The Plagued Language of Love
Below
the leaf-empty boughs,
underneath
our 'Memory Tree',
my
father shovels with all his might
the
reasons leading
him there.
The
other things we gardened
when
I used to wear kindergarten shorts
display
language's failed landscape.
An
used blue mask flies from bushes to shrubs.
One
yellow foot of a chicken. A dust serpent.
I
lock my father in a safe,
entangle
my wife on an afternoon bed,
watch
the plagued streets
she
stares at topsy-turvy.
A
handmade violin player sells his merchandise
from
one closed door to another.
There
is a word that represents all these.
Search
engines cannot optimize it.
Left For Nothingness
Statics cackle. An orchestra of insects
plays a leathery elytra music,
and the riverboat leaves the jetty
as the city becomes another kind of
insect,
the one whose belly bags the soft fire in
protest
against the darkness of the late
springtime.
Leaving? Where to? I hold a paper ticket
to ticking oblivion. The insects dissect
silence
and murmurs of the commuters alike, and
then
there hum the machine, water, shadows.
The other Bank is nowhere to be seen.
Jazzy Sighs
The wraith of her husband
in his navy blue blazer,
all of the cloth sagging,
to the music by Ella Fitzgerald
she sways in promenade position,
unlocks memory's ballroom dance lessons.
Night train crosses the bridge. Hail
Emptiness.
She wets her finger on her tongue
and touches her forehead, breasts, and
between the ribcage with its tip.
From my apartment window French
I see the navy blue blazer fall as she
opens her hands.
The House of Noir
I smite the woodwork.
The 'Do Not Disturb' door quavers.
She emerges wearing
one wrinkled bed sheet
that holds together
the history of humankind.
This I is the I
I could have been -
living, leaving, trailing, finding,
seeking,
drinking the room no. 6.
(The motel keeper is a creep!)
She doesn't meet the eyes.
Somewhere a Tomcat opens a can of moaning.
One blue and red flasher passes by.
The bye lane has two dead eye cams.
This could have been a murder.
One of the crows flew out in time.
An author and a father, Kushal Poddar, edited a magazine - ‘Words Surfacing’, authored seven volumes including ‘The Circus Came To My Island’, 'A Place For Your Ghost Animals', 'Eternity Restoration Project- Selected and New Poems' and 'Herding My Thoughts To The Slaughterhouse-A Prequel'.
Find
and follow him at amazon.com/author/kushalpoddar_thepoet
Author
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