Issue 2.7
July and August 2024
Devon Brock
Gypsum
Gypsum
When daybreak spades its slurry on the wall,
a perfection in gypsum quickens in my eye
and I ask myself if god labors in the trades,
and if there is delight in what would seem
a good day’s work: an arabesque, a dance
swayed by what hardens far too soon.
Practiced in the art of the trowel, I imagine
a god fixed on its work, the wide arcs
of it, the crusted wrists, the muscled
strokes like rivers cut through on a plain
and gentle slope, knowing the end must be
a sheen with neither pit nor crease.
And when daybreak spades its slurry on the wall
I know I have been prepared for this—a life
upon which death would smear its tints
like a child or a Jackson Pollock. And if not that,
then the preferred hues of the day—the neutrals,
mute and hung with what might seem bucolic.
While I must admit that the stone, the gypsum
is ground elsewhere, I must also admit
that it is I who will smooth what I’ve come to
regard as a wall, and it is I who must press
the keys squarely into the laths nailed such
that they may at long last bear me up.
Shamik Banerjee
The Construction Labourers
The Construction Labourers
Before the newborn sun climbs to the crest
Of this numbed earth and night receives relief,
Their morning prayers and rituals are complete.
Their dress code's just a miry inner vest,
Pied loincloths, plus, at times, a handkerchief
Worn on the head to push the stinging heat
When they work on our terrace during noon.
Three rangy chaps, in this long month of June,
Are hired to renovate our second floor.
Sweat glistens on their skin as if fresh varnish
Spread on a wooden deck reflects its shine.
For lunch, they have white rice with water poured
On it, some fries; they like it plain, ungarnished.
And then, a flask of lemon tea is fine
To keep the flow of zing alive in them
Until it's time to leave at 5 p.m.
One in this group appears to be too young;
I wonder if he ever thinks of school.
The rest are middle-aged, so it seems.
While chewing betel, in an eastern tongue,
They talk about their village, little pool,
And farms. Their eyes display enormous dreams.
Three rawboned men far from their native place,
A hue of hope and longing on each face.
Shamik Banerjee
Scenes in May
Scenes in May
Prostrated stray dogs of these lanes
Look half-deceased; dust on the ground
@tabEnvelops them from gut to chest.
@tabAnd when the noon sun does its best,
They find respite in open drains,
As water's nowhere to be found.
Just past a field that's not too far
And once a home to crocuses,
@tabA chockablock, old market street
@tab(With fly-stormed briskets parched by heat)
Stinks up the air. The buyers are
Like vultures flocked near carcasses.
By rail tracks, homeless people sleep
Beside hard beds of hot granite.
@tabUnclad and scorched from feet to hands
@tabLike corpses on cremation lands,
They dwell with no relief to keep
Each white-hot day and foodless night.
DW Baker
Vascular
Vascular
blue like currents
red like blood
lattice network
one by one
blue like death screen
red like flash
4D lenses
looking glass
blue like glowing
red like hot
needle sewing
neon spots
blue like oceans
red like Mars
interstellar
carbon scars
blue like piercing
red like pain
grieving heartland
maxed out brain
blue like twelve bars
red like beat
tachycardic
Venus heat
DW Baker
Verdigris
Verdigris
gold like backlit
green like moss
molten statue
pour the dross
gold like five star
green like home
single sunlamp
heat-lapse bomb
gold like ancient
green like wild
strong force latent
inner child
gold like ages
green like spring
revolution
finds the king
gold like privilege
green like god
ever present
body song
gold like chosen
green like found
carbon life forms
in the ground
Jonathan Ukah
I Am a Hephzibah
I Am a Hephzibah
So thanksgiving is the foundation of worship,
a joyful noise, the celebration of glory;
but here is the valley of dry bones,
skull against skull, sinews against sinews,
and I cannot raise my voice beyond this sphere,
where darkness has slowly moved in,
stifled me to silence, struck me tame.
My praise cannot go to the grave
of flowers, waste and destruction,
the tomb of death, where there is nothing more
left to worship in the elevation of favour.
I dwell in the depths of sorrow and pain,
where thorns scratch my soft flesh,
and prickles abound in the vast void,
nothing green, so nothing grows,
except the march towards dust.
I feel the wide trenches in my heart,
yearning for fulfilment and delight.
Yet, I am thankful to have this hope
like a mustard seed seeping into my mouth;
each time, I want to curse my state
that gives no glory to my body,
those who, through flesh, invite fear.
So, I will arise like the rod of Aaron,
the dead and wooden staff of a man,
which blossoms after glory falls
like a tongue of flame from the sky,
and makes him the caretaker of his people.
The rod is fertile ground, flowers rising
flowers bringing forth fruit,
flowers producing seeds for eternity.
From this pit, I ascend towards Heaven
to become the delight of the Lord,
a Hephzibah, springing from desolation
to the throne of restoration
as my life of pain disappears like dew.