Trinidad Charlie and Other Poems
By Kapil Kachru
Shades of Movement I
In the beginning:
opinionated middle-aged techno yuppie
in upscale old city tourist trap peddling
assorted Asian curiosities, pronouncing
judgment on artistic achievement with
deliberate delicate gestures, while he’s
at it, fragile self-indulgent fingers fashion
miniature porcelain statues of himself
& place them on exotically overpriced
glass shelves, shapeless elastic shadows
leap elaborate across cold marble floor
I remember when apartment hunting
was fun in this city, he says with bitter
backlit syllables. Hope Quebec secedes
from Canada soon
in solitude &
weed grass, a pearl
tirelessly hides &
gathers moon beams
The Last Time
I raised my voice in song,
in a temple,
about eighty years ago –
A light-headed breeze
floated through the courtyard
bearing the delicate intoxication of blossoming hydrangea.
The last time
Silk banners fluttered from painted rafters,
bending and folding calligraphy for the fun of it.
Walls and windows basked in the soft red shade
of rice paper lanterns.
I listened in to the noisy gossip
of brown eared bulbuls.
Fireflies flickered in my bronze face.
The last time
Heaven bestowed ten thousand
strategic bombs on our sleepy heads.
Bright and early the next morning
an excruciating symphony shredded the air.
It took many bodies to feed the hungry flames.
American sailors found me on my side,
mostly unharmed, covered in soot and wreckage.
The last time
They shipped me straight to Liberty’s shore,
where bells still chimed its virtues.
And twice on weekends.
I’ve been sitting around silently ever since
in the public parks of this prudish city.
Troubled by its tradition of dumping perfectly good tea.
The last time
Flamboyant as an alien acrobat, a tree bends backwards
to caress the ornamental dragons on my crown
with trembling wooden tentacles.
Anxious by nature,
light leaves earlier than usual, without saying goodbye.
An awkward guest, always eager to be somewhere else.
The last time.
Trinidad Charlie
Navel-gazing summer sky makes promises
it doesn’t plan to keep. Too distant to care,
too vain to admit it’s too busy admiring its
reflection in the shallow glimmer of a glassy bay,
while you’re being entertained by a bearded face
that’s everywhere in St. John on an iconic bottle
of pepper sauce. The best you’ve tasted & you’ve
tasted your share in your short time. I was named
after my father, he says, in an earthy tone,
without romance or regret. Europe’s only halfway,
my old man carried that name clear across
the world. Took the high road out of Bihar,
rolled into Trini on a bullock cart, with a gleam
in his eye & a song in his heart. A half Spanish lady,
half Native, all sunshine, smiled on him, brought him
wine, tapped his tune out with her Venezuelan feet
& laughed, like trickling water. The rest is family history,
frayed & faded, not forgotten. Be right back, Charlie says,
beaming a smile bright as a flashlight in a dusky grove.
Anything goes in the salty stickiness of island nights –
crickets chirp up storms, tree frogs croak their throats out,
seeking soul mates willing to listen. We’ve got stories & songs
from days of old when rum was sold in wooden casks
by the imperial gallon, & long before. You just heard one,
earlier, about a Carib elder who took his canoe
out for a paddle after dinner in the moonlit wash
of a nearby cove. Gently he paddled, back in 1493
& paddled some more. Stopped some distance
from shore to smoke his pipe. Before he pressed carved
wood to his chiseled lips, gloom spread over him –
deeper than any dark he’d known, moon ensnared in its
arrogant grip. He shivered. His tongue failed to recognize
the terror that invaded eyes. His hand shook. The pipe fell.
A three-masted caravela redonda on its second voyage
to the New World towered over him. Below deck,
Columbus scribbled piously in his leather book,
elated at being the first European to cast colonial eyes
on this abundant land, which reminded him of
eleven thousand virgins. Strictly for saintly reasons,
of course. The bearded face of pepper sauce,
bottled with love in St. John, doesn’t care to comment.
His silence speaks spicy volumes. Charles Dayal Singh
returns with a tray of bright bowls. Best not dwell
on it, he says, handing you a salad of fresh picked
mangoes & cucumbers from his garden,
it ruins the flavor.
Born in Lucknow. Based in Boston. Kapil’s poems and stories have appeared in journals, magazines and anthologies in India, Japan, The Netherlands, UK and the US. Including Inverse Journal, La Piccioletta Barca, NOON: journal of the short poem, The Bangalore Review and The Bombay Literary Magazine. ‘Negligible Inertia’, his debut collection of poems was published by Writers Workshop, India.
What do a pearl, a bell and a dropped pipe tell us about colonial violence? Three poems from Kapil Kachru.