
Emperor Akbar. Fatehpur Sikri.
Emperor Akbar. Fatehpur Sikri.
January 26, 2010
The Mughal emperor’s Pachisi Courtyard. In front of the Ibadat Khana, House of Worship.
Akbar’s court poets Faizi and Urfi receive the Persona. Rabindranath Tagore, Amir Khosrow, Kabir, Bulleh Shah, Lalan, and Sarmad, the wild Persian-Jewish convert to Sufism, dressed like a Jain. The mystics and Sufis of India mix and consult. Vyasa, Valmiki, and Tulsidas look on. Persuaded by Tagore, given the trials of the time, Rahman Baba, an Afgani Pashtun, comes down from his mountain village to confer with the poet from the moon. Satya Pir, Dihlawi, Fani Kashmiri, Brahman, Panapati. Evoking the majesty of human history, Lord Alfred Tennyson extols Akbar’s dream.
The many oceans mingle. The dancing girls on the Pachisi Courtyard.
Tags: Amir Khosrow, Baul, Bulleh Shah, Emperor Akbar, Fatehpur Sikri, Kabir, Lalan, Lord Alfred Tennyson, Rabindranath Tagore, Rahman Baba, Sarmad, Satya Pir, Tulsidas, Valmiki, Vyasa

Englands Green & Pleasant Land
London. Englands Green.
Browning’s poem Christmas Eve especially opened the door for me, finally walked through, after decades of thinking about it. Browning and Tennyson before Westminster Abbey. A cordial reception and then a dressing down. The Federation of the World.
Blake and Milton walk together over from St. Margaret’s Church and join us. My master guides me to what Blake called, so rightly, “Englands green & pleasant land.” A simple parish church. Surrounding graves. A church perhaps Thomas Hardy had restored, in need again of his services. A prayer.
And the Lady of the Lake. A thrush, not darkling now, though it were. Excalibur. Arthur returns. An inscription on the shining blade.
Tags: John Milton, London, Lord Alfred Tennyson, Robert Browning, St Margaret's Church, Westminster Abbey, William Blake