Seed of A Summer
In that season of heat,
After the New Year festival had
Pressed its face to the window
And watched us as we drank to the hilt
The brew of neem bud and flower,
The koel was wooing some comely
Female all afternoon (I joined it
With my raucous song),
I went to the mango market Where everything was a gradation Of green leaf and yellow sun, Where voices rise to a high Pitch in thirst, as if everyone was Singing an impatient raga To tardy monsoon rain, Haggling on the price of each, As if entire satisfaction depended On shelling out a penny less,
And came home with a dozen Of the finest, my fingers smelling Of pulp and juice, a slight tangy Taste of salt, of sweat. And you rose From late afternoon sleep (nothing Better can be done in that heat), Your eyes heavy, lips in that delicious Semi-pout, and reached out to The proffered bowl, and bit into one.
After many summers, I now remember This moment exactly as it happened then: How the yellow juice squirted down Your throat, down your chin, and over My white kurta as I reached out To take you; my tongue was colored Yellow, the nectar of distilled desire Spilt over our bodies like sheet lighting, And in between pauses as you tore The pulp from the seed, I tore it from Your mouth. And then emptied, silence.
I now hold that seed (the only thing remaining, The final residue of loving) in my sweaty hands.
My Poems
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