Ways of Reading Assignment - Shreeparna Chatterjee, MA (Literary Art)(First year)


- Poems on Historical/Mythological Characters :

By the fire
Standing by the fire, for what seems like
an exile’s worth of time,
I turn to the Maryada Purushottam.
 He’s standing there, his head hung low
as if looking at me would melt the
resolve of his barbaric request.
The fire burnt with a crackle
loud enough to shatter the
glass of our silence.
My love, my husband, I thought him my savior too.
Before I jumped
in the fire and put the
crowd’s burning desire
 to rest,
I asked my Rama;
                                                “Is this what you really want?”

The answer; a crackle of flames,
consuming the painful acceptance
of the crowd and the crown.
                                                            And to that tacit compliance,
                                                            I jumped.



Rosa Parks
He asked me to get up
And leave the seat empty
                                                In that moment, I looked
                                                up at him and his request.
                                                Simple. Clear. Blatant.
In my mind, a weight bore down
the weight of years of difference
in color, power and seating.
                                                The weight kept getting heavier
                                                As the man continued to look at me,
waiting, entitled and expectant.

I said no.

Something bigger than me, something bigger than the request,
kept me glued to the chair as I saw
change.
                                                No more would I stand in
                                                compliance, for anybody
                                                else’s convenience.
It was time for me
To sit down for standing up.



- Poems on the prompt for line breaks :

Patio Lights
I remember those Saturday evening
patio lights and how they peeked
through the curtains of your hair.

Seemed almost necessary
then to capture you
amidst all that barbecued merry making.

And my polaroid camera agreed..
Whole heartedly.

Maybe it was the bourbon
spiked aweet tea, endless glasses of those,
that made you look almost etheareally
lovely.

I wish you could see yourself through my love struck lens.
You would have understood why I
smiled like an idiot all evening

When I saw you in that breezy summer dress
 making you look like a garden fairy in flesh.

Seems rather teenage now but in those moments
 you made me feel more like a man
than I’ve ever felt in my life.
                       
Now my polaroid camera longs to see you again.

That’s just my pretentious photographer’s excuse though.
And hopefully, it’s a better one to get you back to me.

Because Saturday evening patio lights
 just aren’t that magical,
unless they peek through the curtains of your hair.
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Note: Line break explained:
1)      “I remembered those….
…amidst all that barbecued
merry making”
2)      “And hopefully, it’s a better one…
…curtains of your hair”
The first line break is for highlighting the space or setting the poem is set in with girl and barbecue set up, giving her the separation of owning the space in the poem.
The second line break highlights the sound of the first and last paragraph being almost the same and the last paragraph echoing the feeling of the first one.


Dadu
Coming back from school
with my sweat slicked, dirt licked face,
I’d always looked forward to you
 asking about my day and having lunch together.

And the afternoons when the lunches were boring,
I’d insist you to buy me McDonald’s meal
to which you would say a firm no at first,

But then you’d give in
to my childish empty threats of skipping lunch
and ask me to order some extra fries
for you as well.
Mischievous smiles had never
looked better than while they were
on my 80 year old hero.

I remember the winter evenings
of Delhi Decembers,
when I’d sit on our age old carpet
next to you and hold your knee

while you’d regale me with
stories of the ‘Dilli’ that
was and samosas eaten by the anna.

Now every birthday of
yours and mine, I set aside an hour or two
to realize the fact that I
 loved you more than anyone else.

And how stupidly
 it look you going away forever
for me to understand that.

You once said to me “Nobody’s indispensable”.

Not realizing while in saying it, that’s exactly what you became.

----------------------------------------x------------------------------------------

Note: The two particular line breaks that I am choosing to explain are:
1)” You once said….what you became”
2)”And the afternoons….to my childish demands”

The first line break that I have chosen to highlight is for speed because the last two lines are the climactic end to the poem and I wanted each of them to have their own fixture in the reader’s attention.
The second line break that I‘ve chosen to highlight is to give a sense of fond remembrance of the times with the grandfather and also for sense of suspense for the reader to see whether the childish demand was given in to or not.




- Poems for the prompt of repetition :

Old Friend
My old friend and I have shared many
a memories together.

Memories of screaming into pillows
behind locked doors
memories of exhausting bouts of
teary eyed conversations with
the mirror
memories where I don’t remember
the last time I ate a proper meal
memories which are now a reminder
of my old friend’s “love”.

My old friend and I saw
each other frequently and people
didn’t like it.
Warnings, threats and ultimatumns
were often hurled at me
and my old friend.

But I found comfort in the
caresses of my old friends.
Caresses which were later
hidden with long sleeves
and dark denims.

I always thought my old friend
was good to me.
A quiet understanding between
us soothed me between restless
nights of tossing in my sleep.

Yes, my old friend was good to me.

It wasn’t until I saw another
girl with the same old friend
of mine, her school's blue shirt turned a dried red
on the sides that I realized,

My old friend
was no friend at all.

With that thought,
my old friend and I never met
again.

And there I took my first
steps to make new friends who 
played melodies in my ears,
painted my feelings on a canvas and
glided my thoughts on crisp sheets of blankness.

But most of all, I became friends
with the girl I saw in the mirror everyday,
who was now seen as so much more
than just her old friend
and finally isn’t crying alone anymore.





Nostalgia

Nostalgia is a Sunday afternoon
lunch at your grandmother's
Nostalgia is an old picture
with a flash too bright and
a smile wide enough.

Nostalgia is you and I recounting
days over tea brewed
too strong at the place we
remembered as our rendezvous.

Nostalgia is my mental hug
to myself on days of lazy lonliness.
Nostalgia feels like a bed
cover in summer with the AC running at the lowest.
A comfortable luxury.

Nostalgia is a friend
Nostalgia is an old lover
Nostalgia is a word which now seems weird because
I’ve used it too many times
But nostalgia is fond of you and your colgate smile.

So I keep taking trips down
memory lane and revisiting us
in memories stored away
for a colder time.

So here I stay, in these
nostalgic lanes
 waiting for you and I to meet again.

Comments

  1. I really enjoyed reading your poems. You write such strong lines. My favourite line is "It was time for me
    To sit down for standing up." It speaks so so much more. The essence of that poem lies here. I also liked the Nostalgia poem. The images you selected were really good and spoke to me. However, I felt that if you delete the last stanza of the poem, it will give the poem more energy. The last stanza seems to take away from the poem rather than add on (as the feeling of that stanza has already been repeated in the poem). Great work Shreeparna!

    ReplyDelete
  2. i really liked the poem by the fire. I think its strong also liked the stanza break.

    ReplyDelete
  3. The use of syntax really came through in "By the Fire", I really liked how you have separated the vision of Sita of her husband and her experience of his decision through that. The line "I thought him my savior too" broke the whole idea of how we see Rama as Lord Rama, Sita's vision here reduces him to just any other husband demanding something outrageous from their wives without reason.
    I also found the poem "Old Friend" interesting but I think the repetition did not really work for me to invoke different feelings. I really liked the theme of self acceptance and knowing when to let go in order to find new beginnings.
    All the best.

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