Strawberry Moon
Ten
years after they aborted
their
first, a girl child,
while
passing the pink clinic
they
see a silhouette
wearing
the strawberry moon
their
car radio goes gaga about.
The
husband throttles the gas,
and
the shadow crashes against
the
windshield and scatters into
a
sparkle of fireflies.
The
man decides to step out, lean
against
the car and smoke while
the
woman murmurs the stale nth draft
of
her monologue on her husband
as
a man and as her husband.
In
the brief flame of the Zippo
their
unborn daughter appears again
as
a music box ballerina showing
her
pointe technique
on
the massy signet ring of the man
who
could have been her bad father.
City, 2023
Ashes
break the gravity's cage.
Albino
fireflies pigment the breeze.
Jung
has something on this dream,
but
the termites have doctored his pages.
The
local lads too have seen this in sleep;
fly-ash
fills up the plots emptied out
after
the collapse of the old buildings.
They
slur, "This is not a dream
but
an echo. No amount of hope or
chagrin
can kill it." I shake my head,
walk
homeward; the wind hustles
the
evening smoke; trees beg to the clouds;
on
your balcony you emerge wearing nothing;
madness
and cigarettes spark in the dark.
Girl
With A Plastic Cola Bottle On Her Head
"Dad,
new Halloween costume, please."
All
she said.
"Hold
my beer." He homemade one.
The
custody battle was short.
Therapy
was longer.
Bodhi
The
hired driver, awake,
his
head on the steering,
stares
at the neon's zen.
He
waits for the party to end,
and
the tired bodies fetch
the
stench of the spent glee
onto
the backseat.
A night bird tilts
the
balance of silence.
His
static deportment
has
just crossed the borderline
of
thoughts, worries and dreams.
For
one moment he is subatomic,
a
figurine of God,
nothing
and everything.
The Tattoo
The
friend who told her
that
most of the jewellery
will
pollute some junkyard
and
some will be sold
for
the wrong reasons
and
her clothes will either be
torn
or go out of fashion
took
her to the ink shop.
Only
the tattoo will stay.
She
said. It did.
It
looks nothing like itself,
can
be a line scrivened
on
the skin of the earth
by
an army of ants praising
the
sun's jamboree.
Where
her hand begins to shake
a
star still holds its resemblance
and
although the dermis surrounding
has
turned into a pool of uncertain
shadows
it gives direction if you ask for it.
We
don't need it. We know where we all head.
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
Nice 👍
ReplyDelete
ReplyDelete("A) pool of uncertain shadows" is an apt description of life quite often and for this masterful group of poems.