Thursday, June 01, 2006

The rainy day Limerick

It was the best of times.
It was the worst of times.
It really was just another rainy day,
But then I needed a beginning that rhymes.

Let’s begin with the guy,
Cause even god started with Adam.
And once the plot is established,
We'll proceed to describe madam.

The guy was wet and cold,
N like most guys a little hungry.
He just had had the most scrumptious tea,
But the rain makes you hungry, you see.

He was waiting for the big red bus,
With letters on the side saying it was the BEST.
His office was just a short distance from home,
So frankly he was much luckier than the rest.

I am quite the animal activist,
So I really won’t say it was raining cats and dogs.
Let’s say that the rain was strong enough to create a jam.
The kind of rain when trains stop and every drain clogs.

It was then that she walked into the small bus stop.
Any other day and he’s have blamed her for the traffic standstill,
She was beautiful like most girls and even more,
Her sight made him glad; A sudden warmth replaced the rainy chill.

She looked impatient as most girls do,
Rattling her watch as if that would make time go faster.
He looked but tried not to stare,
Surely god had taken more than the usual time to cast her.

She looked reproachingly at the rain,
And then he wished he was god for a day.
He’d make the rains stop and light up the sky,
The clouds would pause while the winds would dry up her way.

Suddenly she turned to ask him the time,
With a smile which was even more radiant than the sun.
He struggled so very hard to find his voice,
For a moment he wished someone would shoot him with a gun.

And then after the most eternal pause,
He told her that it was a quarter past five.
She smiled her sweet smile and commented on how late it seemed,
He tried to make conversation, but alas he had seen his courage nosedive.

After an awkward moment of absolute silence,
She turned back and began to fidget with her cell.
He wanted to talk to her and hold her hand,
There were so many things he had to ask, so much to tell.

In the distance he saw that his saviour in red had arrived,
He would run into his bus with what he could salvage of his dignity.
When he saw her too move towards the bus, umbrella in hand,
His feet were stuck to the ground while his heart wallowed in self pity.

She never turned back as the bus came to a halt,
Her friend saw her and hailed her from the front seat.
The bus was quite empty and the conductor most nonchalant,
So they got rid of their sandals and put up their feet.

Her friend looked out in the fading light,
And it was our male lead that caught her sight.
‘Some interesting company you had’ she told her friend,
‘I know’, she sighed ‘for a moment I wished he was Mr. Right’.

- Pranay Rao