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I recently came across a poem by Mary Jo Salter in The Atlantic – Executive Shoe Shine – which I loved!

I couldn’t find a decent page with this poem to link to so I am reproducing it below:

PONCE DE LEON – A MORNING WALK

You too if you work hard enough
can end up being the name of a street
in a drowsy little Indian town
a day’s drive from Mexico City
where orphans like bold Joselito
hustle in the taxi burro streets,
where cosmetic fragrances mingle
with scents of ripe and overripe fruits
& vegetables, where the smell of breakfast
& dinner are almost the same.

The natural odor of dung and body sweat
rises from the Zócalo into a sky, semi-
industrialized, housing the spirits of
blue señoritas with sun soaking into
their rainwashed skirts dried dustier
& wrinklier than red or green pepper.

While a crazy rooster’s crowing late
a brown baby delights in orange and yellow
balloons floating up like laughter
to tenement windows where a whole family
of older kids wave happy soap wands
that yield fat bubbles part air part
water part light that pop on the faces
of prickly strawhatted gents
rambling by below, ragged and alive.

One morning’s moment in this ageless
stone thoroughfare named after just one
dead Spaniard who wanted to live forever.

- Al Young

Coming across an old diary filled with favorites jotted down set me reminiscing about my on-again, off-again affair with this genre of written expression. My first brush with it in school included rhyming singsong stuff like A. A. Milne’s Puppy and I and those wacky poems by Lewis Carroll and Edward Lear, the pleasurable effect only broken by a frisson of unease caused by Walter de la Mare’s The Listeners.

Then came the shock – poetry need not rhyme and could describe nasty stuff that is usually shoved under the carpet. I learned this at IST Dar-es-Salaam when we did Stephen Crane’s In The Desert . To say that his verse is disquieting would be an understatement – more like visceral, bloody and in-your-face, forcing you to look beyond skin-deep man.

Then sometime in the early ’80s my dad brought home a volume of modern American poetry from the USIS library. I was intrigued enough to copy many of them out into an old diary that I still have! Some of my favorites among them:

Charles Bukowski’s Short Order

Donald Justice’s An Elegy is Preparing Itself.

William Carlos WilliamsThe Red Wheelbarrow

Al Young’s Ponce de Leon

James Emanuel’s The Negro

Dabney Stuart’s Exchange

Gwendolyn BrooksWe Real Cool

When I came back to India, it was only natural I sought out poets from the subcontinent. Jibananda Das (Banalata Sen), Amrita Pritam (Pariah) and Imtiaz Dharker stand out among them.

I then came across this piece in The Hindu by V. Sudarshan in the mid ’80s and was impressed enough to cut it out and keep. I cannot locate it on the Internet – the Hindu’s archives don’t stretch back far enough I guess – so I’m reproducing it below for your reading pleasure.

ANOTHER KIND OF WINDOW

newspapers are colorconscious

display everything in black and
white
and forests might have moved in
the night
if not for
the daily bifocal squint
at the fine print

I get a clearer picture of
yesterdays
through the now familiar
perspective
of an amnesiac’s lapse of
memory

get to know the latest deaths
(those that couldn’t see beyond
the caste
mark on the village well included)
local
or otherwise

of the blind who allegedly
recovered sight
somewhere in the dark
continent the news of which
reached
the inside pages three
or four days later

or nearer home the neighbours
with their daughters lately ripe
wear the Sunday morning
matrimonial look
as they with a discriminating eye
separate the nettles
from the grooms

how the rivers thin to trickles!

frontpaged three columns wide
unidentified bodies grainy
and radiophotoed festoon
the nearby tree after a bomb
blast that had been
merely a warning

today the editorials are sartorial
carefully skirt expunged remarks
and whole scenes and maintain
the Dignity of the House (there
are

not many opportunities to hurl
brickbats and spittle freezes in
midair when the set up
is democratic) somewhere low

on page three squashed between
an advertisement for newfangled
undergarments at thirty percent
and an aborted token

protest a death by hanging
after the sour cud of
a careless pregnancy

continued on page eight column
eight is the life sentence the
judge
gave the now wifeless poor man
with
one nagging mistress and five
children

(four daughters and a male
bastard)
and the still bloody memory and
of course after the bonebundle
the newsdog hauled
out from the cupboards
of an otherwise

flawless politician
I am full
and
make it a point
to hurl open the window
drag in the fresh air
lick myself
clean again

like a cat
after

the daily dole
of newspaper gruel

V. Sudarshan

© Sosha Srinivasan

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