The
Lunar Triumph
The
dark side of the moon
takes
over my knees.
In
the morning I stagger, stroll, sit
on
every park bench.
The
papers run the triumph,
the
stories of human feat.
I
writhe for a painless small step.
The
older joggers confirm -
not
until after the full moon.
A
small step in another gravity,
beyond
life, thoughts, forms of ending.
I whisper, remind my patellae.
After Reading Stephen King
Dogs
share no warmth with me.
I
especially avoid our own alley
after
seven in the evening.
The
dog we nicknamed Kujo
rules
the strays. Some nights
its
maw slavers my sleep.
I
read. I read verses and prose
loved
by a niche, but this Monday
I
hook up with Fairy Tale by King.
Tuesday
sinks in the book. On
Wednesday
while returning,
frightened,
regretful, late from a soiree
a
shadow, I feel, sniffs my trousers
rubs
past fast without growling.
A
moment I see the eyes,
in
the next nothing. True tale, I whisper,
"Will
this end a lifelong dread?
Or
is it because I forgot that I am dead?"
Twilight Evolution
Someone
burns something,
always,
in this city.
I
breathe in; my lungs grow large
and
heart goes petite.
In
our balcony night arrives
wearing
orange,
fresh,
dishevelled, worn out
before
the beginning.
By
the street, on the pavement
an
ironing man
heats
up his mettle
on
an old-fashioned coal stove.
Here
we evolve and we standstill.
Your
shadow crosses the meadow
stripped-bare
between the concrete.
I
breathe in.
My
throat reminds me of my mother
struggling to end her life.
Kushal Poddar - The author of 'Postmarked Quarantine' has eight books to his credit. He is a journalist, father, and the editor of 'Words Surfacing’. His works have been translated into twelve languages, published across the globe.
Twitter-
https://twitter.com/Kushalpoe
Lovely poems all. Kudos Kushal
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