Literature Transcendence Published 9 years ago - Parminder Singh Aziz - 9y ago 47 World Sikh News inaugurates its Literature section with the poems of Chandigarh-based poet Parminder Singh, who in this poem takes us into the world of mysticism where the lines between the spiritual and the material vanish, giving a glimpse of the transcendental experience lived by the narrator. Transcendence History vouches for its sanctity, myths glorify it the supernatural wings of divinity are attached to it since the childhood of my great-great grandfather, even beyond that. My father once told me of a man who sits outside the verandah of this place, synonymous to the ‘spiritual’ and has seen innumerous onslaughts of brutality, of profanity. My father was told about the man by his father, who knew it from his own. None is sure about his age, or motive. Everyone alive who has visited the place vows that this face is familiar. I take my daughter, now six, holding her finger cross the verandah, heart pumping. Sight falls at him, eyes meet eyes, he smiles and says, “Here you come, after thirty years!” Bewildered, I rush to him, touch his feet. I ask so many questions, people gather and tell me Baba doesn’t ever speak. I cannot distrust my ears but leave the place to finish the rest of my pilgrimage. *** I was eight then, but can recall the glimmer of the eyes, it’s the same. It’s rare that you witness the lines blurring between the temporal, the spatial, the physical and the metaphysical. *Originally published in Spark the Magazine. 47 recommended Share ShareTweetSharePin it Print