In 1981 Azra Abbas came out with her first collection of poems, Neend Ki Musafatein [Journeys of Sleep]. The first line in the book was “Paani pe chaltay huay paon hamaray hi thay” [Those feet were ours that tread on water]. It heralded a new beginning in Urdu poetry. In those days, choosing prose poem over other forms of expression was no less than trying to tread on water. But there was one iconoclast, Qamar Jameel, who spearheaded the prose poem movement and infused a certain ardour in many young writers, some of whom are still in the same phase of their creative lives. Abbas was one of those young writers.
In the past 40 years or so, Abbas has been quite consistent in publishing poetry collections. Her first was based on her initiation into the realm of love, then its fulfilment and then daydreaming about the outcome of this tryst with love. After that came Maiz Per Rakhey Haath [Hands on the Table] where some of her poems were singled out for their explicit sexual expression. Hairat Ke Uss Paar [The Other Side of Wonder] was notable for expressing the experiences of living in a foreign city (London) while Andhere Ki Sargoshian [Whispers of the Darkness] was marked by a profound, multifaceted sadness which was not felt before in her poetry.
This sadness is very much there in her new book Bheerr Mein [In the Crowd], but the word ‘sadness’ would not be enough to explain this, or any, collection. These are variations of sadness which are more discernible in the genre of prose poem than in any other form. Love, filial bonds and her beloved city Karachi have been some of the most recurrent themes in Abbas’s poetry. Now life, time and death have also cropped up as important themes with which she is most concerned.
The grande dame of prose poetry has mellowed and her anger has been replaced with wistfulness about love
Her sadness comes from different spaces. From promises of love which could not be kept; from love that is thrown into a corner or has been put in abeyance; from love that was lost or was showered over someone who did not deserve it; or just for waiting all her life for someone who actually deserved her love. But above all, this sadness is there because of the futility of the search for love which she experiences at the present stage of her life. It is a mellow sadness, devoid of the sharpness and incisiveness of Abbas’s anger of her younger days about which she had told an interviewer that, had she not been a poet, she would have been a terrorist. Now her anger has subsided into a sadness which is often mellifluous when expressing the sorrows of love.
Is it strange that she is still writing love poems? No, it is not. When she was young, she was writing about love as an experience; now she is writing about love as a remembrance of things past. She is writing about a love which was promised to be given to her in instalments, but was discontinued after the first one. She writes about the futility of the search for love in poems such as Tum Mujhe Dhoondte Rahey [You Kept Looking for Me], where both lovers end their lives trying to catch the other; even though they meet once, they fail because they are not able to recognise each other at the right moment. One poem is named Aatishdaan [Fireplace] where the titular object is reminiscing about people who used to gather around it for warmth, but now it is about to be extinguished. She is recalling the days when she used to pluck dreams from trees and when she used to walk under trees and the trees would bestow their dreams on the poet by showering their leaves and petals on her.
The futility of the search for love has enabled Abbas to think about the concept of time. This futility of life has rendered time useless. Now when time passes it doesn’t tell where it is passing and where it is hurting someone. Nevertheless, time will disassemble the entity of one’s self and take it to its usual end. That end is death, another theme which is dealt with poignantly in Abbas’s new poems.