The portrait
On a gloomy day I found it,
Among a pile of dust and papers.
It stunned me
For my eyes cannot move beyond.
Like a speck of blood
Coughed by a sick women
Its sight drowns me into an abyss
Of fear
And anxiety.
A fuzzy beam of the evening light
Runs right across it –
The portrait,
Dividing the canvas into
Triangles of golden orange and grey.
Is he a man?
Or, a woman?
Too much have been left to the imagination.
The artist had slashed his brush
In a hurry
Or fury …
Who knows what!
I readjust my glasses to get a hint
But it betrays none.
The profile of the forehead is
Only a suggestion.
And the eyes, yes
They dissolve my vision
Paralyzing my reason.
Bosoms have disappeared into
A mist of grey and orange
Only to find two clinched hands
Reemerged from the mist
Of golden orange and grey.
Strong hands they are
Together they hold the portrait;
Arresting the viewer
Between the eyes and the hands.
As I constantly move between the eyes
And the hands
An illusion is created;
Of pain,
Hunger, anxiety, fear, frustration …
Is it the genius of the artist?
Or, is it just me?
Like the enigmatic smile of Mona Lisa
It entices me, teases me, frustrates me
Seduces me.
One hand holds a gun
And the other holds a pen
Dripping in blood.
The tip is in mid air;
It has suddenly stopped writing.
Is the portrait of a poet or a warrior?
Or both?
A rebel, or a reformer?
Is it composing a poem?
Or, ending a life?
Whose blood is it writing with?
Its own or others?
Or, is it trying to decide between the two –
Gun or pen?
As I hold up the portrait closer,
Scanning its surface, its contours,
The deep valleys of creases
Over the face of the portrait,
Looking for some answer
Some hint to
What the hell was going on.
The sun is already hidden behind
The western hills,
Dissolving the canvas into darkness
Completely.
Now the questions will haunt me
Through the night.
Another Long, sleepless night;
Of beautiful dreams and nightmares,
Fighting with my own Devil.
When the first light of the dawn breaks
I will look at the portrait
Again.
- by
Kshetrimayum Jogendro Singh
December 29, 2009
Austin, Texas.
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