Nothing Scares Me More & The Lamp

Authors

  • Ayesha Salma VNRVJIET

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.56062/

Abstract

Nothing Scares Me More 

The poem is a ghostly reflection on the dead eye, which is a representation of complete inertia. In comparison to a blind eye that still feels and still reacts, the dead eye is represented as a soul sucking animated eye, its pupil emptied of the soul. Its careless eye, with its unpredictable movements, and its slow fading Association brings the sadistic decay. The speaker looks back at how the dead eye conveys a more profound truth that there is lack of vitality and accountability and brings a silent and obscure message to the dead souls around the dead eye. Finally, the poem touches on the issue of mortality, spiritual barrenness, and deep silence that characterizes the end of life.

 

The Lamp

This spiritual adventure is basically what the poem is leading me through where the narrator no longer has to freak out about death but it is more of an opportunity to experience a chilled entrance into some other worldly feeling such as this Shambhala scene. He is basking in beauty, harmony, and healing, and then the Supreme Soul lays a clue that it would like to see this lamp in his heart that that was present when everything was created. The lamp turns out to be off, which is a significant atmosphere of losing innocence, purpose, or moral light, and as such, the narrator has no choice but to strike back to the real world with this heavy sense of regret and the desire to have what was. It is all about spiritual responsibility, achieving the inner radiance, going beyond the mundane, and addressing the hurtling haste of returning to the state of being an ordinary person.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2025-11-25

How to Cite

Ayesha Salma. “Nothing Scares Me More & The Lamp”. Creative Saplings, vol. 4, no. 11, Nov. 2025, pp. 4-7, https://doi.org/10.56062/.