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A Glass of Milk was Spilled Today

Here is a ballad from Sumita, wherein the storyteller-poet tells an interesting tale, in Different Truths.

A glass of milk was spilled one day.

Mother yelled and Sunny froze,

Knowing the drill, he waited

For the storm to close.

 

Anger though takes time waning,

For this event alas, kept recurring.

Clearly audible was her muttering,

About careless wastage – dire warning.

Forecasts faithfully foretold, such folly

Would surely make Sunny’s future unholy.

Then the Homeless and Hungry

Were invited in spirit to behold

How naughty Sunny willfully

Their last meager supper, floored! 

Time at last cooled Mother’s temper,

Having vented some other skirmish here,

It was just a storm in a teacup,

And the milk finally mopped up.

 

Sunny regretted in vain,

Guilt trip was his bane;

In his mind, jumbled, faint

Articulated a refrain:

“It was an accident.

Everyone, you too,

Has thus been rent.

How much did you

Then exclaim, regret,

Browbeat yourself

Over the head?

You’d be of the ilk:

A waste to cry

Over spilled milk.”

 

Their dog, a house pet

Tethered at bay,

Hoped the accident

Would play out his way.

Wished they’d let him

lap the milk up;

Such a tasty way

To clean the mess up.

 

A glass of milk was spilled again today.

Mother yelled and Sunny froze,

Knowing the drill, he waited

For the storm to come to a close.

 

Too many glasses had been spilled,

And Mother’s anger quickly built.

Sunny struggled with his own guilt;

Why did he keep gesticulating,

While eating, his stories punctuating?

But this time mother’s mind, sane,

Articulated a humble refrain.

“What if I had caused the spilling?

Wouldn’t I be far more willing

To let go, without any milling?

I would quite easily myself bilk:

What waste, crying over spilled milk?”

At that thought, she smiled,

Shared with Sunny, quite mild:

Her crazy reverse thought process.

Sunny amazed, was not in disgrace.

 

The dog wagged his tail eagerly;

His tongue lolled out happily.

“Someone, please read my mind,

Let me lap up the milk, be kind,

I’ll clean up the mess in a jiffy,

No need at all to be miffy.”

This time Mother did look to him,

And he did the job with superb vim.

©Sumita Dutta

Photos from the Internet

#Ballad #Verse #Storyteller #StoryInVerse #DifferentTruths

author avatar
Sumita Dutta
A lifelong bookworm and a graduate of Fine Arts from Chitrakala Parishath, Bangalore, Sumita Dutta enjoys most art-forms avidly. She has worn a number of hats – parent coordinator handling admissions, teaching O and AS level English, editor, publisher, photographer, manipulating digital images, designer, team leader for an IT start-up, PRO, sales rep and more. Her poetry, prose, photography, and art can be found on a number of sites on the web.

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