Kavya Wahi, Mid-Term Assignment


Prompt 1: DESCRIPTIVE POEMS

1.

Image result for arpana caur

A piece of Art

It was in a closed room
An art exhibition, where two eyes—only mine,
Met her,
From a distance.
With an undivided attention, I divided her
Into a three-by-three grid.

Gray hair wrapped in a bun
Creases on forehead reflecting her sealed thoughts
And her worries and a few faded scars
Swollen eyes shadowing sullen sadness
And sleeplessness
Coffee-brown iris
Fringed with lashes
Tear ducts filled to the brim
Another low and they’d flow
Stretched ears weighed down with
Experience and small studs
Cleft chin
Lips dry and colourless.
Long hands as soft as the bristles of a paint brush
Paint-less nails dipped in hues now and then.

A replica of her mother, she was
In the life-size painting
Hung on the white wall.
That was my last memory of her.
That was her last memory of her.

Note: This poem is about a contemporary artist and her description is quite direct. The last stanza may not clearly define ‘her’ and ‘her’. ‘Her’ in “That was my last memory of her” is about the painter in and “That was her last memory of her,” it’s the mother.



2.

Image result for box of cassette tapes

The cassettes

I felt tremors,
Not in my heart, but
Under my feet,
The earth was shaking,
In reality today.

Roommate was glued at ninety degrees to the floor
Servant was hidden under the table
Me?
I ran to my room in haste, and
Opened the cache of memories.

A box of cassettes,
From your adulthood to my childhood.
Fifty three cassette tapes,
With lives of three:
Youngest, elder and the dead.

All sheathed in similar plastics bodies,
Transparent and with two holes,
Wrapped in the dust,
Some rusted, other packed,
Rest taped with random tapes.

Partially-torn notes attached to some—
Of birthdays, anniversaries,
Of sadness and fun.
I stared at them and heard all the voices,
I was clung to the magnetic tapes.

I felt the tremors,
Now in my heart, too.
Those recorded stories,
I played and rewound at once,
In seconds.

Earth stood still,
And so did I.
Without a blink, I scanned through our lives,
As I held those old cassette tapes,
The only thing I now call mine.



Prompt 2: POEMS TRIGGERED BY EVENTS

1.
A Real Dream

Chop-Chop. Squish-Swash. Chop-Chop.
Everyday activity, mundane routine.
With the sun, rise my mother,
With her, begin these sounds.
Cucumber, tomato, capsicum, onion,
Dance on the music of the machine when my mother
Rotates the lever.
Chop. Shmish. Kreech.

Sound very unpleasant. The red tomatoes ooze
Blood, just when
I dream of the reality of those kids
One moment painting with the colour red
Next moment painted in the colour red
Chop. Squish. Crack. Bang. Boom. Chop.

That night, I dozed off amid the shrill cries,
The bullets like the blades piercing the guts, and
This recurring dream doesn’t come
To an end
A few onions - slippery, naughty, lucky
Escape the grinder
Roll, hide, and lay flat
To save their lives.

The score at the end remains uneven
When I woke up I asked my mother: till when?


Note: This poem is based on an incident that happened in May 2018 in which a bunch of students were shot in a school in Texas by a 17-year-old. The shooting took place during their art class, hence, “painting with the colour red” and “painted in the colour red”.
I have tried to put light on the heart-rending incident by using another narrative of a usual activity of slicing vegetables at home in order to show how normal and common such incidents have become today. The specific sounds of both the acts are sometimes intermixed as they randomly pop up in the memory. The last line puts forth a question that is related to both the narratives in the poem.
In case it is unclear, in the third stanza, ‘onions’ are the ‘kids’ who managed to escape a round of firing.


2.
One amongst us

Two faces,
Torn pages,

Diamonds faded,
Papers traded,

Fate syncs,
Political links,

Flashing smiles,
Blurry lines,

With ease,
Flown overseas,

Nation scene,
Lost sheen,

Played with hearts,
Pierced with darts.


Note: This poem is about the scam done by Nirav Modi. The two-faced man, the trader of diamonds, managed to leave the country after alleging fraudulent transactions. The man, by no means, could have achieved his goal without the aid of any political connections. However, the plan did not chart out as perfect as his diamonds. After committing this huge fraud, he is currently sitting abroad with multiple passports. This poem is a satire on the whole incident that created a scene in the nation. Who knows if he had his Aadhar Card linked to the bank or not!?



Prompt 3: LINE BREAKS

1.

You and Me
When I sneak out of my room just to see
how breathing feels in your absence,
it starts raining.
They say it always rains
during the most difficult times.
So, I step inside with my hands stretched out
Of the window, thinking about these droplets
That must have accompanied you on some night.
They must have kissed you on nape,
Washed away your thoughts,
Touched your glasses and have watched you
Reading,
Writing,
Pining,
Breathing.
So, I collect them in my hands
For a little more than usual
Just to know what could your touch do to me.

When I think of you,
I go out to breathe all that you are made of—
Poofs, lies and cigarette stubs.
Parts of me turn sepia thinking about the past when
I once wished to be your last cigarette
Of the day, so, I could hold onto your lips
for long.
I wished to be wrapped around your fingers,
And stay there
Until both of us are burnt a bit
from the smoke.
I wished to find a home in your skin
But not anymore
For now I have found a better home
in my own skin.

Note: There are certain places where I have deliberately broken the lines in order to bring out the beauty of the poem using Wagner’s six S’s. The break after the line “They say it always rains” adds an element of surprise. The condition of always raining is known only when the second line is read. I’ve written four words separately in each line to give emphasis on the individual acts. The end of the line “I once wished to be your last cigarette” gives a sense of the wish which is to be just the last cigarette but it becomes clearer that the wish is to be the last cigarette of the day (and of every day). The break after the second-last line “I have found a better home” does not clarify which home and where the home is but it only qualifies that it is better. It is the last line that explains that it is in oneself that the home is found.


2.
Follow your heart

People say follow your heart.
But I ask what one does if they don't have one
or maybe they have one
but that's not what they call it with.
Heart might not be even a part.

Who knows where my heart is?
Does it hide under my elbow
when it misses you
or it comes in my mouth
whenever you pack your bags and plan to leave?
Does it go down there and make me go weak on my knees
every time I play the reel of your pictures on screen?
Is it lost somewhere in my bones and giggles shyly
every time I write you letters
or is it next to the clot that forms
when I forcibly stop the exuding blood from my palm?

Heart.
How do I follow my heart when I fail to spot its actual spot
Is it in your arms—
those arms that promise to do me no harm
or it moves to my spine
when you inject me with your smile?

Walking on the streets holding my ribs
thinking to save my heart from falling
because I can really feel it
crawling.
Did my heart vanish a little
every time I loved someone
or died a little
every time I tore one of their poems?
Is it still there beating behind an invisible cloak of everything
that is unreal because the last time I saw,
it was behind  my eyes pushing hard to come out
but I swallowed it saying, “Oh you lovely little thing it's time for a nap.”

Each time I try to follow my heart,
I peep inside every part of my body to find
this thing people call as a heart.

Note: In the second stanza, there are a series of conditional question whose condition is mentioned in the following lines. In the fourth stanza, the idea of the heart crawling doesn’t come to notice when it is just felt. “Did my heart vanish a little bit” would read simply as a question until the next line is read. So the elements of surprise, syntax and sense are employed in writing this poem.

Comments

  1. I really liked the poem titled "one amongst us". Short but strong.

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    Replies
    1. Thank you, Swati. There’s always someone amongst us who manages to remain unseen and suddenly becomes the talk of the nation.

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  2. i liked the poem cassettes. i could somehow relate to it at some point

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