Mon stylo

• Dec. 19, 2005 - The poet

Most of the hostel rooms in Cotton College are four-bed rooms, very few are three-bed and fewer are two-bed rooms. I did not see any single room in Cotton College, as I cannot be forced to call a box a room.

 

I was in a four-bed room and was the second oldest boarder among the four. Nayan da, who was two batches senior to me was doing mathematics honours course. Himangshu was in 12th standard and Pranjal was in 11th standard. Both Pranjal and me were newcomers to the room. Obviously, Nayan da and Himangshu got better space in the room. I never had any grudge for this because they were wonderful person.

 

Himngshu was always busy with studies and when he did not study would talk about his unseen girlfriend about who I used to make fun. Pranjal could be very funny one day and would turn serious the other day. I would coax him every night to sing my favourite Zubeen numbers and he would oblige happily.

 

Nayan da was a very fine person except that he was a modern poet and ask me what a torture it is to read or listen to modern poems.

 

After joining Cotton College I came under the impression that every second person is a poet and it was the easiest road to fame. My belief was further strengthened when a poem titled “Sagarika Bardoloi of Handique Girls’ College…” almost became college anthem and the poet Pranab Barman became a romantic hero. Even today I don’t understand the poem.

 

The College Week was approaching and the buzz was who will win the best poet contest this time- Pranab Barman or Pranjit Borah, another giant in the College. Far away from this literary hullabaloo, Himangsu, Pranjal and me were discussing ways to get rid of Nayan da’s poems.

 

“Jot down some tough words, names of some places and add a girl in blue saree, that’s what modern poem is,” Pranjal comes out with a theory.

 

“Is that so easy? There must be some formula,” Himangshu said. He always thinks that the whole universe runs on formulas and theories.

 

“Come out of Physics Himangshu. Anyone can write a modern poem. Make sure that none understands it,” I declared like an expert.

 

“Can we write one?” both asked together.

 

“Why not? Let’s start. Bring me a pen and some papers. Ready? So what would be the first line?” I loved when someone look towards me for a solution.

 

Suddenly there was a knock at the door and we all shouted together, “No.”

 

We did not want any disturbance in our creative exercise. But that knock gave us the first line of our poem: Someone knocked at my door last night…

 

One hour later we came up with a 20-line modern poem. We submitted that poem for the poetry competition under my name.

 

That year I won the best poet award.

 

Sadly, I still don’t know the meaning of the poem I wrote though I got another unwanted tag-poet. Exactly one week later I found myself installed as the president of Anubhav Gosthi-a literary organisation in the college.

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• Dec. 28, 2005 - Poets.....

Posted by Anonymous
Hmm...I seem to remember the Cottonian poets....Pranab Barman and others...all courtesy Amar Asom, by Homen Borgohain (spelling mistake??)....seem to remember some controversy too...some poem on Uzaan Bazaar, and that someone had committed "verse-lifting" of sorts.......Those days Amar Asom had a special page dedicated to poems...dont know how things stand now.....

So, are u going to try your hand at some more poetry in the future??
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• Dec. 29, 2005 - I'm still sane

Posted by arhan78
I was never a poet and would never be one. The poets and poems you have mentioned are all Hebrew to me. Why can't they write poems a la Debokanta Boruah? Remember Xagar Dekhisa?
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• Dec. 29, 2005 - Re: Poets...

Posted by Anonymous
Oh but did you get the impression that i knew any of those poems and the poets? They are as hebrew to me as they are to you.....its just that i love reading Letters to the Editor, and had come across the "poetic spats" there.....so just to see if i had any latent poetic streak in me, i had tried those pages meant for poems...hebrew, man, right you are !! BTW, my mom knew "Xagor dekhisa" by heart and would look very nostalgic then.....
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• Dec. 30, 2005 - College days were so much fun !!

Posted by charmiz
......weren't they?? I would love to have a blog of my own some day where even I could jot down stuff from my own college days. But I am afraid I am too transparent, and I usually involve a lot of people, who might not approve of what I write (leave alone my pathetic writing skills, and my lack of confidence). So till then i'll spend my lunch breaks reading other people's blogs !! Keep blogging !!
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