Sunday, January 4, 2026

A Kashmiri devotional song

 This is a Kashmiri devotional song in praise of Lord Krishna, which recounts a practical phenomenon witnessed by his friend Sudama. [Kaim sa ne preytith mein pana paer]

 A Kashmiri devotional song 

Part-1

[1]

Who held this dark malice, this venomous mind?
Who snapped my green 
bonds, my shelter, my kind?
My hut of dry 
twigs, my branches laid bare
Who left me with nothing but 
wind and despair?

 

(Chorus)

Who shattered my cottage, my shelter so small?

Who answered my prayers with ruin and all?

O Murli Dhar, is this Thy decree?

Is this the favour Thou granted to me?

 

[2]

Dead-tired and weary, from distance wide,
Tears filled his 
eyes in a shimmering tide.
"Who is this 
king in my dwelling so vast?
What magic is 
this, from a glorious past?"

 

(Chorus)

Who shattered my cottage, my shelter so small?

Who answered my prayers with ruin and all?

O Murli Dhar, is this Thy decree?

Is this the favour Thou grantest to me?

 

[3]

Dead-tired and weary, with burdens to bear,
Tears filled his 
eyes, streams bright and clear.
Sudama saw a 
king in his dwelling so grand,
“What magic is 
this, by whose unseen hand?”

 

Chorus

Who shattered my cottage, my shelter so small?

Who answered my prayers with ruin and all?

O Murli Dhar, is this Thy decree?

Is this the favour Thou granted to me?

[4]

Where is my family? Where do they wander?
Why do I 
stand in a place I must ponder?
Starved by my 
journey, by cruel drought's art,
I search for my 
garden, my roots, and my heart.

 

Chorus

Who shattered my cottage, my shelter so small?

Who answered my prayers with ruin and all?

O Murli Dhar, is this Thy decree?

Is this the favour Thou granted to me?

[5]

Where are the blossoms that sweetly would cling?
Where are these 
meadows in the first verdant spring?
What wondrous 
fields spread, a vision of might?
What grace has 
transformed my darkness to light?

 

Chorus

Who shattered my cottage, my shelter so small?

Who answered my prayers with ruin and all?

O Murli Dhar, is this Thy decree?

Is this the favour Thou granted to me?

…..

Part-2

[1]

Where from these fountains so bright and blue?
Where do these 
flowers draw colours so new?
Where did these 
pearl springs get a promise to run?
Where from this 
water come blessings, so won?

 

Chorus

Who shattered my cottage, my shelter so small?

Who answered my prayers with ruin and all?

O Murli Dhar, is this Thy decree?

Is this the favour Thou grantest to me?

[2]

Everywhere, buildings in grandeur now loom,
Everywhere, 
houses with bright-coloured bloom,
Everywhere,
heavenly fragrance and light,
Everywhere 
shining, a beautiful sight.

 

Who shattered my cottage, my shelter so small?

Who answered my prayers with ruin and all?

O Murli Dhar, is this Thy decree?

Is this the favour Thou grantest to me?

[3]

Where have these fountains with sudden grace sprung?
Where do these 
blossoms to bright hues belong?
Where have these 
pearl-waters, so silent, flown?
Where has this 
river of blessing grown?

 

Who smashed my hut, my humble home?

Who left me to wander, to weep and to roam?

[4]

Everywhere, palaces touch clouded skies,
Walls painted 
bright where my cottage lies.
Everywhere 
fragrance, a heavenly air,
Yet my poor 
hut—who has tended with care?

(Chorus)

Who smashed my hut, my humble home?

Who left me to wander, to weep and to roam?

[5]

When did these servants and helpers appear?

Have all my children fled far from here?

Has my dear wife betrayed me at last?

Is my small world a tale long past?

(Chorus)

Who smashed my hut, my humble home?

Who left me to wander, to weep and to roam?

 

[6]

Where are those buds, those flowers so fair?

I long for their fragrance still in the air.

My heart is aching, I’m searching in vain,

Hoping to see their beauty again.

(Chorus)

Who smashed my hut, my humble home?

Who left me to wander, to weep and to roam?

[7]

Sudama pressed on, both hands to the frame,

Perplexed as he whispered his own name.

He peered through the doorway, to the ceiling and floor—

Puzzled, he wandered through the window and door.

(Chorus)

Who smashed my hut, my humble home?

Who left me to wander, to weep and to roam?

[8]

Pitiful Sudama, lost in surprise,

Watched as a wonder rose to his eyes.

Out from the forest, calm and sweet,

Susheela came forth, his wife, to greet.

(Chorus – softly)

Who smashed my hut, my humble home?

Who left me to wander, to weep and to roam?

(Final echo)

Who smashed my hut… who smashed my hut…

Sham Misri, Seattle, USA

Thursday, January 1, 2026

The Stone-Keeper's Secret

 

The Stone-Keeper's Secret

I. The Historians' Dispute

The stones don't speak in certain years,
They only weather, hold the fears
Of dynasties that rose and fell,
A timeless, fragmented tale to tell.

Did Someshvara's spire climb in ten-twenty's air,
Or a century later, in a king's new care?
Dhaky and Brown with Kramrisch debate,
While Ojha's twelfth-century seal they await.

The Vishnu temple, standing worn and grand,
Michell places first upon this land.
A puzzle built of sandstone block,
Resisting time's unflinching clock.

II. The Vassals' Game (Kiratakaupa)

First known as Kiratakupa's hold,
A prize for vassals, brave and bold.
Someshvara, of Paramara line,
Gained the Chaulukya's favour, a fate divine.

Then Alhana, Chahamana lord, took the stage,
His governorship marked on a stone-made page.
But power shifted, a relentless tide,
To Madanabrahma, in whom trust did reside.

His successor fell to Kirtipala's might,
As thrones changed hands from dark to light.

III. The Scars of War (The 1178 CE Inscription)

In eleven-seventy-eight, a record made,
Of a temple's wound, a violent grade.
Repairs were carved for Turushka blows,
The Ghurid threat, and all its woes.

When Muhammad of Ghor's armies came,
And lit the land with battle's flame.
But Chaulukya forces, at Kasahrada's field,
Made the invading tide to yield.

So Kiradu stands, a testament true,
To kings who built, and wars that came through.

Story

The Stone-Keeper's Secret

The desert wind, sharp with grit, was the only thing that moved freely through Kiradu. For the old caretaker, Bhanu, it was a living breath in a place of the dead. The scholars came and went, their voices full of dates and dynasties that Bhanu did not need. He knew the truth of this place not from inscriptions, but from the silence between them.

Today, a young historian from the city had arrived, his bag heavy with books. "I am studying the Paramara chieftain, Someshvara," the man, Anil, declared, pointing to the best-preserved temple. "The one who built this in the 12th century. Or was it the 11th? The historians can't agree."

Bhanu simply nodded, his eyes on the intricate carvings of the mandapa, its octagonal columns holding up the empty sky where a roof should be.

Anil spent his days scrambling over the ruins of the five temples, his camera clicking. He spoke of Madanabrahma of the Chahamana family, of Alhana and his son Kirtipala, and of the great battle against the Turushkas that had scarred the stones.

"Look here," Anil said one evening, excitement in his voice. He had found a section of wall on the Vishnu temple, which the scholar Michell had dated a century older than the rest. "This damage... it's not erosion. This is from a tool. A deliberate defacement."

Bhanu approached and ran a calloused finger over the gouged stone. "The Turushkas," Anil explained, his voice full of academic triumph. "The 1178 inscription records the repairs. This is proof of the Ghurid invasion, right here!"

Bhanu was silent for a long time. The sun began to bleed into the sand, painting the complex in shades of fire.

"That is not the story the stone tells," Bhanu said, his voice barely a whisper.

Anil scoffed. "And what story does it tell?"

"It tells of a day when two masters worked here," Bhanu began, his gaze distant. "The first built the Vishnu temple. His work was pure, a prayer in stone. Then came the new master, Someshvara's man, to build the grander temple. His style was different—more show, more gods, more war. The two masters argued. The new one, favored by the king, called the old one's work primitive. In a rage, the new master took a hammer and defaced the older temple, to build his own upon its reputation."

Anil stared, his historical narrative crumbling. "That's... a folktale. There's no inscription, no record of that."

"The stone is the record," Bhanu said, his eyes sharp. "You see a battle with outsiders. I see a battle within. The repair in 1178? It wasn't just to fix what the Turushkas broke. It was to hide the shame of what one of our own had done. They covered the scars with new carvings, but the deepest wounds remain. You can still feel the old master's sorrow here. It is why the Vishnu temple stands so alone, and why the wind sounds like arguing here at dusk."

The sun dipped below the horizon. A sudden chill gripped the air. Anil looked at the defaced wall again, and for a moment, he didn't see a historical artifact. He saw a crime of passion, a jealousy preserved for a thousand years.

He packed his bag in a hurry, the weight of his books feeling suddenly insignificant. He left without another word, the official history of vassals and invasions unsettled by the whisper of a more human, more tragic truth.

Bhanu watched him go. He then turned back to the Vishnu temple, placing a hand on the cold, scarred stone.

"The scholars only hear the shouts of kings," he murmured to the silence. "But if you listen closely, you can still hear the whisper of the first master's chisel, and the crack of the second master's hammer. That is the true history of Kiradu. It is not written in ink, but in regret."

 SYMPATHY — a poem, a father’s gift, and a memory revived

While sorting through old papers and books to clear away what had accumulated over the years, I came across an old volume my father—Late Pandit Janki Nath Misri—had once given me to read when I was in the 10th grade. The book is The Indian Treasury of Verse, edited by S. G. Dunn (Oxford University Press, 1915).

At that age, I could not fully grasp every poem. Yet after joining S. P. College, Srinagar, I returned to the book with a clearer mind and a deeper appetite for meaning. Many of the poems I memorised then remain vivid in my memory even now. One of them was “Sympathy,” and it reads:

Sympathy
I LAY in sorrow, deep distressed,
My grief, a proud man heard;
His looks were cold, he gave me gold,
But not a kindly word.
My sorrow passed -I paid him back,
The gold he gave to me.
Then stood erect and spoke my thanks,
And blessed his Charity.

I lay in want, in grief and pain:
A poor man passed my way;
He bound my head, he gave me bread,
He watched me night and day.
How shall I pay him back again,
For all he did to me.
Oh, gold is great, but greater far
Is heavenly Sympathy!
C. MACKAY

Today—31 December 2025—I physically laid my hands on that same book again. It had been lying among “junk” and old reading material that I had intended to dispose of. The moment I opened it, memory returned with startling force: on the contents page, I saw my own name, written in my own handwriting from years ago.

What moved me most was not only the rediscovery of the book, but the rediscovery of myself—the student I was, the father I had, and the quiet thread connecting those years to the present.

What I understood then—and what I understand now

As a 10th grader, I likely admired the poem for its rhythm and its moral clarity: one man gives money without warmth; another gives care without calculation. But in college—during those formative years at S. P. College, when one’s inner world expands, and one begins to notice the subtle textures of human behaviour—the poem opened differently.

It is not really a poem about “help” at all. It is a poem about the difference between charity and sympathy.

  • Charity can be correct, even generous—yet emotionally distant, almost transactional.
  • Sympathy, as Mackay uses it, is not pity. It is presence: a willingness to share the weight of someone else’s pain, to sit beside them, to watch “night and day.”

The proud man’s gold solves a problem but leaves the heart untouched. The poor man’s bread and care, on the other hand, restore something deeper than comfort: they restore dignity, belonging, and faith in humanity. That is why the poem’s final line still lands with such quiet force: “Oh, gold is great, but greater far / Is heavenly Sympathy!”

A link to my father

This book was not simply an anthology. It was a gift with intention behind it—my father’s way of placing good language, strong ideas, and moral clarity into my hands. When I revisited the poem in college, it was not only a literary exercise; it was, in a subtle way, a return to his guidance.

Over time, the poem ceased to be only ink on a page. It became intertwined with:

  • a father’s gift,
  • my educational journey in Srinagar,
  • and the enduring human truth that care is measured not in currency, but in compassion.

I also remember my father sometimes mentioning another “Sympathy.” Perhaps he was referring to the famous poem by Paul Laurence Dunbar, with its powerful metaphor of the caged bird and its longing to be free. If so, that too fits the larger theme: whether in Mackay’s gentle moral contrast or Dunbar’s fierce longing, “sympathy” ultimately points to the same thing—an understanding that reaches beyond words into lived experience.

The old book, The Indian Treasury of English Verse, smelled of monsoon damp and forgotten years. Its spine cracked as I opened it, a sound like a distant door. I was not in my college then, but back in the quieter room of my earlier youth, the 10th-grade student I had been. The book was a parting gift from my father, Pandit Janki Nath Misri; its weight in my hands was a weight of expectation. "Read this," he had said, his voice still present in the silent house.

That first reading was a duty, a landscape of words I traversed with diligence but not always with sight. Poems like "Sympathy" by C. Mackay were passed by like familiar stations on a known route. I lay in sorrow, deep distressed… I understood the story—the proud man's gold, the poor man's bread—and noted its moral neatly. It was a lesson, like many others, filed away.

But time has a way of turning lessons into mirrors.

The shift to S.P. College, Srinagar, was the turning of the soil. It was a world of sprawling debates, of heated discussions on philosophy and society in the shadow of the Himalayas, of new friendships forged in the keen intellectual cold. I was building the architecture of my own mind. And in that construction, I returned, as if seeking a foundation stone, to my father's book.

After sixty-five years, I read this poem, Sympathy

This time, "Sympathy" did not offer a lesson. It offered a revelation.

The lines were no longer just ink. The proud man became a type I was beginning to recognize in the world—the benefactor whose gift carries the chill of transaction. The gold was not just a coin; it was no aid given to elevate the giver, not to heal the receiver.

But it was the poor man who now stole my breath.

He bound my head, he gave me bread, / He watched me night and day.

I was recalling the shopkeeper near my college who, seeing a student looking peaky and poring over books late, would slide a cup of kehwa across the counter with a nod, asking for no payment. I remembered the classmate who, when I struggled with a concept, stayed back not to tutor me, but to wrestle with the problem alongside me, sharing the very burden of not knowing. This was not charity. This was kinship. This was watching night and day.

The final couplet became my silent anthem:

Oh, gold is great, but greater far / Is heavenly Sympathy!

The second life of a poem

Books can become “old.” Paper can be yellow. Spines can crack. Yet certain lines do not age at all—because they do not merely sit on the page; they take residence in the mind. And when they return, they return with our whole history attached to them.

So, this memory is no longer just about finding a forgotten book in a pile meant for disposal. It is about finding, in a few familiar verses, a compass I did not know I had been carrying all these years: the ability to distinguish between the glitter of assistance and the glow of genuine human kindness—and to recognise, with gratitude, the quiet inheritance my father placed in my hands.

Happy New Year-2026

Sham Misri,

Jammu.

Saturday, December 27, 2025

The Architect's Curse

 Story:

The Architect's Curse

The Thar Desert had a way of swallowing things—cities, sounds, and time itself. For Dr. Arjun Mehta, an archaeologist running from the noise of a failed life in the city, the ruins of Kiradu were a perfect refuge. The complex of five 12th-century temples, built by the vassals of the Solanki monarchs, was a puzzle of stone and silence.

His focus was the Someshvara temple, the best-preserved of the group. Even in its ruin—the main spire collapsed, the mandapa open to the sky—it was a masterpiece. Its walls were a lexicon in sandstone, every block interlocked in the precise Māru-Gurjara style, every column a dense tapestry of carvings. He would trace the figures of dancers, warriors on horseback, and mythical beasts, feeling the ghost of the long-dead artisans in the cool, gritty stone.

The local villagers, who provided him with water and supplies, thought him mad. "The stone-sleep comes at dusk, Sahib," warned old Manvendra, his eyes milky with cataracts. "The master architect, he loved his creation too much. When the king tried to take him to build another city, the architect refused. The king had him killed. With his last breath, the architect cursed this place. Any who remain after sunset will join his work forever, their flesh turned to stone, their souls trapped in the carvings."

Arjun dismissed it as a folktale, a poetic explanation for the site's abandonment. His rational mind saw the real tragedy: shifting trade routes, a water source that failed, the slow, patient siege of the desert.

One evening, engrossed in documenting the unique octagonal layout of the Someshvara's mandapa, he lost track of time. The sun plunged below the horizon, and the desert chill arrived like an unwelcome guest. He packed his tools hastily, but as he turned to leave, a sound froze him—not the wind, but a low, rhythmic chime, like a distant hammer on chisel.

He shone his torch around the courtyard. The beam caught a figure in the Vishnu temple at the far end of the complex. Through the forest of "highly carved columns," he saw a man standing perfectly still, his back to Arjun. He was dressed in simple, homespun cloth, not a local style Arjun recognized.

"Hello?" Arjun called out, his voice swallowed by the vast silence.

The figure did not turn. Arjun approached, his boots crunching on the gravel. As he drew nearer, a cold dread seeped into him. The man was not just still; he was rigid. His skin had the dull, granular texture of the surrounding sandstone. It was a perfect, petrified human statue, its face forever turned towards the ruined sanctum, one hand outstretched as if in a final, desperate plea.

The legend was true.

The rhythmic chiming grew louder, now coming from all around him. He spun, his torch beam slicing through the darkness. The carvings on the Someshvara's walls were moving. The stone apsaras shifted their hips, their frozen smiles now seeming like knowing grins. The elephant riders on the frieze lowered their lances, their mounts taking a ponderous step forward with a sound of grinding rock.

He was no longer in a ruin. He was in a workshop, and the temple was still being built, its art still coming to life, hungry for new models.

He ran, not towards the road, but deeper into the complex, disoriented by terror. He passed the three ruined Shiva temples, their sanctuaries gaping like dark mouths, and stumbled towards the ancient stepwell. There, by the crumbling edge, he saw her. A woman, her form emerging from a half-carved pillar. Only her face and one arm were fully detailed, her expression a haunting mix of serenity and profound sorrow. Her features were too perfect, too lifelike to be mere sculpture. She was another victim, caught mid-transformation.

The numbness hit his feet first, a deep, cold heaviness. He looked down and saw a pale, grey hue creeping up his ankles, his skin hardening, losing sensation. The temple was claiming him. It would immortalize him not as a scholar, but as another terrified figure in its eternal stone narrative.

With a final, agonizing effort, he tore his gaze from the petrified woman and lunged away from the stepwell, towards the desert's open expanse. He fell, rolling down a sandy dune, the numbness receding as the open, curse-free air hit his skin.

He was found at dawn by Manvendra, shivering and babbling. The old man simply nodded, offering no "I told you so."

Arjun left Rajasthan that week, his research abandoned. But he could not escape Kiradu. In his dreams, the chime of the chisel was constant. And on his phone was a photo he did not remember taking—a close-up of a new, small carving near the base of the Someshvara temple. It depicted a man with a modern backpack, his face contorted in a scream, one foot seemingly fused with the temple floor.

The Kiradu complex, he now understood, was not a completed work. It was a living, growing gallery, and Percy Brown's "Solanki mode" was a style that had found a way to perpetuate itself through the ages, one terrified soul at a time. The architect's curse was not one of destruction, but of eternal, horrifying creation.

Xxx

Of course. Here are poetic lines drawn from the rich historical tapestry of Kiradu you provided.

Saturday, December 20, 2025

Some Verses

 Some Verses

I. (The Someshvara)
A fallen spire, a roofless hall,
The Someshvara outlasts them all.
On octagon columns, a world is made,
Where light and shadow play in the arcade.

II. (The Vishnu Temple)
At the complex's end, a lonely sight,
Vishnu's carved columns, holding tight to the light.
A century older, they silently plead,
A testament to a forgotten creed.

III. (The Three Shivas)
Three Shivas rest, in ruin and grace,
Their sanctuaries mark this haunted place.
A stepwell's thirst, a silence profound,
On this ancient, consecrated ground.

 1. The Solanki's Stone Song

In Thar's vast, golden hold,
A Solanki story, in sandstone told.
Five temples stand, where time has pressed,
But Someshvara stands, the best-preserved.

Its shikhara fallen, its roof is bare,
But on each column, art beyond compare.
In Māru-Gurjara style, a sacred dream,
Where gods and beasts dance in the sun's hot gleam.

Across the way, where three Shivas reside,
Only sanctuaries, with time, abide.
And Vishnu's mandapa, a columned age,
The sole survivor of a bygone page.

A stone-song silenced, yet the lines persist,
By desert winds and history kissed.

2. Echoes in the Stone

Five ruined prayers in the desert sun,
A Solanki dynasty, undone.
The Someshvara, though scarred and maimed,
By Percy Brown's "Solanki mode" was named.

Its mandapa columns, an octagon,
Where carved stone life is still cast on.
The Vishnu temple, older, stands so stark,
A sentinel of columns in the park.

A stepwell waits, with silence deep,
Guarding the secrets that the ruins keep.
Not just a ruin, but a frozen age,
On Rajasthan's historical stage.

Saturday, December 6, 2025

The Birth of Poetry

 

The Birth of Poetry

Later, Valmiki walked along the Tamasa with his disciple Bharadwaja. The river’s pristine waters mirrored the purity of a virtuous mind. Suddenly, a hunter’s arrow struck a male curlew mid-mating, leaving its mate distraught. Overcome with grief, Valmiki cried:

“O hunter! May you never find peace,

For slaying a bird lost in love’s bliss.”

Stunned by his own words, he realised they formed a shloka—a metrical verse born of sorrow. His disciples repeated it, transforming grief into poetry.

Thus, from compassion and pain, the first verse of the Ramayana emerged.