top of page
Noted Nest

The Remedy of a Helpless Life

By Sharvani Bhalerao



A silenced night brings the finest imagination’s,

Ore just that everyone is asleep except me,

Cringing and turning till my mother whispers me to stop.


The hushed silence is peaceful for me to imagine,

To imagine myself cease away from my body and escape from the window as swift has a hawk,

And to hover in the sky with those ivory stained wings,

Which when united with the twinkling stars and sun,

Start sparkling so much that even the moon shies himself from me.


I swoop towards that lonely tree,

The largest I have known,

The one that touched the stars,

The one who was half dead due to its loneliness,

That tree gave me solace and I didn’t know why.


I go there thinking of myself as its saviour,

To sit on it branches,

To rekindle it with my touch.


But behold there’s someone else there,

With her wings dazzling,

Her face invisible in the soothing darkness,

Except her eyes just like mine.


I implore her to tell me her identity,

In her subtly melodic voice, she says ‘Your life’,

Her big eyes fix their glances to my face, studying my bewildered expression,

She says, ‘After all, this is where you gave up on me’.


By Sharvani Bhalerao



46 views3 comments

Recent Posts

See All

The Secret

By Asmie I’m sitting here, not too far, Glancing at you, you flutter so beautifully in the air. You shine so perfectly, can’t help but...

The Final Glimpse

By Asmie I was here, aching, for a final glimpse. A barrage of deception – was anything real? I was here, yearning, for a fleeting...

3 Comments


Hani Manjunath
Hani Manjunath
Oct 12, 2024

The concept of self harm, that internal conflict, it’s depicted in a wondrous manner

Like

Durga Vasumati
Durga Vasumati
Oct 11, 2024

The exploration of intense ideas through the use of form and diction is really beautiful in this poem.

Like

Kaavya
Kaavya
Oct 10, 2024

This is a wonderful poem, that explores the concept of self harm. It talks about someone who is willing to save other lives but incapable of holding on to their own. The irony is projected beautiful.

Like
bottom of page