Three Poems
By Sanjana Choudhary

Image Source: Ny Carlsberg Glyptothek, Copenhagen. Bust of Sophokles (Roman copy after a Greek original 270 BC)
Sophocles and My Dadu
Â
I have neither met SophoclesÂ
nor my grandfather
both met the same fate
Sophocles died reciting a monologueÂ
from Antigone
and my Dadu ~ burst his vein singing aÂ
funeral song in a Brahman’s house
quite like an untouchable nightingaleÂ
when it loses its voice
and all music pausesÂ
and Sophocles is dead
and I? I have never known himÂ
but I know as little of dadu
as I know of what SophoclesÂ
smelled like…
Maybe my Ammañ had known,Â
but has she forgotten?
I am far from her to ask
Closer to Sophocles’ place of birth than hers WeÂ
are a world apart
Separated by a Visa
Â
You fed me fish & a poem for breakfast
Â
You fed me fish
You fed me such that no fish bonesÂ
slick my tongue
You fed me cornflake pistachios and kishmish swimming in lukewarm milk
Perfectly warmÂ
such that no heatÂ
burns my lips
You fed me imlee off of your veril AndÂ
I made the face of a six year old To
watch you laugh
You fed me the taste of a curry
off of your palm
to see if I want it saltier
like the sea ~ that you are
You fed me a poem for breakfast OneÂ
too many
And my belly was full of love
And sweet lovewords
You wrote
Perhaps when I went into a deep sleepÂ
Under a blanket
That you put on me
The Salad Garden
Â
When you look, MathematicallyÂ
close enough,
You see a dysfunctional fountain,
Left to maintenance that lets it be there
for purely the reason that it once wasÂ
The salad garden and the tomato vinesÂ
grow unidirectionally
as if the gardeners whispered inÂ
their ears, swiftly, softly
to obey a direction,
upward, upward, and then toÂ
a rebellious left.
The bonsais outgrowing themselvesÂ
too big to be cute,
too less slender
and calculated in breadth,
A twin tomat-oo glaringÂ
in disquiet, moving with
the hellish fury of the windsÂ
from the north.

Sanjana Choudhary is a graduate student of South Asian History at the University of Oxford. She is a writer from Bhopal, India. Her research tackles colonial censorship of Indian Magazines and literature in the 20th century. Previously, she has written for the books section of Caravan Magazine, Duke University Press, Indian Express, etc.
 
				


