Monsoon
by Sutapa Chaudhuri (September 2015)
Obliterate all paths across the scorpion trail—
the venom deadly, fill up, overflowing,
the empty fate lines imprinted on my palm.
Take away the pain that sears a dead weight
athwart my chest, the spread of numbness,
slow and stealthy, crisscrossed over a wild,
palpitating heart. Wash out the tales
spoken in jest or casual encounters
of intimacy etched deep and fathomless
in unpurgeable residues. Let your mudslides
annihilate civilizations, the wistful nightmares
of trysts and togetherness. Let flash-floods
in sudden waves wreck fake lives and fruitless
downpour, false lost loves or indelible,
truant memories. Let life die and then,
if you can, touch my heart with love.
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Sutapa Chaudhuri has two poetry collections — Broken Rhapsodies and Touching Nadir. My Lord, My Well-Beloved is a collection of her translations of Rabindranath Tagore’s songs.
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