Wednesday, September 29, 2021

Un-weeping Willow (Long Nature Poem)

Un-weeping Willow


Is it a willow

An ash or hemlock?

I do not know

How could I?

I’ve been always in the car

Going at almost fifty en route

Between Dewitt and Fayetteville

Maybe one day I will

Take its photo or go near 

Just to touch it and see up close

What tree it is


But even without knowing its name

I know it well, so I think

I know it instinctively somehow

Because 

I have seen fallen trees

Even in our backyard, we’ve tornado ripped

Maple and walnut, majestic veteran trees 

Yes, really I have witnessed

Many, in fact

I’d seen them in my native land

In Vijayawada, an almond tree in our compound

In Cocanada countless banyan and other trees

Some times, a whole field of flattened bananas 

I was in college then, in that seaport

A furious cyclonic storm

Hit us suddenly in the evening

Everything turned pitch dark

It was as though, the sea

From

The Bay of Bengal got 

Its soul stirred, it roared mightily


All lights were out

Our mess closed down

We walked to the Udipi restaurant

On the Main Road

No water in the tap, only well water

Nothing for us – the stranded hostel students

No water, no electricity, no food

We were

Only an insignificant minuscule compared to

The thousands of fishermen

They lost everything

Housing, boats, clothes

And their folks, sadly even little children too


Next day, or after couple of days

I went out for a walk

To see our Pithapuram Rajah College

The roads, town, and shops

The whole neighborhood lost its identity

Nothing was recognizable

Everywhere, the downed electric poles, naked wires

Old trees, must be older to me by several decades

Uprooted, branches sliced off

Limbs hanging barely

Tin rooftops, bamboo poles

Clay tiles, shabby sign boards

All sorts of debris thrown out

On to the well planned grid of roads

Barely we could 

Make our way to the college


There too

In the sprawling campus

A few stately green deciduous trees

Torn mercilessly, begging for attention

With fresh sap on the wounded limbs

Outstretched hanging branches

But who felt the most empathy

For all the trees and flora in Cocanada?

Who else would it be?

Our Professor Chacko, of the Botany department

I saw him standing next to his children

In the college botanical collection

With a frown on his face

Still, he was a bit happy

But for the Hope Island

The storm damage could’ve been much worse.


This fallen willow tree

Is exceptionally lucky

To be able to survive, to gently lean on to

The Mother Earth’s bosom

But for a little bruise

On its feet and maybe on its trunk

A little strained root system perhaps

But, such little aches and pains -

Which we all grownups get accustomed 

Sooner or later in life

It happens to us all 

Man, animal, or tree.


Yet this leaning, more like a reclining tree

(The image of Ranganayaka,

Of Nellore flashes through mind)

Showed no worries

No record, no visible memory of its terrible accident

Accident born of a strong gale

Or wind shear

Such winds visit us during late summer

Or fall

It withstood the onslaught like a sturdy big oak

As a fearless yogi

The PWD workers too loved it

They never disturbed it

Never entertained the thought of uprooting it

Why?

They just go around it

Going about their business of 

Lawn mowing, fall clearing


As I pass by this semi-uprooted Salix

Everyday while driving on route 5

I have only one thought

How many of us will be that lucky?

Like this gently reposed tree

How many of us can move on?

In life, late into old age

Without a care, without a scar

Of ill health, accident, bodily neglect, or social scorn

How many of us will be looked after

By those around us

Like this fallen tree?

Would our earthly brethren 

Show us the same dignity

As accorded to this fortunate willow

Who knows answer to these troubling 

Questions? 

In these hard scrappy times

For us mortals, nothing is certain

Neither loving care in old age

Nor material security, nor emotional warmth

Here or anywhere. How sad!  

Copyright 2021 by the author



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