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Beyond the Ash Rains -- Agha Shahid Ali

Guest poem submitted by Aseem Kaul:
(Poem #1858) Beyond the Ash Rains
 'What have you known of loss
  That makes you different from other men?'
  - Gilgamesh.

 When the desert refused my history,
 Refused to acknowledge that I had lived
 there, with you, among a vanished tribe,

 two, three thousand years ago, you parted
 the dawn rain, its thickest monsoon curtains,

 and beckoned me to the northern canyons.
 There, among the red rocks, you lived alone.
 I had still not learned the style of nomads:

 to walk between the rain drops to keep dry.
 Wet and cold, I spoke like a poor man,

 without irony. You showed me the relics
 of our former life, proof that we'd at last
 found each other, but in your arms I felt

 singled out for loss. When you lit the fire
 and poured the wine, "I am going," I murmured,
 repeatedly, "going where no one has been
 and no one will be... Will you come with me?"
 You took my hand, and we walked through the streets

 of an emptied world, vulnerable
 to our suddenly bare history in which I was,

 but you said won't again be, singled
 out for loss in your arms, won't ever again
 be exiled, never again, from your arms.
-- Agha Shahid Ali
There's something hypnotic about this poem - some reason that I've never
been quite able to put my finger on, which makes the landscape it describes
come so vividly alive. It's not just the individual lines, though some of
them are truly brilliant ("I had still not learned the way of nomads: / to
walk between the rain drops to keep dry"), nor the way, towards the end,
that Shahid invokes the conversational tone so perfectly ("won't ever again
/ be exiled, never again, from your arms.). It's not even Shahid's trademark
trick (learned from years of studying Urdu poetry) of using the most
beautiful, evocative words (monsoon, exile) so that to read his poems is to
taste the rich, full sweetness of the language.

No, there's something else about this poem. The sense, perhaps, of reliving
some ancestral dream. Of that moment when you first awake and can just sense
the images of last night's vision slipping through your fingers. It is a
testament to Shahid's amazing gift that his poems make you feel a nostalgia
for places you've never been to, people you've never met, all the lost
tribes of ancestors that you can suddenly feel aching in your bones.

Aseem.

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