Monday, November 15, 2021

Krishna, 3:29 A.M. by Meena Alexander

Krishna, 3:29 A.M.

 
In a crumpled shirt (so casual for a god)
 
Bow tucked loosely under an arm still jittery from battle
 
He balanced himself on a flat boat painted black.
 
Each wave as I kneel closer a migrant flag
 
A tongue with syllables no script can catch.
 
The many births you have passed through, try to remember them as I do mine
 
Memory is all you have.
 
Still, how much can you bear on your back?
 
You’ve lost one language, gained another, lost a third.
 
There’s nothing you’ll inherit, neither per stirpes nor per capita
 
No plot by the riverbank in your father’s village of Kozencheri
 
Or by the burning ghat in Varanasi.
 
All you have is a writing hand smeared with ink and little bits of paper
 
Swirling in a violent wind.
 
I am a blue-black child cheeks swollen with a butter ball
 
I stole from mama’s kitchen
 
Stones and sky and stars melt in my mouth
 
Wooden spoon in hand she chased me
 
Round and round the tamarind tree.
 
I am musk in the wings of the koel which nests in that tree —
 
You heard its cry in the jolting bus from Santa Monica to Malibu
 
After the Ferris wheel, the lovers with their wind slashed hair
 
Toxic foam on the drifts of the ocean
 
Come the dry cactus lands
 
The child who crosses the border water bottle in hand
 
Fallen asleep in the aisle where backpacks and sodden baskets are stashed.
 
Out of her soiled pink skirt whirl these blood-scratched skies
 
And all the singing rifts of story.
 


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