Sunday, 6 August 2023

Poetry Reads: Lust Poems by Snehith Kumbla

Over the years, as life has unfolded, a string of poems on the sexual experience got themselves written, like honey trickling in to a honeycomb. A selection of these poems have made it to 'Lust Poems' - published a day after my first poetry collection - Fragrance and other poems was released. 

Indians and sex: Status quo  

Little, no, nothing...nothing is taught or talked about in India - Be it of sexuality, sex, lust, sexual attraction, puberty and the overwhelming changes it brings. No school or college endorses sex education. I do not know of any Indian parent of having talked about 'the birds and the bees' to their kids.

Yet, we are in the age of freely available porn, soft porn, lewd apps and channels promoting vulgar content. None of it holds a realistic mirror to the nature of sex and its complexities - Far from it. In fact, the content promotes misleading and fantasy-laden elements that can divert immature minds.

The only thing that is prominently mentioned is contraception and thanks to condom companies, at least the messaging is well-intended and celebratory. The stigma of asking for a condom at a chemist is largely gone - in India's metro cities at least.    

The Kama Sutra, an often misunderstood work on sexuality, erotic desire and emotional happiness in life, was collected in its present form in the second century. 

From then to now, from sexual awareness, discussions on a pleasurable life, to blackening faces and humiliating couples on Valentine's Day, the collective Indian sexual consciousness has touched new lows. 

That said, there is much radiance and hope in how Generation Z aka Gen Z (born between 1995 and 2009) perceives sex and sexual relations. But that is for another blog post. We deviate here, back to the book. 

An image from the book 

In this age of repression and general inhibition, I present to you 'Lust Poems,' a dozen poems in celebration of bodily pleasures, an ode to breasts, nod to quickies, the sparks of winter lovemaking, of intense first attraction and much more.  

Lust Poems is available on Amazon Kindle and on paperback across the globe on the Amazon website and Amazon Kindle, except in India. Why? Your guess is as good as mine. Apparently, in the world's most populated country, sex is too taboo to be featured on a top ecommerce website.  

Lust Poems by Snehith Kumbla

The Amazon Kindle US link

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0C9V85TN9

The Amazon Kindle UK link: 

https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0C9V85TN9

The Amazon Kindle Australia link: 

https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/B0C9V85TN9

The Amazon Kindle Canada link: 

https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B0C9V85TN9

An image from the book

(Article by Snehith Kumbla)

Poetry Reads: Poems on the Underground

Underground Railway Trial Trip, 1863 

The London Underground aka the Tube, as they call the metro or the subway, is the world's first underground railway. That said, when the Metropolitan line was started in 1863, it wasn't exactly running underground. A trench was dug a few feet below the ground, tracks laid, roofs laid, and voila! Underground, they declared!

It was in 1890, the first real underground route, the Northern Line, was opened to the public. What revolutionary tunneling machine led to this is another story.

That introduction aside, let's cut to year 1986. 

Persuasion, three friends and an experiment

Once upon a time in 1986, three friends gently ganged up to make an offer...anybody could refuse.

The three non-Mafia members, Judith Chernaik (writer 1), Cicely Herbert (poet 1) and Gerard Benson (poet 2) proposed an experiment. 

They prodded (not literally, but in a manner of speaking) the concerned London Underground personnel, in what is alleged to be, a non-threatening manner, to conduct an experiment. 

Lets put up some poems on them trains and see what happens, the trio murmured. The powers that be agreed.  

Thus began Poems on the Underground. Print editions of the featured poems followed. Free leaflets of the poems were distributed at stations. 

To this day, three times a year, a renewed set of poems, old, new, ancient, popular, obscure adorn the Underground trains. 

The Poems on the Underground blokes do recognize the support of The British Council, Transport for London (TfL) and Arts Council England. But they neither confirm nor deny that the Corleone family is in any way involved. 


Poems on the Underground: Highlights 

One of the funniest verse I read in a Poems on the Underground anthology is the mischevious, cheeky Edwin Morgan poem The Subway Piranhas

It so happened in the early eighties that Morgan was among the four poets commissioned to write poster poems. This was to mark the reopening of the Glasgow Subway - Argubly the world's third-oldest underground system. 

The Strathclyde Passenger Transport Executive (SPTE) rejected four of Morgan's poems. SPTE, as Morgan said in response, took the poems literally. SPTE, as was reported, wanted to assure their passengers that (as far as they know) no piranhas infested the Underground.  

The Subway Piranhas later made it to the Underground display, and later to one of the Poems of the Underground anthologies. 

The Subway Piranhas by Edwin Morgan 


My utmost favourite is this wonderful Grace Nichols turn on homesickness, featured as the first poem in a Poems on the Underground anthology. 

Like a Beacon by Grace Nichols



Poetry and us
The transformative power of poetry is the essence of the Poems on the Underground initiative – a celebration of the human spirit, ode to shared experiences, that even in the depths of a bustling metropolis, art finds its way to the soul.


(Article by Snehith Kumbla)


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Poetry Reads: Fragrance and other poems by Snehith Kumbla

The second edition front cover This is convey , with much joy, that I have published a selection of my poems on Amazon Kindle and paperback....