October
poem.
In God’s
calendar of foregone
Settings, seasons
mostly indulge
In fair play.
There ought to be
never Room for umbrage.
The gardener’s pail
sedate
Now in a corner, the
soil- smelling
Sharp bladed grass
wails to
The windy, slow, darkening, sky.
Not merely sore bitter
feelings,
Nor Memory
whet by corrugated
Surroundings like
secret hideouts,
Yet you crave herbal
treatment:
This bugging
ortho on the left arm,
drives me to
the bunch of leaves,
Grandma’s celebrated
herbal remedy,
Multi purpose Tulsi
leaves rescue
me.
The crumbled
golden leaves
Don’t grumble their
age’s countdown,
Accept demure , resign to
their Mother,
Different from mankind.
October’s Morn
is slow
More dignified a
maiden,
You continue Walk with
me.
Come ye, October!
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