Confluence

For those who live and work as expats June is always a time of partings. Wonderful, interesting people who have shared our lives for some years are moving on to new posts and new lives somewhere else. It is a sad time, but it is also important to remember how rich are lives are because of all those amazing people we meet, people who we would never have come to know and love is we had stayed safe at home. This poem, an old poem from 2013, which I just rediscovered hidden away in a lost folder, is a reminder to appreciate those friends who share our path for a while.

Confluence

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Sometimes lives meet like rivers,

far from source

brought together by geography,

by destiny,

by the chances of topography.

Converging  in a whirl of soul and water joined,

in waves and eddies and swirling sediments

tributaries join and twist and turn and hurtle on towards the sea.

Friendship and love and familiarity are the sentiments,

together making lives more interesting,

more complete, more glittering.

For meeting,

sharing,

parting

the journey is the richer

 

Dhaka 2013

 

 

 

 

Summer holiday and Ramadan

In Dhaka, summer holiday is here, the International schools have closed for the long summer break and the exodus has already taken place. At the same time it is the start of the holy month of Ramadan, and those who rose early to take a pre-dawn meal before prayers are sleeping as long as they can. This Friday morning the streets feel very different to the usual chaos…

 

First of Ramadan

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deserted morning streets

crows looking puzzled

small birds twitter inquiringly from tree tops

– where is everyone?

 

Dhaka 2013

Monsoon arrival

This week’s poem inspired by the recent arrival of the monsoon, which this year was particularly dramatic and which I experienced from very close quarters.

 

Monsoon arrival

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Grey dusty days washed clear away,

clouds collide, rivers rise,

dawn-birds praise fresh-rinsed blue skies.

 

Crisp emerald leaves emerge complete,

puddles pool, paddies flood,

seeds burst deep in fertile mud.

 

Birds-eye view, when Noah’s doves flew;

blinking ponds, steaming warmth,

delta’s heartbeat to monsoon storms.

 

Chapai Nawabganj, 2015

Landscape

This week’s poem inspired by a many-hour drive through the lovely landscape of Bangladesh.

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Landscape

hazy hot sky over squares and rectangles of green, brown, seedlings waving weakly above water, muddy stubble, golden harvests, sliced by brick lined bustling roads. hard trampled bunds splitting land from water, green from grey, wet from damp. everywhere lined by tall straight-stemmed timber trees, brick and mud thatch houses. corrugated and tiled roofs, shiny, rusty-rimmed sharp edges. puddles, muddled homesteads circled by dark rings of fruit trees, heavy with green mangos, wide leafed jackfruit trees with lumpy fruit-swelling trunks. sweet smell of growth battling decay, thriving dying rotting ripening, mouldy compost, flowers fruit.  irregular quadrangled deep green ponds flashing twisting fish, washing splashing, ducks, children, long black glossy dripping hair and gleaming liquid limbs. bamboo groves, sharp skin-slicing leaves, elegantly bowing yellow stretching stems. mushroom-pretty piles of rice straw, odd-angled sheds, poultry houses. knife-backed rib-caged yellow cows, grubby sheep, clucking, ducking laying, brooding hens. wide sluggish grey-green rivers meander fat and lazy through energetic country-side. heaving markets, exhaling humid heat, clinging dust. piles, sacks, bundles, bags, rice, spice, fruit, spinach, spinney-ash-snake-sweet-bitter heaps of gourd, amethyst aubergines, bursting jackfruit spewing sick-sweet breath. black-haired nodding heads, henna beards, arms legs, lean-muscled sweat-shining bodies, bangladesh.

 

Rajshahi, 2015