Guns and Roses
In the womb
of the earth, I was sown
with warmth
and passion.
Shattering the earth, I
birthed.
Some of my
mates unceremoniously dug out,
some
abandoned and some poisoned.
Lucky I was
to see the light and feel the breeze.
More than
water and manure, with love and care I was nurtured.
Playing with
the bees, dancing with the breeze,
With the sun
as the warm guide and the moon and the stars for cheery companions,
I grew up to
be a fine red bud.
Kissed by
the dew and courted by the bees, I grew up into the virgin puberty to be a
desired beauty.
My Prince would come riding a
snowy stallion or astride a marble tusker,
hold me in his tender hands
with love sweeter than the honey and purer than the
dew,
kiss me so
gently that even his breath doesn't hurt me.
In the
heavenly garden of bliss among the fairies, we would live happily ever
after.
From where
did you come, you beast?
Uprooting my
dreams, burying my happiness.
Brutally
plunging into my life without my consent,
tearing away
my veil of feminine modesty,
Violently
heaving me away,
crumpling
beneath your insane chauvinism.
Is your
manhood not under you? For your bestial cravings,
don't you
have women in your house?
Your wife,
your sister, your
mother?
What right
do you have over me?
What rights
over my body and my
desires?
What respect
do you know for feminity?
That
divinity in your chain's locket, isn't she a woman too?
What rights
do you have to worship?
What rights
do you have to live?
Being
desirable is not my fault,
being a
woman is not my fault,
Temptation
is not Eve's fault.
The fault
lies between the folds of your mind and between your
legs.
Roses are
beautiful, but look below, there are thorns.
Dedicated not only to the girl whose every drop of tear is slap of the shameless face of this Nation, but also to all women.

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