Mascara Literary Review

Issue Six -November 2009

Dilip Chitre

 

Dilip Chitre n 1938 in Baroda, India. Studied in Mumbai. After graduating in 1959, taught English for three years in Ethiopia, returning to Mumbai in 1963, worked as a journalist, columnist, commentator, editor. Was Fellow of the International Writing Program, University of Iowa, Iowa City, USA from 1975 to 1977, Back in India, made films, painted, roamed around. Now live in Pune, Maharashtra for the last 25 years. Published 30 books in all, 5 in German translation, Won many prizes, honours, and awards. Travelled all over Europe, parts of Asia, and Africa.

 

The Ninth Breakfast: Astrological Forecast

 

Sometimes a mere sausage portends,

Waiter, the coming shadow

Of Saturn. Sad days begin

Insignificantly. But sinister days

Foretell their ways. The innocent sausage in one’s plate

Grows into a cobra. And one knows

That the tables have begun

To turn.

On a Saturday you never

Get horseshoes for breakfast.

But a severe exhortation

In the morning’s editorial

On the duties of a citizen.

Here, where the cows are sacred,

And pigs taboo, a starving mob

Glares at your subversive sausage

Whose shape, moreover, is an implicit

Insult to Shiva’s phallus,

And you choke because you know

One man

Is another man’s breakfast.

 

No thanks. I’ll only have tea and toast.

 

 

 

Absence from Myself

 

I am emptying my shelves and my drawers

I cannot cope with their contents

Any longer. They connect with a past

That hardly seems mine though known to me.

The shelves contain books, of course,

And some of them go a long way

Into a memory not exactly my own

Where my treacherous roots lie

Into humanity's favourite myths.

 

The drawers contain documents, notes,

Unfinished manuscripts, faded photographs,

Letters, memorabilia, and possessions

That could be called mere fetishes.

Alternatively, one could call it heritage.

My father's dead and my only son died too

Within just a short span separating them

And I would be someone sandwiched

Between them---a piece of living history

Between two dead ends.

 

I am the one that has endured and survived

Two ends of history and the emptiness

Of shelves and drawers and largely

Unwritten books, abandoned poems,

Unfinished paintings, unrealised films,

Spaces more empty than filled,

Occupied and left.

 

Spaces, spaces, spaces.

Time leaves no detail untouched

And time takes all details away.

My ancestor's gone and so is my successor.

 

That leaves me no space but

Here and now, no room to negotiate,

Not even an edge to fall off from.

I am exquisitely here and now

And where I never before was

Nor ever will be.

Moreover, this is not an end.

 

 

 

 

From Moscow To Leningrad (1980 )

 

From Moscow to Leningrad

I was travelling through a three-dimensional notebook

The notebook had mile after mile of snow

The notebook had railway tracks

Close to my chest there was a broken

Anthill the size of a woman

 

Close to my chest were eighteen she-cobras

Close to my chest was powdered turmeric

My body flung northwards

Pointed to the Pole

 

Whose sins were washed out by that journey

Whose wounds bled away in that journey

There were characters written in the notebook

Spreading like fire through the snow

In the shape of a spark.

 

 

Underneath the Chandeliers Hung by Stalin

 

Underneath the chandeliers hung by Stalin

People swarm to buy bread

And at a distance stand the churches of Christ

Detached and compassionate

 

Underneath this Russian snow there could be

Several flowering plants of poetry

Countless thorny solitudes

The bones of former citizens

 

 

On the Way to Petrograd/Leningrad

(---for Irina )

 

Time turns to ice

Boots fall into a vanishing line

The grief of black living eyes

Lies hidden in the groin

Ointment on a tender spot

Graft on an alien branch

In the closed car of a train

Disoriented copulation

The ice of coals shovelled into

A couple of hours of intimacy

The rail track is refreshed by

Wheels speeding over it

From Moscow to Leningrad

 

You commit adultery and it’s a torture

And this Express goes

Right up to Finland

Towards the land of White Nights

 

The tall ghost of Peter the Great

The solid buildings of the navy

The palaces, the squares, the canals,

The innocent eyes of Mandelstam

Pushkin’s love affair

Lenin’s speech

Dostoevsky’s vigil in terror

And the European masterpieces

In the Hermitage

Before the Revolution and after

All this is eternal

The Great War and the great peace

 

The pleading breasts

Of a starved woman

Her thighs gone awry

Vodka dripping over her shoulders and body

And as a frightened sparrow hits a wall in its search for a window in the dark

Her breath enters my nostrils and my mouth as she gasps for air

I do not dare to write a poem

On all this

Our own relatives will become the angels of death

To exile us into Siberia