Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Leaving Yuba City


    Prev Next



      For Abhay, Anand and Murthy,

      who bring poetry into my life each day

      I wish to thank the following individuals for their encouragement of my work:

      Martha Levin, marvelous editor, delightful friend

      Sandra Dijkstra, the best of agents and readers

      Phil Levine, poet and teacher extraordinaire,

      and

      Gurumayi, light of lights

      Parts of this manuscript won a Pushcart Prize and an Allen Ginsberg Prize.

      Grateful acknowledgment is made to the editors of the journals and anthologies in which some of the poems originally appeared.

      The author wishes to thank the Gerbode Foundation and the Santa Clara Arts Council for awards that helped make this book possible.

      Contents

      How I Became a Writer

      The Nishi

      GROWING UP IN DARJEELING

      The Walk

      The Geography Lesson

      The Infirmary

      Learning to Dance

      Going Home Day

      The First Time

      Blackout

      RAJASTHANI

      Two Women Outside a Circus, Pushkar

      Tiger Mash Ritual

      Villagers Visiting Jodhpur Enjoy Iced Sweets

      At the Sati Temple, Bikaner

      THE BABIES: I

      THE BABIES: II

      INDIAN MINIATURES

      The Maimed Dancing Men

      After Death: A Landscape

      The Bee-Keeper Discusses His Charges

      The River

      The World Tree

      Arjun

      Cutting the Sun

      INDIGO

      TRAIN

      MOVING PICTURES

      The Rat Trap

      To Mrinal Sen, on Seeing Bhuvan Shome

      The Tea Boy

      I, Manju

      The Makers of Chili Paste

      The Widow at Dawn

      Storm at Point Sur

      The Lost Love Words

      VIA ROMANA

      The Drive

      The Tourists

      Outside Pisa

      Termini

      The Alley of Flowers

      Skin

      YUBA CITY POEMS

      The Founding of Yuba City

      Yuba City Wedding

      The Brides Come to Yuba City

      Yuba City School

      Leaving Yuba City

      Woman with Kite

      Indian Movie, New Jersey

      How I Became a Writer

      I peel off the sweaty dank of dawn bedclothes.

      tiptoe to the door, soft, soft,

      so the gorilla with iron fingers that waits

      in the next room won’t hear me.

      Sidle out. Then I’m

      running, but lightly, still on my toes.

      glancing back until I reach

      the kitchen, thin cement strip where mother

      sits at her steel bonti slicing bitter gourd

      into exact circles for lunch. She has bathed already

      and her damp hair covers her back

      like smoke, the wisped ends

      curling a little. She smiles and hands me

      chalk. Under the grease-dimmed bulb

      her shadow dips toward me, velvets

      the bare ground. “Write shosha” she says

      and shows me a cucumber, green light

      sliding off its skin. “Write mulo.” Now

      a daikon radish, white and gnarled, sprouting little hairs

      as on an old lady’s chin. I make shapes

      on the cement. It’s hard.

      The tight circles of the lo

      cramp up my fingers. Around us the household sleeps,

      limbs gathered in, snout buried in stiff fur,

      but restless, dreaming of onslaught.

      Rasp of a snore, a cough,

      the almost-mute fall of a pillow kicked away.

      “Write mo-cha” Her cool fingers

      petal over mine like the layered red plantain flower

      we are writing. “Curl the mo like this.” Her voice

      pours into me like syrup of palm,

      amber, unbroken. On the street, sudden

      angry yells. Perhaps a fish-seller or a neighbor

      servant. Behind us, a clatter.

      Her hand stiffens over mine, stops.

      We’re both listening for that heavy stumble,

      metallic hiss of pee against toilet pan, that shout

      arcing through the house like a rock, her name. But

      it’s only the mynah, beating black wings against the ribs

      of the cage, crying Krishna, Krishna.

      We suck in

      the safe air, we’re smiling, I’ve completed the cha

      which hangs from its stem, perfect, ripe

      as a summer mango. She pulls me to her,

      hugs me. Her arms like river water, her throat

      smelling of sandalwood. Her skin

      like light, so lovely I almost do not see

      the bruise

      spreading its yellow over the bone. “That’s

      wonderful,” she breathes into my hair

      as the sun steps over the sill

      and turns the room to rainbow. And I, my heart

      a magenta balloon thrown up

      into the sky, away

      from iron fisted gorillas, from the stench of piss,

      I know I’m going to be

      the best, the happiest writer in the world.

      Note

      bonti: curved steel blade attached to a piece of wood. It is placed on the floor and used to cut vegetables, fish, etc.

      Krishna: The name of a Hindu deity symbolizing love. Pet birds are often taught to repeat the names of gods in the belief that it will bring luck to the household.

      The Nishi

      I

      Sometimes I wake up suddenly with the blood hammering in my chest and hear it, a voice I can’t quite place, deep inside the tunnel of my ear, tiny, calling my name, pulling out the syllables like threads of spun-sugar, Chit-ra, Chit-ra.

      II

      When I was very little, my mother used to sing me to sleep. Or tell me stories. A jewel was stitched to the end of each, and when her voice reached that place, it took on a shivering, like moonlit water.

      III

      Some nights I woke to hear her through the thin bedroom wall. Not tonight, please, not tonight. Shuffles, thuds, panting, then a sharp cry, like a caught bird’s. I would burrow into the pillow that smelled of stale lint and hair oil, squinch shut my eyes so red slashes appeared, hold my breath till all I heard was the roaring in my ears.

      IV

      After father left her she rarely spoke above a whisper. Go to the closet under the stairs, she would say, very soft. I don’t want to see your face. Her voice was a black well. If I fell into it, I would never find my way out. So the closet, with its dry, raspy sounds, a light papery feel like fingers brushing against my leg, making me pee in my pants.

      V

      What do you do when the dark presses against your mouth, a huge clammy hand to stop your crying? What do you do when the voice has filled the insides of your skull like a soaked sponge?

      VI

      Late at night she would come and get me, pick up my dazed body and hug me to her, pee and all. I’m sorry, baby, so sorry, so sorry. Feather kisses down the tracks of dried tears. But perhaps I am dreaming this. Even in the dream she doesn’t say This won’t ever happen again.

      VII

      I will never have children. Because I have no dark closets in my house, because I don’t sing, because I cannot remember any of my mother’s stories. Except one.

      VIII

      That night she took out the harmonium, the first time since father left. It was cove
    red in cobwebs, but she didn’t dust them away. They clung to her fingers as she played. She let me stay and listen. Outside, a storm. When the thunder came, she let me hide my face in her lap. She was singing love songs. She sang for hours, till her voice cracked. Then she told me the tale of the Nishi. She held me till I slept, and when she put me to bed, she locked me in. It was an act of kindness, I think, so I would not be the first to discover her body hanging from the ceiling of the bedroom that was now hers alone.

      IX

      The Nishi, said my mother, are the spirits of those who die violent deaths. They come to you at night and call your name in the voice you love most. But you must never answer them, for if you do, they suck away your soul.

      X

      Sometimes I wake up, blood hammering, hear it, a voice, deep inside a tunnel, tiny, pulling out the syllables, Chit-ra, Chit-ra. I squinch shut my eyes and answer, calling her back, wanting to be taken. But when I open them I am still here, webbed in by the sound of her name, its unbearable sweetness, its unbreakable threads of spun-sugar.

      Growing Up in Darjeeling

      Five Poems

      The Walk

      The Geography Lesson

      The Infirmary

      Learning to Dance

      Going Home Day

      The Walk

      Each Sunday evening the nuns took us

      for a walk. We climbed carefully

      in our patent-leather shoes up hillsides looped

      with trails the color of earthworms. Below,

      the school fell away, the sad green roofs

      of the dormitories, the angled classrooms,

      the refectory where we learned to cut

      buttered bread into polite squares,

      to eat bland stews and puddings. The sharp

      metallic thrust of the church spire, small, then smaller,

      and around it the town: bazaar, post office, the scab

      coated donkeys. Straggle of huts

      with hesitant woodfires in the yards. All

      at a respectful distance, like the local children we passed,

      tattered pants and swollen chilblained fingers

      color of the torn sky, color of the Sacred Heart

      in the painting of Jesus that hung above our beds

      with his chest open.

      We were trained not to talk to them,

      runny-nosed kids with who-knew-what diseases, not even

      to wave back, and of course it was improper

      to stare. The nuns walked so fast,

      already we were passing the plantation, the shrubs

      lined up neatly, the thick glossy green

      giving out a faint wild odor like our bodies

      in bed after lights-out. Passing the pickers,

      hill women with branch-scarred arms, bent

      under huge baskets strapped to shoulder and head.

      the cords in their thin necks

      pulling like wires. Back at school

      though Sister Dolores cracked the refectory ruler

      down on our knuckles, we could not drink

      our tea. It tasted salty as the bitten inside

      of the mouth, its brown like the women’s necks,

      that same tense color.

      But now we walk quicker because

      it is drizzling. Drops fall on us from pipul leaves

      shaped like eyes. We pull on

      our grey rainhoods and step in time,

      soldiers of Christ squelching through vales

      of mud. We are singing, as always on walks,

      the nuns leading us with choir-boy voices.

      O Kindly Light, and then a song

      about the Emerald Isle. Ireland, where they grew up,

      these two Sisters not much older

      than us. Mountain fog thickens like a cataract

      over the sun’s pale eye, it is stumbling-dark,

      we must take a shortcut

      through the upper town. The nuns

      motion us, faster, faster, an oval blur of hands

      in long black sleeves.

      Honeysuckle over a gate, lanterns

      in front windows. In one, a woman in a blue sari

      holds a baby, his fuzzy backlit head

      against the curve of her shoulder. Smell of food

      in the air, real food, onion pakoras, like our mothers

      once made. Rain in our eyes, our mouths. Salt, salt.

      A sudden streetlamp lights the nuns’ faces, damp,

      splotched with red like frostbitten

      camellias. It prickles the backs of our throats.

      The woman watches, wonder-eyed, as we pass

      in our wet, determined shoes, singing

      Beautiful Killarney, a long line of girls, all of us

      so far from home.

      The Geography Lesson

      Look, says Sister Seraphina. here is

      the earth. And holds up, by its base, the metal globe

      dented from that time when Ratna, not looking.

      knocked it off its stand and was sent

      to Mother Superior. And here

      the axis on which it revolves, tilted

      around the sun. Like this, the globe a blur now.

      land and water sloshed

      into one muddy grey with the thick jab

      of her finger.

      Ratna returned to class with weal-streaked

      palms, the left one bleeding slightly. She held it curled

      in her lap so it wouldn’t

      stain her uniform as she wrote out,

      one hundred times, I will not damage

      school property again.

      Now each girl sits with her silent laced shoes

      flat on the classroom floor. I grip

      my chair-edge. I know, were it not for the Grace

      of the Holy Ghost, we would all

      be swept off this madly spinning world

      into perdition. Sometimes I feel it

      at morning mass, six a.m. and the ground

      under my knees sliding away, hot press

      of air on the eardrum and the blue sleeves

      of the Virgin opening

      into tunnels.

      Ratna didn’t cry, so Sister Seraphina

      pinned to her chest a placard that said,

      in large black letters, WICKED. She

      was to wear it till she repented, and no one

      could speak to her.

      This is the way the moon

      travels around the earth, Sister

      says, her fist circling the globe, solid,

      tight-knuckled, pink nails

      clipped back to the skin. I know

      the moon, dense stone

      suspended in the sky’s chest,

      which makes flood and madness happen and has

      no light of its own. As our heathen souls

      unless redeemed by Christ’s blood.

      That night in the moon-flecked dormitory

      we woke to Ratna thrashing around in bed,

      calling for Sultan, her dog back home. She

      would not quiet when told,

      and when the night nun tried

      to give her water, she knocked the glass

      away with a swollen hand. All

      over that floor, shards, glittering

      like broken eyes, and against the bed-rail

      the flailing sound of her bones. Until they took her

      somewhere downstairs.

      On this chart, points Sister, you see

      the major planets of the Solar System.

      Copy them carefully into your notebooks. Smudges,

      and you’ll do them over. I outline

      red Mars, ringed Saturn, the far cold gleam

      of Uranus, their perfect, captive turning

      around a blank center which flames out

      like the face of God in dreams. I will my hand

      not to shake. We never saw Ratna again, and knew

      not to ask.

      Tomorrow we will be tested

      on the various properties of
    the heavenly bodies,

      their distance, in light years, from the sun.

      The Infirmary

      I

      I’d seen it only in daylight, once each month

      when we were sent down

      to be dosed with Enos Salts. Regularity,

      the Sisters said, was the root of health.

      A nun in front and one behind, we filed

      across the compound to the low brown building

      crouched among jhau trees. And at the door, waiting,

      Sister Mary Lourdes, her habit

      stiff as pages in a new book, her hard white hands

      smelling of carbolic soap.

      Mixed with warm water, the Enos

      turned a pale yellow, bitter and bubbly,

      burning the nose. Like champagne, said Yvonne

      whose parents were Goan Christians

      and drank. Cheers, dears, she’d say,

      the plastic infirmary tumbler raised, breasts thrust out,

      one eyebrow lifted, a black-haired

      Marilyn Monroe, while we Hindu girls

      from bland teetotalling families

      watched open-mouthed. Until the day

      Sister caught her at it. And made her bend over

      and whacked the backs of her thighs

      till the ruler left strips of raised flesh.

      We watched the silent light

      glint on her Bride of Christ wedding band

      each time she slashed the air.

      II

      So it was strange to come to it in dark, alone,

      wrapped in a blanket that prickled my skin.

      The night nun’s name wavered in my brain

      like a flame in wind. Her hands

      held me too tightly, made me stumble. Or was it

      the rippling shift of ground? The air was fire,

      then ice, I could not swallow, and were those stars

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026