
give/take away
remain
until the voiceless climb over them
again and again
and again and,
again
3. (verb): enclose (an area) within walls, especially for protection or privacy; seal a place by building a wall around it; confine or imprison someone in a restricted or sealed place.
worry not. it’s a mallet, not a hammer. there’s yet
(blocked) sunlight, (trapped) airs, (stagnant)waters
find joy (in pain), show gratitude, stay walled
we got your back, you’re safe
worry not
Thank you for reading. See you next week!
I’ve been experimenting with poetry for seven weeks now, responding to prompts on Namratha Varadharajan’s page. You may read the previous poems on the following links:
Week 1: After Ada Limon
Week 2: Braiding a Poem
Week 3: Nature and Poetry; The Haiku
Week 4: An Attempt at Self-Portrait
Week 5: Exploring Prose Poetry and Surrealism
Week 6: Three Poems: The Cherita
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I have no idea what Hermit Crab is but your take is beautiful and imaginative. I’m amazed. Aur mujhe kuchh nahin aata hai. :))
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Thank you, Tarang. I appreciate your visits to the blog so much and your encouragement.
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I love what you did with this, Sonia. And that movie scene was memorable.
‘wall in dreams’ resonated with me. This is such a good word to use for the prompt as has multiple directions to go in.
And the ending is just right “you’re safe
worry not”
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I agree. The word can be predicted in so many ways, and also used in various forms. Thank you for this value addition. Sorry, your name doesn’t appear here. And I don’t want to guess:)
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An interesting poetry form. I hadn’t encountered it before.
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Thank you, Liz.
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You’re welcome, Sonia.
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Oh I don’t know what to say. This is way over my head. You’re a gifted writer. I wouldn’t know what to do with a prompt like that.
Wonderful.
But that movie etched in your memory from childhood! Oh my! Children shouldn’t watch such movies. It scared me just hearing you say what you remember. Sorry it happened to you. Be safe.
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Thank you, Selma. You are very kind.
I agree. When we were growing up, there were very few filters.
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Yes. Few. Parents did the best they could. Bless you dearie
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Sonia, you’ve started working your magic from the first lines of the blog itself, and then the Mughal-e-azam reference! I really loved how painfully visceral the walls in your poem felt, like a lived memory of my own. Beautifully incorporated with the meanings!
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Oh god. I’m not sure it’s a nice memory. But thank you for reading, Manisha and for your beautiful praise. It keeps me going.
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