The Devotee


It came to pass that a man drenched with thirst swam ashore on the beach. His eyes were tired, his frame was slack. Though he was young, his mind was a century of drought. He searched for worship and devotion. For god or for monster. He had heard that a man exclusively deserved the deity he chose. He wanted to submit and to belong. All the wasted threads of his body and his soul ached for a commitment to the divine.

He chanced on the figure of a magnificent creature who played in the sand. Trudging forward to see more of it, he was, not blinded, but soothed by the bronze sunlight enveloping the form. It was not male nor female, not adult nor child, not man nor beast. Intent of man, spirit of woman; brow of the sage, innocence of the cherub; eye of the tigress, gait of the stag. The form stared at him with the infinite kindness of the universe.

He then broke and wailed. The aeons of travel, the ages of grime, and the years of fatigue fell upon the sand with his tears. In him, till no moisture and solitude were left, his dry tongue moved in a plea –

“What must I do to be free of fear?”

The form replied –

Thou doth touch me, but shan't gather lust from me.”
Thou doth extol of my beauty in word and song, but shan't wait for a response.”
Though doth worship me, but shan't be bid love in return.”

Hearing that, he recoiled in anguish and dread. And such was he spoke.

“What kind of god be thee?”
“What be a man, sans the love of his god.”
“What be a god, sans the devotion of his apostle.”

Thence, he resigned his fate. If submission to such terms is what it took, so be it.
He spread his arms to the heavens and peace reined on him.
In his journey, he had found that a man's god is the reflection of his fabric. So he knelt on the gallows, smiled at the executioner, and wished for a pretty end.





Arziyaan saari mein chehre pr likh ke lya hoon,
Tumse kya maangu mein tum khud hi samajh lo maula

Dararein, dararein hain mathe pe maula
Marrammat mukaddar ki kar do maula”

Tere dar pe jhuka hoon, mita hoon, bana hoon,
Marrammat mukaddar ki kar do maula”

Pyaas leke ke aaya tha,
dariyaa vo bhar laaya,
nuur ki barish mein bheegta sa tar aaya”

Sar utha ke mein toh kitni kwahishein ki thi,
kitne khawab dekhe the, kitni koshishein ki thi,
jab tu rubaru aya, nazarein na mila paaya,
sar jhuka ke ek pal mein maine kya nahi paaya”

6 comments:

Baby Lion said...

Yea yea, whiner, we got ur point! :P

Unknown said...

It's people like you who kill art.

Btw, were you drugged and raped tonight, or still are fine?
If yes, where? Terrace? TV Room?
Did you get to watch the entire movie?
Huh?

aSTha said...

beautifully written..every word connected and gave a different perception all together.
'i believe' is the necessity :)
p.s. the song, one of my favourites- a sense of belongingness transpires.

Baby Lion said...

Nah... still fine! Didn't really watch d movie, though! :P

Unknown said...

Thank you Astha. You know how much that means. Keep reading, you.

Amratanshu Parashar said...

The need to be "free from fear" has plagued my thinking for a long time now, :P for about the last 8 most tragic months of my life.closely felt what its like to almost loose everything.everything including life itself :D. felt like the man you mention :D
not looking for redemption but only peace
not salvation but satisfaction.
hmmmmm..... could connect to what i could perceive and what you were pitching at. nice!!!!.keep em coming SNIDER :D

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