Culture & Society

Poems: Of Clocktowers And Tripwires

The poet floats through an urban landscape, and his eyes map all, from the gulped vestiges of the day to the blocks of memory.

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Remembering a city
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Time’s stuttered utterances, half-words and orphaned vowels, lost mid-sentence
the clock-tower stood askance, a giant monolith, mnemonic eye sifting its gnarled brain
potholes, turning into craters, gulped vestiges of the day 

blocks of memory, tinned sardines with expiry dates, lined up for the burner 
the bartender, practised hands eulogising vintage spirits, poured one more shot
deck of cards dispatched in avian flurry
the joker strutted out
carefully circuiting the tripwire

and trumped the ace of spades
in a spark of momentous truth

an indignant church bell trolled on
zoned out in silo.

(Born and brought up in Kolkata, India, Raja Chakraborty is a bilingual poet, writing in English and Bengali. He authored, 'The Soup Bowl and Other Poems', ‘Whispers in the Wind', ‘Broken Lines and Rainbows' and 'About Maya and Other Poems'.)

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