Stabroek News Sunday

Every now and then

- DAVE MARTINS

In the course of having a career in music, which led to my doing a series of columns headed SO IT GO in Sunday Stabroek, material of one sort of another comes to me in diverse ays. Recently, someone unknown to me, Haimnauth Ramkirath, sent me online informatio­n about a collection of poems he has written, and copyrighte­d, which will soon be out in a book.

The work is a collection by Haimnauth delving into his observatio­ns about nature and mankind’s connection to it and the material is riveting for the poet’s involvemen­t with nature that shines through continuall­y in his writings:

He Planted A Tree

The old man planted a tree in the park, in the shadow of a red oak tall.

When stormy winds shook it hard, sheltered it within the portals of his heart. But the old man died before the tree grew tall.

He never took a little rest under its shade. He never saw the nest the robin made, or in fall its leaves of flaming yellow and crimson red. Never saw the tiger moth butterfly on its leaf alight, or squirrels mount its trunk in blithe delight.

Never a witness to its impassive strength— resolute in the fiery blast of the sun’s wrath, unrattled by storms and lightning strikes. But the old man knew these things all along. He would never see the tree tall and strong.

That’s why he planted it with a song that his spirit may live on in that which is suckled to the earth, and for you and me and the world to see— beauty of life that’s in a tree.

Sunset

I gazed at the sun gradually sinking into the bosom of the deep sea. A fading lamp,

but a thousand delights time compressed, and in a span of moments— a blaze of the firmament.

A parting gift— a bed of crimson red the sun makes to rest.

The embrace, the dance of color and light, like the distant glow of a forest alight.

Autumn leaves strewn in the sky, infinite hues subdued and bright streaming through scattered fabrics of clouds.

Compelled to gaze long until that lamp was gone.

Still ten thousand shades of vanishing light. Deep meditative silence fell on the land.

Then— the majestic curtain abruptly closed: darkness swallows every trace of its eternal foe.

The Lotus Rises

Deep roots in muddy, slimy pond, but like the elephant, unyielding and strong, the lotus heeds the call of dawn.

Rises from depths languid and murky, and like pure waters of a gushing spring, bursts into profuse blooms of perfume above the turgid surface of a weary pond.

Untainted by mud, lifts its face like sprays from a cascade.

When a mild wind stirs the silence, it dances with an unearthly radiance— homage to the chariot mounting the horizon. Water droplets precarious­ly slide on its leaf, like one standing on the edge of a cliff, like these fragile threads of our breath.

Its story, a never-ending odyssey.

Dark depths of despair to illuminati­on.

Cuts drowsy waters of loathsome desires, awakens with the fire of a soul inspired— the human journey in a flower captured.

Closes petals at night and sinks under, and when night dies in day’s soft embrace, quiet miracle on the pond displays.

In the stillness of deep awakening chants, rises immaculate­ly with blooms defiant, as the human heart opens and reveals in resplenden­t colors—a thousand-petalled lotus.

I sent Haimnauth the following note:

HAIMNAUTH

Your powerful connection to and your sustenance from nature comes through consistent­ly and unswerving throughout these poems. The images are always clear and very persuasive, and I am impressed that you don’t allow divergence­s to get in the way of your overall message with its distinct forward, never faltering, thrust. You have clearly found a path that brings these positive messages as a matter of course; nothing sounds forced or contradict­ory. Belief in the message, I would say, is the singular feature that you convey time and again… no quibbling, and the examples you choose are persuasive…

I don’t know how soon the book will be out, but it is a formidable piece of work, an extensive exploratio­n, and I recommend it highly. So it definitely go.

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