Tuesday, November 30, 2021

The Valley of Death

A tree standing all alone on the bank of a rivulet, watching a small forest on the other side.

 

The lined up shadows

Of walking dreams

Kept marching on

In the creamy spell

Of camouflaged vows.

 

Down the withering

Valley of death

They kept strolling in blinded bouts

Under a wavering cast of clouds

And the flickering

Fireflies beneath.

 

Suddenly the Moon rose high

And the dreams ceased

To fly

Into the cemetery

Of Hopes, Colors and Sighs.


The Postmortem

A creeping plant spreading everywhere with blooming flowers in a color blast.

 

She had dreams,

Like an autumn blast

Caged in a white frame,

Until the shredded hopes

In a pacifying twilight

And the dune of moonlight

Kept melting and falling

Splat

Onto her soul

To spill it out

Of its dear home.

 

And there was a postmortem,

Only to find a big void inside

With the shimmering shadows

Of a Moon blanched night.


Monday, November 22, 2021

The Lakeview Café

 

A beautiful lake and magical tree line in an autumn blast.


The lake view restaurant was costly. I used to walk past it in my evening or morning walks and sometimes during the noon under the shades of large beautiful trees, especially on the weekends. And sometimes I would enter the restaurant in some special occasions because of the serenity and aroma playing around the entire atmosphere and the captivating view of the soothing lake with crystal clear water mirroring the color blasts of the tree line; in the special and magical effects through the glass window of the restaurant.

 

During the pandemic lock down for covid 19, the restaurant incurred a huge loss too and it was apparent in its look after the year-long closure with hardly any maintenance and the massive job cut. And it remained closed for months even after the withdrawn of lockdown for a much needed renovation work, which paved way to another amazing window to earn some more revenue by introducing an improvised lake view café on the open space by the lake. It appeared to be more flexible and convenient for the walkers who happen to pass by the restaurant all around the day, partly because of the open tranquility and mostly because of the reduced price comparing to that of the main building.  

 

And it was the reason why I became a more regular frequenter to the café to spend some more moments under the shades of nature after the regular workouts. And the coffee was really good; always freshly brewed from the finest quality of well roasted beans.

 

The man was in his late 80s, and he was looking more aged with his thin, devastated and delicate health: burdened with the shredded hopes in this stage of his life; and torn with the burden of struggles for sustenance. In an age-old ragged and faded shirt, he was quivering with a bundle of jute bags hanging from both his weakened shoulders. As a street hawker he sells those bags to the reluctant customers, mainly seeking a satisfaction in winning the bargain: so careful to let him get away with hardly any profit margin.  

 

‘Can I have some water, please, just a glass of water?’ He requested in a timid tone defeated by time.

 

The waiters got startled with the sudden and unexpected appearance of such an unwelcomed guest in the terrace. And a senior among them, himself in an old age, handed him a bottle of water to shovel him away as fast as possible. 

 

What we normally do in a situation like this is to ignore in a magnificent silence, sometimes with a camouflaged gesture of disgust playing around our frowning eyebrows, thinking how could these sort of guys can trespass into our sweet moments. Or with a delicate style to slide our sights out of the things unseeable, in a fragile attempt to sugarcoat our guilty conscience thinking that he will either survive anyway or will go beyond the necessity of surviving all the way.

 

 

But apparently, he needed some calories to consume; with contrast to the regular customers of the café who spend hours to burn their calories and then add some as part of the refreshments and I was probably one like them, seeking some pace-less moment of solace in the reckless racing for life. He was quivering in hunger and reached a point to fell down on earth anytime. And still his burnt out dignity shuttered his mouth to not ask for some food instead of a glass of water. But, you can easily get away with it by putting you in the dilemma of noticing and not noticing; whatever is comfortable for you. And whatever was comfortable for Philip, the wealthy husband of Rosemary Fell.  

 

The first thing that strike my head was how we possibly can bring a positive change to the destiny of these kind of people: burdened with the age and ravished off their rights to the commonwealth society; the carcass of a circus.

 

And then Katherine Mansfield’s short story, ‘A Cup of Tea’ flashed back to my vision.

 

Answering to the appalling request for alms enough to buy a cup of tea, Rosemary Fell took Miss Smith to her plush house in the posh area. The image of the poor, pathetic girl somehow matched with the hungry old man. The girl apparently in quiver and shiver for hunger and winter, was asking for enough alms to buy a cup of tea. Her condition was pathetic enough to drive Rosemary’s mind away off purchasing a painted ceramic box in a posh antique shop. And she drove her instead to her luxurious palace as a harbinger of destiny vowing to change the fate of the fretted girl. She was certain of her heart-felt intention to do good and stood irresolute to her husband’s diplomatic denial. She fed her well and kept her good vibe intact as long as her husband tricked her with jealousy and a sense of insecurity by praising the beauty of the poor girl.  

 

With the slightest risk of our fortune, we back away from all those well wishes to change the destiny of people, to show them how good-hearted we really are. We forget about our preaching on how a strong hope can change their life and make them land onto their dreams.

 

Most of us can’t change the society. But we can at least change a particular moment if we are yet to master the art of looking away dodging our sleeping senses. I know I can’t do big; but, it’s not good enough reason to force myself away from doing the least thing I can do. And as I myself was not in either of the categories of the doers and the ignorers and as I really didn’t belong to the class who would think of their budgets inside the main building or outside in the terrace, I asked a young waiter to come close. He knew me well as a recent addition to café for the love of a good cup of coffee. 

 

I asked him to get the old man to a vacant corner table, which usually remains unchosen and unoccupied for a hard angle of the beautiful view. I ordered a set menu combining fried rice, chicken and vegetables. And of course, the action was not cordially welcomed by the guy in charge of the café. At least this is what I can ignore. But the way the hungry old man was grabbing the food served was something I couldn’t bear.  

 

Leaving behind the half-finished cup of my favorite coffee, I paid the bill with a tip; bigger than I can afford happily and far lesser than what the other frequenters usually take back to their wallet from the changes.


Camping by the River Dhaleshwari

 

The beautiful bank of River Dhaleshwari.




The Call of the River

In a gloomy morning of dilemmatic and whimsical winter, we set out, on a sudden unplanned tour, to reach the serene tranquility of Dhaleshwari River at Dhaleshwari Camping & Kayaking, without any prior knowledge to the stunning surprise awaiting us.

 

River Dhaleshwari

Dhaleshwari is a distributary river flowing out of Jamuna to make a solo trip to cover a long journey along 160 kilometers on Tangail, Dhaka and Narayanganj districts until it merges with Shitalakshya and then the mighty Meghna.

Unlike the other rivers flowing inside the heart of Dhaka, Dhaleshwari still holds the natural look of a river with the natural flow, uncontaminated water and soothing view on its both banks, especially in the Keraniganj part, which is where the Dhaleshwari Camping & Kayaking is located at. 

 

Swimming in the River Dhaleshwari.

The Camping Site

As I said earlier, it was entirely an unplanned Friday morning tour. Waking up a little earlier than the usual Fridays, I felt like making an escape plan from the motored life and a river outside the mechanized city was the very first imagery to have struck my mind. And I ran into the unplanned trip.

I have explored several tourist spots based on the river Buriganga in the heart of Dhaka, but was utterly disappointed with the odor and the water quality of the near dead river. In this regard, Dhaleshwari River was a little far from the heart of the city, and the little distance was enough to avoid the unavoidable pollution streaming out of an over-burdened city.




I had heard about the Dhaleshwari Camping & Kayaking site from several Facebook posts, especially from a group on a cleaning campaign to free the St. Martin’s Island off the curses of plastic wastages. And Jayed Khan Khaled bhai was the one who carried all those wastages all the way from Teknaf to his camping site on a hired truck to make an eco-friendly barge on the Dhaleshwari River.

 

Meeting with Anisul Haque Sir

 The Surprise

Even without the necessary pre-booking for the site under maintenance, Jayed Khan Khaled bhai cordially accepted us as friends, not as clients and arranged a late breakfast along with the mouth-watering lunch with the aroma of a blissful village home and a mind-blowing site-seeing.

We had already made our day, quenching the long-cherished thirst for spending an entire day by the spell of a river, far from the mayhem of maddening crowd. And it was all possible because of the unbelievable congeniality and hospitality of Jayed Hasan Khaled Bhai.

We had been enjoying the short trip way beyond the expectations. And then it became a very very special one with the sudden visit of Anisul Haque sir. It was one kind of a moment to feel really fortunate about. Felt so blessed to have the company of such a celebrated personality from this close!  


 



The Nature is kind,

Enough to get you find

The ultimate solace,

Floating within

And hidden behind

The water and the wind.


The Plan ‘B’

It was close enough to reach the spot in about 40 minutes from the Dhanmondi area of the city, but still far enough to dodge the deafening chaos into the calm and quiet serenity on the very lay of the Nature. But, the Dhaleshwari Camping & Kayaking is targeted for the people in love with the raw nature in an entirely village setting. If you happen to look for the luxury offered by the traditional resorts, this might fall into plan ‘B’ for you. But, if you want to dive deeper into the tranquility of the Nature, want to enjoy the soothing greenery of a village, the bliss of a serene river and the peace hidden deep down your heart, this is the perfect kind of place that you can choose for a camping site for a day long stay or for a night to explore the magic of melting Moon flooding the flow of Dhaleshwari.




The Journey

We took an uber ride to get to the spot and the car took about 35 minutes to drop us at Dhaleshwari Camping & Kayaking at the expense of 600 BDT.  CNGs are also available from Muhammadpur bus stand at Basila to get to Kalatia Bazar, Keraniganj and from there any auto-rickshaw can drive you to the camp site on the bank of the river in a few minutes.    


Friday, November 5, 2021

Walking Shadows

An abstract image of the walking shadow of a girl overlooking the melting colors from a tree.

 

I talk to shadows.

A lot many, from

The passing days;

In new bottles

With newer shades,

New looks

And dazzling glows.

 

And all my questions

Change back to phonemes

In a big void,

With no place to land

Like a newbie in twitter

With no returning flows.

 

And I'm a shadow myself

Waking up a new born,

Rising from the deaths

Of the earlier nights

In every single morn;

Putting on well a new day

And the colors of past to adorn.


The Road to Heaven

A soothing and calm shore along a deep blue sea.

 

With the flow of crystal

From the mountain ridge

My soul glides along,

Winging on

A northern breeze.

 

How deeply I miss

The beauty

And the bliss

Of a southbound trip

By a coral sandy beach.

 

Along the green

Flowing deep

And the blue, swinging high

In a wayward leap,

There lies a heaven to reach.


The Dreamy Sunset

A Sun setting in the western sky on the ocean, splashing melting gold all over the horizon.

 

Ah! The magical view

Of the setting Phoebus.

Soothing and calm enough to brew

Orpheus to pen a few lines;

As the dreamy dune of

Reddening hues

Fly with the diving Sun

Over the golden line of pines.

 

It is the cherished time of the day

Sitting by the spell of the bay

When the nous flings open

With the closure of his eyes

And the winging suffocated vision

Get the unearthed words shine.


The Rhyme Trilogy

  1. My Little River, Rhyme   -Have I ever told you about a river? -Which river? - The river flowing in a magical symphony, down t...