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Kuzhur Wilson Nov 2013
Since I have no other way
And am in utmost need,
Painter girl,
I filch one of the eight lambs
You have made plump with
Green jackfruit leaves and
Thin gruel with paddy bran.

I will take it to the goat market
And sell it in a jiffy.

I assure you
I will not sell it
To any butcher-
The lamb you made chubby
With sweet sweet words
And much much petting
And nice lilting croons,
Mixing and mixing
Greens with browns.


Don’t be sad, painter girl.
I hear you come running
Searching for your lamb and
Cry out “O my dearest one
Who went grazing in the green fields,”
As the sun in your canvas
Sets in the sea and
The saffron blends with the dusk.
And, see your tears mingle
With the black that you wanted
To adorn the brow of
The naughtiest of them.

Painter girl,
It’s all because I have no other go
And it’s of utmost need.
I could have broken into the
Two-storeyedhouse you sketched
And stolen the ornaments in
Secret lockers that even
You are unaware of.

Or, I could have
Palmed the golden girdle
Of the beautiful ***** princess
Whose portrait you made,
The one with a nose stud.
Or, drugged her with my kisses
And plundered the harem.

Or else, I could have
Entered the snake shrine
Guarded by the dark serpents
That you often drew
And fled the country with
The precious jewel.

Or, I could have shot down
The birds that you drew
And sold them grilled.

I could have axed down the
Mahagony trees you nurtured
And sold them as timber.
I could have blinded your Kanhaiah
And made him a beggar
To become rich from the alms he earned.
I could have enslavened his Gopis
And handed them over
To the red light streets.

Painter girl,
It’s not for anything of this sort.
I take just one of your eight lambs.
Sell it for a good price
And fulfill my need.

Now, perchance,
If a new tenant comes to rent
My brain where nothing resides
And if they pay me a fat advance,
Painter girl,
Surely will I buy back your lamb.
And tether it in your painting.
Don’t you dare say then
Don’t you say then
That you have forgotten it.
Don’t you say then
You have exhausted your stock of
Green jackfruit leaves.


(Trans from Malayalam by Ra Sh)
(Trans from Malayalam by Ra Sh)
Kuzhur Wilson Mar 2016
Since I have no other way
And am in utmost need,
Painter girl,
I filch one of the eight lambs
You have made plump with
Green jack fruit leaves and
Thin gruel with paddy bran.

I will take it to the goat market
And sell it in a jiffy.

I assure you
I will not sell it
To any butcher-
The lamb you made chubby
With sweet sweet words
And much much petting
And nice lilting croons,
Mixing and mixing
Greens with browns.

Don’t be sad, painter girl.
I hear you come running
Searching for your lamb and
Cry out “O my dearest one
Who went grazing in the green fields,”
As the sun in your canvas
Sets in the sea and
The saffron blends with the dusk.
And, see your tears mingle
With the black that you wanted
To adorn the brow of
The naughtiest of them.

Painter girl,
It’s all because I have no other go
And it’s of utmost need.
I could have broken into the
Two-storeyed house you sketched
And stolen the ornaments in
Secret lockers that even
You are unaware of.

Or, I could have
Palmed the golden girdle
Of the beautiful ***** princess
Whose portrait you made,
The one with a nose stud.
Or, drugged her with my kisses
And plundered the harem.

Or else, I could have
Entered the snake shrine
Guarded by the dark serpents
That you often drew
And fled the country with
The precious jewel.

Or, I could have shot down
The birds that you drew
And sold them grilled.

I could have axed down the
Mahagony trees you nurtured
And sold them as timber.
I could have blinded your Kanhaiah
And made him a beggar
To become rich from the alms he earned.
I could have enslaved his Gopis
And handed them over
To the red light streets.

Painter girl,
It’s not for anything of this sort.
I take just one of your eight lambs.
Sell it for a good price
And fulfil my need.

Now, perchance,
If a new tenant comes to rent
My brain where nothing resides
And if they pay me a fat advance,
Painter girl,
Surely will I buy back your lamb.
And tether it in your painting.
Don’t you dare say then
Don’t you say then
That you have forgotten it.
Don’t you say then
You have exhausted your stock of
Green jack fruit leaves.
(Trans from Malayalam by Ra Sh)
Rob Rutledge Jul 2016
A mind made of marble
And pristene granite walls.
Intricate mosaics,
Oak carved skirting boards.

Mahagony knights
Prize their ivory pawns.
On unto the fight,
Iron locks with horn.

Sweet Mother of pearl,
Stern Father of pride,
Find a place called home,
Stand sentry for the night.

Fountains maintain order
The force of flowing water,
Both violent and yet serene.
Soothing currents of the sea
Slaying dragons in our dreams.
Jeff Lester Mar 2019
The Mahogany Ships

by Jeff Lester

1.
In the great court of King Phillip,
the brave twins put sword to the great unknown;
eloquent, they spoke of the right of passage
and the conquest of pagan tribes.
Together, they smithed such fine words
that ball shot from shipboard cannon
made no sound on flesh or chain
- though none thought to ask
of the watermarks that lay within those pages.
None save for the mariner,
who kept his mind quiet
lest they take the chance from him.

2.
In the high towers above the sea,
under lock and key, the wives met chastity
with the midnight lard
- until one of them again forced open her thighs,
this time to spill blood and soil linen.
That infant found much despair
when it met sea air at the gape
and its cry sent the mid-wives running
into the night, lanterns aloft with flames
bravely daring that foul breeze.
By morning, the twins had sent rats
from every town and city
to the mariner’s dock
with every ******* son they could find.

3.
After the Cape, what call came to the mariner
from beyond the unknown precipice?
That proof and others went asunder
with each new bearing from his sextant:
at the late hour of the watch,
the only sound that gave comfort
was the lash for the night watchmen
asleep in the ship’s tower
so that under-decks, all might dream kindly
of trade winds, not Sargasso seas.
But at the dead reckoning, when the mariner
turned hard into the wind
without instruments to guide him,
the voice of twins came uninvited
and without warning from across the seas.
Then, when he needed utmost quiet,
it was the call from within
that disturbed him most
for it was in a language
that he could not discern or decipher
as none of it was countenanced
or considered under the charter’s seal.





4.
Great ships may **** and plunder
for a time, but rocks will break hearts
and ship’s hulls without stars to guide them.
Now undersea, the mariner’s bleached log
speaks not of the long night at the Cape’s turn
nor of those that would mourn his passing.
Instead, the mariner wrote of the frailty
of pitch and mahogany – before discarding
that precious gift to begin again with words
for those sent high into the rigging
in search of the distant shore.
In rhythm with the sea, he wrote
of his fear of footmarks in the sands
and of the solace of burials at home and sea.
He wrote of the calm before the great storm;
of strange lights in the southern skies
and of the uncertain passage of travellers
that confront seas that waken in the dark of night.
All that and more he wrote:
words that might have withstood any test
but rejection – in the end, the sea took it all
in an act of preservation.

5.
On a far-flung coast in Western Australia,
a raging storm from beyond the Cape
wrests another great ship from its hiding place.
The vessel has no name carved on it
fore or aft – and no mast that a fresh sail,
filled with wind, might again take it
to another shore. Though timber and iron
last the vigil for a time,
the voices that called out to the mariner
linger there on that shore
with an improper burial.
It takes a full decade for a patient sea
to bare its plunder, but only an instant
for it to change its mind for the morning.

6.
At low tide on the new day, descendants
from the Old World discover the pieces
of broken pottery that the storm has left behind.
Some wake innocently in the ruins, having spent
that wild night copulating on the shore.  
Others, with fresh paper and instruments
in their hands, search until nightfall
for the great ship that still plies its trade
of war and conquest from beneath the sands.
None find what they seek, though later
some might ***** a stone monument
on the site that others, four centuries earlier,
would have found suitable for a light-house –
if they had foreseen that lonely place
where the shards always flee
with the rising tide of a fresh sea.

— The End —