Saturday, 23 November 2024

Four Poems by Shailja Sharma

 




my story is being told

 

the warmth of her lap

nested my being

in her body’s texture and fold

a story remained untold

the wrinkle around her eye

held my sky

the pores on her face

bled into the ink on my page

her legs itched

her elbow cried through scratchy years

in my tears

her silver hair shined wisely

on my skin

her brow was thick

like her blood running in my vein

she had fingers of many kind

but the one I remember holding

is still mine

grandmother is long gone

but her warm lap nests my being

in her body’s texture and fold

my story is being told

 


 

 

She is born

 

When a sigh is sealed in the innermost drawer

When a virgin tear is slammed by the eyelid

When a fear is too afraid to come out

When an ounce of joy spills on the entire sky

When the unspoken message is ready to push out

Just like when a baby is born

The heart starts peeling its layers-

One by one by one, and then the last

In that tender moment:

Poetry takes birth

Rejoice, she is born!

 

(First Published in Wise Owl, 2023)



At My Funeral

 

A man, he was, I think.

A pair of solid arms,

Swinging like bands of a rainbow to

Embrace me divinely.

Somewhat visible within

Inches of my consciousness,

Breathing by my breaths.

His breaths ran past the second,

I hit my thresholds.

A man, he was, I think.

Treating my corpse with

Gentlemanly grace at my funeral.

Who else would put a woman’s needs first?

Whether or not I was alive,

His priority did not change.

Yet working hard to mask his tears,

(To match social expectations)

At the loss of his loved one.

The one carrying this ordeal of a task:

A man, he was, I think.

My man, he was, I know.

(First Published in Different Truths, May 2022)



My Street

 

Shiny porous skin and

eyes full of story. Sun's sweet heat

glowing on its loose gravelled

face. Rainwater resting in its

pits like the sweat of a playful child. 

The branchy mango tree-- its

braided hair.  My street.

My street stood only laps

away from the Mini-Market

where flavours of childhood were sold.

The Mini Market is still

booming with new little customers.

A parade of unfamiliar vendors

walks with their better-looking fruit.

Stressed birds flutter around

unopened newspapers. 

My innocent street is now

populated with swapped

owners. Some memories

are buried under their houses

which colonized

the untitled playgrounds.

Play may be happening

somewhere else now. Mothers

worry little ones

could get lost on busy streets.

Just as small streets get lost

in a big world.

Time has travelled me far

beyond that street. I am tired.

But my childhood continues to

play over there. By itself.

On that street, where I grew up

and where I continue to grow

by mind's extension.  That street

which pushes me to the sky

and then stands for me

open-armed in my mind's vision.

 

(First Published by Setu, February 2021)




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