She sang a song, I remember,
A tribal spring song, she said,
A song they all knew, they held dear.
For me the curious diction did not matter;
The soulful strain gladdened the air,
Made the evening bright.
She was pretty, slight,
With glossy, downy hair, petite
In her tribe's pink outfit.
She lived across the road, down that lane
Close to the house burnt last night.
I had watched the tall flame
Till it was calmed bit by bit.
The grey of the evening sky
Roofed our small 'house'
Crooked and tottering, made for us
Of bamboo and banana leaves
By our elders.
There she sang their song, they held dear,
Feet bent, head lowered,
The boots of policemen on gravel
Merged with her voice
Refusing to halt.
And her house could have been burnt
Last night. We never knew how it was
To see the familiar house in ashes,
Consuming the favourite dresses,
The textbooks, secret collections
And father's money. Yet she sang, eyes closed, shivering but slightly, as if it was their magical chant,
Though many of her people
Were stacking what they had in bundles
In a quest for untold routes.
Ankur Goswami is an Assistant Professor in English and a research scholar presently working at NEF College in Guwahati. Apart from being an English teacher, Goswami has also been imparting training on communication skills and soft skills for more than 20 years now. He loves writing poems and has been published on several national and international platforms.