MORNING RITUAL
And so every morning, plucked jasmine, heavy incense
and
the lighting of copper lamps whetted our appetite
for
prayer. A sandalwood fragrance thickened.
Our
father spooled muslin wicks that licked up pools of oil,
touched
his palms and closed his eyes.
We
were young, and could not understand
why
we whirred slim incense rods round
the
statue of Ganesha. "One must pray everyday,"
he
said. Scorched by guilt, we nodded, pledged
our
mornings to this act.
She
watched us quietly, aloof and busy
with
house chores. When the session ceased,
she’d
pick her broom up, sweep away the ashes,
steal
jasmine from the gods and empty oil from the lamps.
Her
bracelets clinked, her broom strokes, brusque
with
rhythm, became ritual themselves.
She'd
give her final pocket penny to the pan-handlers
who’d
come at seasonal intervals, without a fuss.
We
often tried to coax her to join us,
but
she insisted, "I pray differently."
RURAL PORTRAIT
Soon
a ring of girls encircled me,
black
eyes poised to question who I was,
which
strange city could have fed a woman
with
the English tongue. The whys
and wheres
rolled
from their throats: guttural sounds that flowed
from
a lack of proper education.
What
reply could I have offered them?
A
blackboard with some chalk to show them joys
of
stringing words from a’s
and z’s? Their mothers
watched
me carefully from under a neem’s thick roof.
Tensing
silence broke quite suddenly
when
from a straw-glazed hut a new parent
lightly
stepped, a gurgling boy in her arms.