Debasis Mukhopadhyay lives and writes in Montreal, Canada. He has a PhD in literary studies from Université Laval, Quebec and poems published in several magazines in the USA & UK including Yellow Chair Review, Thirteen Myna Birds, Of/With,Silver Birch Press, The Bitchin’ Kitsch, Foliate Oak, Eunoia Review, Snapping Twig, Fragments of Chiaroscuro, Words Surfacing, The Curly Mind, I am not a silent poet, With Painted Words. Follow him at https://debasismukhopadhyay.wordpress.com/ or @dbasis_m on Twitter. Delirium To recall the rustling cracks When on the immaculate snow Her eyes are burning down Lie To foretell a lie My sweet name To attend prayer with a white narcissus in hand Door And all day you are sad Glare around the neck Sighs slam the door Unthinking How old have I become So quiet so bright so sold out so devoured by languor I have forgotten the songs & wings That yesterdays root out unthinking from the needle Now I will wait wanting to tell you about it And you may not know I gave you my hands Waiting town Keeping my head down, I am waiting for you. No beaky words, no breath of oleander that I can shape into the space of my sun-filled cubicle. Inside Alhambra, I see nothing but a bird with no shadows of its timeless wings made of glass. I am fluttering downward inside a waiting town. If you come, talk about children, cut roses, waxy ermines, and perhaps, about the hands that have changed waiting all these years. They once were my root. Can you touch me to serve the moment swarming now in my veins? No stage, footlights are the only solace.
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