Sunday Morning Beggars at Puri
by Bibhu Padhi (December 2015)
I become a mother, a father,
a mistress, a master.
The calls get louder, then
turn into shouts at
no one in particular, perhaps
meant only for the sky
and the gods and goddesses
who might not be here.
The early morning air trembles
with weekly sounds,
settles into an uneasy peace,
bruised with the colours
of sharp, throaty voices
that cut across its rest
and sleep, rush into
its long, eloquent dreams.
Lying on the sofa, I think of
the numerous other voices
that have chosen not to disturb
our Sunday sleep,
maintaining their sounds
for death’s no-sound zone,
listening to an interior speech
that I may not hear,
is lost deliberately.
What has happened to their
ability to speak, to ask for things
we may not own, their
simple questions that will not
find an answer in a world
of common things?
Perhaps they alone
know the answer
but would not speak.
___________________________
He lives with his family in Bhubaneswar, India.
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