Women

by Samartha Vashishtha



I saw them sane at the edges of hysteria –

shouting; picking their slain sons

from the feet of the tyrant.


From directions that one never knows

marching unto the horizons

massive armies pass their worrying eyes.


A third of history belongs to them.

All of rumour.

A dusty feather in the crown of a mighty throne.


A a shiny day, a husband leaves.

Sons that go come back dressed as monks.

A woman longs for her five hours of sleep.


In the dead of the night, my mother sobs.

Drooping, she keeps on telling me tales.

A woman melting in my arms glues my limbs.


A thousand years wait in the offing.

Of women that left, no traces remain.

A woman has nowhere to go.


Samartha Vashishtha



Note: This poem first appeared in the Deccan Herald.




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