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Best Famous Kashmir Poems

Here is a collection of the all-time best famous Kashmir poems. This is a select list of the best famous Kashmir poetry. Reading, writing, and enjoying famous Kashmir poetry (as well as classical and contemporary poems) is a great past time. These top poems are the best examples of kashmir poems.

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Written by Kunchan Nambiar | Create an image from this poem

The kingdom of the Gandharaka ruler

The kingdom of the Gandharaka ruler
Has turned into a mere desert.
The land of the Simhala King
Is now filled with lions and leopards.
The lord of the Chera people
Feeds himself on cheap vegetables.
The Chola King has nothing to eat
Except the maize of low quality
The kings of the Kuru house
Have nothing but jackfruit seeds.
The lord of the land of Kashmir
Is busy eating cucumbers.
The ruler of the Champeya land
Eats only tubers and broken rice.
The Konkan prince is about to die
Thinking of his wives' breasts.


Written by Laure-Anne Bosselaar | Create an image from this poem

The Worlds in this World

 Doors were left open in heaven again: 
drafts wheeze, clouds wrap their ripped pages 
around roofs and trees.
Like wet flags, shutters flap and fold.
Even light is blown out of town, its last angles caught in sopped newspaper wings and billowing plastic — all this in one American street.
Elsewhere, somewhere, a tide recedes, incense is lit, an infant sucks from a nipple, a grenade shrieks, a man buys his first cane.
Think of it: the worlds in this world.
Yesterday, while a Chinese woman took hours to sew seven silk stitches into a tapestry started generations ago, guards took only seconds to mop up a cannibal’s brain from the floor of a Wisconsin jail, while the man who bashed the killer’s head found no place to hide, and sat sobbing for his mother in a shower stall — the worlds in this world.
Or say, one year — say 1916: while my grandfather, a prisoner of war in Holland, sewed perfect, eighteen-buttoned booties for his wife with the skin of a dead dog found in a trench; shrapnel slit Apollinaire's skull, Jesuits brandished crucifixes in Ouagadougou, and the Parthenon was already in ruins.
That year, thousands and thousands of Jews from the Holocaust were already — were still ¬— busy living their lives; while gnawed by self-doubt, Rilke couldn’t write a line for weeks inVienna’s Victorgasse, and fishermen drowned off Finnish coasts, and lovers kissed for the very first time, while in Kashmir an old woman fell asleep, her cheek on her good husband's belly.
And all along that year the winds kept blowing as they do today, above oceans and steeples, and this one speck of dust was lifted from somewhere to land exactly here, on my desk, and will lift again — into the worlds in this world.
Say now, at this instant: one thornless rose opens in a blue jar above that speck, but you — reading this — know nothing of how it came to flower here, and I nothing of who bred it, or where, nothing of my son and daughter’s fate, of what grows in your garden or behind the walls of your chest: is it longing? Fear? Will it matter? Listen to that wind, listen to it ranting The doors of heaven never close, that’s the Curse, that’s the Miracle.
Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

Jobson Of The Star

 Within a pub that's off the Strand and handy to the bar,
With pipe in mouth and mug in hand sat Jobson of the Star.
"Come, sit ye down, ye wond'ring wight, and have a yarn," says he.
"I can't," says I, "because to-night I'm off to Tripoli; To Tripoli and Trebizond and Timbuctoo mayhap, Or any magic name beyond I find upon the map.
I go errant trail to try, to clutch the skirts of Chance, To make once more before I die the gesture of Romance.
" The Jobson yawned above his jug, and rumbled: "Is that so? Well, anyway, sit down, you mug, and have a drink before you go.
" Now Jobson is a chum of mine, and in a dusty den, Within the street that's known as Fleet, he wields a wicked pen.
And every night it's his delight, above the fleeting show, To castigate the living Great, and keep the lowly low.
And all there is to know he knows, for unto him is spurred The knowledge of the knowledge of the Thing That Has Occurred.
And all that is to hear he hears, for to his ear is whirled The echo of the echo of the Sound That Shocks The World.
Let Revolutions rage and rend, and Kingdoms rise and fall, There Jobson sits and smokes and spits, and writes about it all.
And so we jawed a little while on matters small and great; He told me his cynic smile of graves affairs of state.
Of princes, peers and presidents, and folks beyond my ken, He spoke as you and I might speak of ordinary men.
For Jobson is a scribe of worth, and has respect for none, And all the mighty ones of earth are targets for his fun.
So when I said good-bye, says he, with his satyric leer: "Too bad to go, when life is so damned interesting here.
The Government rides for a fall, and things are getting hot.
You'd better stick around, old pal; you'll miss an awful lot.
" Yet still I went and wandered far, by secret ways and wide.
Adventure was the shining star I took to be my guide.
For fifty moons I followed on, and every moon was sweet, And lit as if for me alone the trail before my feet.
From cities desolate with doom my moons swam up and set, On tower and temple, tent and tomb, on mosque and minaret.
To heights that hailed the dawn I scaled, by cliff and chasm sheer; To far Cathy I found my way, and fabolous Kashmir.
From camel-back I traced the track that bars the barren bled, And leads to hell-and-blazes, and I followed where it led.
Like emeralds in sapphire set, and ripe for human rape, I passed with passionate regret the Islands of Escape.
With death I clinched a time or two, and gave the brute a fall.
Hunger and cold and thirst I knew, yet.
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how I loved it all! Then suddenly I seemed to tire of trecking up and town, And longed for some domestic fire, and sailed for London Town.
And in a pub that's off the Strand, and handy to the bar, With pipe in mouth and mug in hand sat Jobson of the Star.
"Hullo!" says he, "come, take a pew, and tell me where you've been.
It seems to me that lately you have vanished from the scene.
" "I've been," says I, "to Kordovan and Kong and Calabar, To Sarawak and Samarkand, to Ghat and Bolivar; To Caracas and Guayaquil, to Lhasa and Pekin, To Brahmapurta and Brazil, to Bagdad and Benin.
I've sailed the Black Sea and the White, The Yellow and the Red, The Sula and the Celebes, the Bering and the Dead.
I've climbed on Chimborazo, and I've wandered in Peru; I've camped on Kinchinjunga, and I've crossed the Great Karoo.
I've drifted on the Hoang-ho, the Nile and Amazon; I've swam the Tiber and the Po.
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" thus I was going on, When Jobson yawned above his beer, and rumbled: "Is that so?.
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It's been so damned exciting here, too bad you had to go.
We've had the devil of a slump; the market's gone to pot; You should have stuck around, you chump, you've missed an awful lot.
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In haggard lands where ages brood, on plains burnt out and dim, I broke the bread of brotherhood with ruthless men and grim.
By ways untrod I walked with God, by parched and bitter path; In deserts dim I talked with Him, and learned to know His Wrath.
But in a pub that's off the Strand, sits Jobson every night, And tells me what a fool I am, and maybe he is right.
For Jobson is a man of stamp, and proud of him am I; And I am just a bloody tramp, and will be till I die.
Written by Adela Florence Cory Nicolson | Create an image from this poem

Two Songs by Sitara, of Kashmir

   Beloved! your hair was golden
   As tender tints of sunrise,
   As corn beside the River
         In softly varying hues.
   I loved you for your slightness,
   Your melancholy sweetness,
   Your changeful eyes, that promised
         What your lips would still refuse.

   You came to me, and loved me,
   Were mine upon the River,
   The azure water saw us
         And the blue transparent sky;
   The Lotus flowers knew it,
   Our happiness together,
   While life was only River,
         Only love, and you and I.

   Love wakened on the River,
   To sounds of running water,
   With silver Stars for witness
         And reflected Stars for light;
   Awakened to existence,
   With ripples for first music
   And sunlight on the River
         For earliest sense of sight.

   Love grew upon the River
   Among the scented flowers,
   The open rosy flowers
         Of the Lotus buds in bloom—
   Love, brilliant as the Morning,
   More fervent than the Noon-day,
   And tender as the Twilight
         In its blue transparent gloom.

   Love died upon the River!
   Cold snow upon the mountains,
   The Lotus leaves turned yellow
         And the water very grey.
   Our kisses faint and falter,
   The clinging hands unfasten,
   The golden time is over
         And our passion dies away.

           Away.  To be forgotten,
           A ripple on the River,
           That flashes in the sunset,
           That flashed,—and died away.

Book: Shattered Sighs