Analysis of How Will You Reply?



Listen and understand;
Our grief and our pain
It is only our life gain
We escape from injustice,
Inhumane conduct, and system
In our beloved motherlands
For human rights
Under fair and equal justice
In civilized societies
Where we live and breathe,
Missing our birth homelands,
Friends, families, and cultures
You have no clue of such feelings
We bear and wear that, every minute
Alas, you blame and classify us
As terrorists and dangerous
As religious teaching executors;
Whereas, we follow and respect
The rules and law that you enforce
We contribute our energy and skill
For enhancing your societies
If one of us does wrong
It becomes, a religious terrorist
If one of you does wrong
It defines as a mental sickness
What a justice or philosophy it is?
You victimize many nations,
Killing innocent ones
Only for your interests and benefits
You still stay civilized and righteous
If we defend our rights
And self-determination
You label us as religious terrorists
As a fact, you manufacture and supply
The weapons of mass destruction
Just tell us that; how you will stand
And lie, in front of Jesus Christ?
How will you reply,
When Jesus will ask
What you left on the blue planet
Hatred or Love, Peace or Hostility
Mercy or Cruelty, Hunger or Food
Analogy or Distinction?


Scheme ABBCDCEFGHIJKLFFJMNOGPQPFRSSTFEUVWUAXWYLZ1 U
Poetic Form
Metre 10001 1010101 11101011 1011010 00101010 010011 1101 10101010 0100100 11101 101011 1100010 11111110 1101110010 01110101 11000100 1010100100 01110001 01011101 10101010001 101010100 111111 1010010100 111111 101101010 10101010011 11001010 101001 1011100100 11110010 1101101 010010 11011010100 1011010001 01011010 11111111 01011101 11101 11011 11110110 1011110100 101101011 01001010
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 1,229
Words 219
Sentences 3
Stanzas 1
Stanza Lengths 43
Lines Amount 43
Letters per line (avg) 24
Words per line (avg) 5
Letters per stanza (avg) 1,030
Words per stanza (avg) 219
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Submitted on March 20, 2020

Modified on March 05, 2023

1:05 min read
27

Ehsan Sehgal

Ehsan Sehgal is a Pakistani-Dutch poet and writer. He moved to the Netherlands in 1978 to avoid persecution during the General Zia era in Pakistan and has lived in the Netherlands since. Ehsan Sehgal began his literary career in 1967. His first publication was a novel, but his consequent books were all collections of poetry. He writes mostly in the poetic form called ghazal but has also written Ruba'i, Nazm, Qataa, and Naat. He also writes in the meter called Beher and is well versed in poetry meter of the Urdu language. Zarb-e-Sukhan is a collection of the collections, and he is famous as of that book. Besides the novel and books of poetry, he published a collection of quotes and articles in 1999. In 2010, having lived in the Netherlands for over three decades, he also published a collection of aphorisms in Dutch and having the desire to share his ideas with a Dutch audience. The book, in Dutch De Wijze Weg ("The Wise Way"), was translated by Naeem Arif. The Wise Way is also published in both the English and Urdu languages. Daily Dawn mentioned him, one of those a few Pakistani English poets, whom poetry, has been traveled, and acknowledged abroad and homeland as well. His latest collection of English prose poems is Breathing Words. Various Pakistan singers have sung his ghazals and naats. He has been praised by many Urdu writers and poets, especially by Ibn-e-Insha who has appreciated Sehgal's literary work in his weekly written columns in Akhbar-e-Jahan Karachi. An author writes, "As far as the poetic justice in Sehgal's writing is considered, it is debatable. In spite of some shortcomings, he keeps on writing which is good. His work over a period of time has been acknowledged." A journalist of English newspaper The News International wrote in an interview that "Going through Sehgal's poetry one is instantly aware of a strong message, an intellectual depth, and a sharp poetic sensibility." A famous poet of India Nida Fazli and Pakistani journalist and writer Sultana Mehr compared his poetry with the style of Ghalib and Allama Iqbal. Sehgal has received awards of Molana Maher-ul-Qadri Award in 2001 from Urdu Trust London, U.K, Allama Shariq Jamal Award in 2005 from Bazm-e-Shaoor-e-Adab in Jaipur, India, and Faiz Ahmad Faiz Award in 2011 from Urdu Tahreek Aalmi London, U.K, in recognition of his best poetry works. He has also received Pride of Performance by Maraqaba Hal Holland, The Hague, Netherlands in December 2013. He also writes prose poetry in English. More here -https://www.conservapedia.com/Ehsan_Sehgal more…

All Ehsan Sehgal poems | Ehsan Sehgal Books

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