Pain and our innate philosophy



Rolling tears tell his pain
But all ended in vain.
The world indifferently air:
"Lose not thy courage, just bear,
The Lord will certainly take care"!

When pain is pounding every cell,
Such a rigmarole, can it console?
Be silent, just a pat is enough
Your philosophy, the sufferer already knows,
Pain overpowering, he is now under its influence.

"Speech is silver but silence is gold"
Masters have already told.
Silence can convey,
Pain is kept at bay,
Ingrained philosophy has now a say.

To Christ and other masters
What may seem to us as disasters
In one breath they bore and much more,
The pain never touched their inner core
We, mortals within the realm of senses are simply torn.

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About this poem

We may have sublime philosophical views but in moments of torturing pain, our senses may overpower that wisdom. It depends on the degree of our body consciousness. The lesser the degree of this, the lesser we feel the torturing pain and the more our wisdom will prevail. Great masters have actualized this. After all, we are mortals and yet we can alleviate pain with our innate philosophy. This is the core message of the poem. Moreover, nobody can pacify a man suffering from tormenting pain with hollow and age-old statements. . That philosophy is already within the patient. 

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Written on December 04, 2016

Submitted by ravi_panamanna on December 13, 2023

Modified by ravi_panamanna on December 13, 2023

42 sec read
5

Quick analysis:

Scheme AABBB XXXXX CCDDD EEFFX
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 727
Words 140
Stanzas 4
Stanza Lengths 5, 5, 5, 5

Ravi Panamanna

My actual name is Subramanian A. I am a retired official of the State Bank of India. Settled in Palakkad, Kerala, India. My literary awards include The Barath Award for Literature (best story), and the Poiesis Awards both in Poetry and short story, all conducted jointly by Xpress publications.com. My interests cover photography, philosophy, and science. Google search under Ravi Panamanna would take the searcher to my various links. more…

All Ravi Panamanna poems | Ravi Panamanna Books

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