Mourning the High Priestess of Poetry
Mysteries of
existence who would explicate,
Would blank remain
leaves of women’s book?
Enlightened
examples fly over man’s slate.
She’d never know
which lyrics had forsook.
Budding stories
sobbed they’d never be born,
They’d never be
sheathed on earth’s vibrant sheet,
Their pre-nascent
demise, they tended to mourn.
Men’s condensed
spirits, they’d never meet.
More
of own lineage, would men manage to trace,
When
their own verité they’d learn to face?
Crinkling,
creasing, crumpling regrets,
Consuming,
corrupting, collapsing vignettes.
Pulsed through her
spirit, lighted up her soul,
Her body
couldn’t bear it, too great their goal.
-Inspired by Emily Dickinson
(Death
anniversary on 15-5-2022)
Of Indian origin, Sultana Raza’s poems have appeared in 100+ journals/anthologies, including Columbia Journal, The New Verse News, Vita Brevis, Entropy, London Grip, Classical Poetry Society, Dissident Voice, and Poetry24. Her fiction received an Honorable Mention in Glimmer Train Review, and has been published in Knot Magazine, Coldnoon Journal, Setu, and Entropy. She has read her fiction/poems in India, Switzerland, France, Luxembourg, England, World Con Dublin, the PCA/ACA conf. (USA), and at CoNZealand.
Her creative non-fiction has appeared/will appear
in numerous journals including Literary Yard, Literary Ladies
Guide, Litro, Vector (BSFA), Focus (BSFA), and File770. Her
100+ articles (on art, theatre, film, and humanitarian issues) have appeared in
English and French. An independent scholar, Sultana Raza has presented many
papers related to Romanticism (Keats) and Fantasy (Tolkien) in international
conferences.
No comments:
Post a Comment