My Failing Eye
Debsruti Basu
Debsruti Basu
There is a manner
in which things shape up,
inside my head.
Like well-paved roads,
leading to fallen houses.
I know all the stories.
I remember them with the precision
of how they began —
how each eyelash dropped a lie,
or a truth, combining the two.
And I have my endings,
like curtains that were once lace —
holding up the window,
like a body of its own.
My hands lie folded,
on my sterile chest.
With no children to feed,
neither to own,
in which things shape up,
inside my head.
Like well-paved roads,
leading to fallen houses.
I know all the stories.
I remember them with the precision
of how they began —
how each eyelash dropped a lie,
or a truth, combining the two.
And I have my endings,
like curtains that were once lace —
holding up the window,
like a body of its own.
My hands lie folded,
on my sterile chest.
With no children to feed,
neither to own,
I sleep like an old nostalgia shop.
But you, you remember to leave this city —
leave these walls,
this village, nameless.
For when the shutter finally falls down,
don’t see your face,
for sale —
crumbling within.
But you, you remember to leave this city —
leave these walls,
this village, nameless.
For when the shutter finally falls down,
don’t see your face,
for sale —
crumbling within.
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