Everyone loves poetry loves a section of all that is known to him/her. This slice keeps changing as he/she changes. I intend this blog to be a section where I could share the slice I am in love with at the moment. Currently, I am seeking a balance between communicating and hiding what I want to say in my poems and feel that to be any good a poem has to communicate as well as hide

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Poems rejected by The Statesman (Kolkata)

This morning even before I had had tea I went out to get a copy of The Statesman, as dad, the recipient of that paper in our house (I subscribe to 3 other newspapers, TOI & The Telegraph & Ananda Bajar Patrika), had instructed the boy not to deliver it till his return from his pilgrimage/holiday on 23rd Nov. The urgency was to check whether the poem that I had mailed to the paper last Sunday had been published. I was pissed off to see that it hadn't. But my daughter consoled me. She told me that now The Statesman couldn't attract any talent and possibly the person deciding on whether to accept my poem for publication was a graduate from Bangabashi College, which might be true. So here it is. I publish in this lovely instrument presented by modern technology and Google. So here it is.



Transmigration

I

Decades
Slipping between bodies in a bus, nine to five
Wiping his brow carefully lest the sweat
Drip onto other bodies
Pages turned reveal the same text, morning and evening
Petrolly dusks over dark skeletal houses across the road
Netted in tram wires, the same dirty slashes of blue or grey
Dusted with kites, as irrelevant flies, mornings too
Sunny, putrefying
Fortunate windows sometimes catching a gasp of wind.

And words.
Peanut shells of words
Arranged, re-arranged, urgently, endlessly.

Such decades

Suddenly flip over in the winds of time on the street
An expanding eternity of green, leathery, feathery
Branches languorously elongating in the sun
Spanning entire excited teenages right upto the sad doors of youth
Leaning out over the narrow strip of patched pitch
Glowing, carpet green above, mahogany underside.
Where time is measured in railway electric clocks.

Suddenly vistas expand, time expands
Beneath the Gainsborough dusks
The emptiness drones uninterrupted
Amid the going and coming of electricity
Entire evenings of a single candle on the window in a dusty room
Of a warped dusty table top and a cracked dressing table mirror
Framed in cobwebs.

Beneath the stretching branches
Leading to a distant forlorn round-about
A thick invisible swirling mass of absence roars
Sweeps you off, you take water, choke, splutter,
You try to expel the cold stone in your gullet,
To no avail

“It happens to everyone”
Your protestations that it’s so unnecessary
Chokes in your throat
You cry, choke, sink, swim
And are thrown onto a Saturday train
And later, breathe
Your feet on terra firma of your home city.


II

But your city.
Your city.
A dimension has slipped.
You pass through familiar streets
In a film.

Your home, your woman, your child
They are there
In two dimension

The mangled finger will not uncurl and touch
Visions of the inevitable darkness of Monday dawns
Slip in surreptitiously between your woman and you
And where are your ears
You miss out on the gurgling trivia of her week past
Hiding tribulations faced alone

And she is lost
The TV is no consolation.

III

Bit by bit pieces fall in place
The miracle of a late night movie
On television now permitted
Of the Sunday newspapers
After breakfast
Or a nap
Sunday mornings
From an unreal past
Are found between forgotten bills.

IV

Suburban afternoons
After a tender lunch, once unnoticed
Fade to an evening balcony
Over a home street of a past life.
Hurried packing and
The drink of forgetfulness
Jolts awake
To the arms on a cross at quarter to three
Though the trap door should have sprung
At quarter past four.

The prison van or a shared taxi
With other ghosts
Rushes over the dawning river
To another life
To the cacophony of similar birds
On the same platform
Waiting for the same train.

Copyright : Tapas Bandyopadhyaya

Sunday, July 01, 2007

Man With No Home

Now I have no home. No. I am not a refugee from a third world country. I am victim of the economic system whereby I have to shift my location away from my family in order to get the dole that is given to me as salary for my services to the company, a government owned company in India.

Strangely, and I am not alone in viewing it as such, this is because I got a promotion with which came a reduction in pay. Easy to understand if you are in the service of the Government of India or a State Government. You dont get the House Rent Allowance which you used to get for living in your own house at the old location. And that is 30% of your basic pay and one-fifth of your take home pay. Some promotion ! And you can do nothing about it. Not even suggest a remedy to the powers that be because that might be viewed as misconduct !

So I live six days of the week in the town where I am posted and one day with my family at Kolkata and I am confused as to which town/city I should call my home.

I know I am fortunate in having a secure job. There are others in this economic system where persons work thousands of kilometres away from their families on six month contracts. From time to time they are stranded at home without a contract. The power of money !