ISSUE E2 | Poetry | May 2021

Death in February

Huzaifa Pandit

Once upon a routine death,

February snow wears a cold night

in its cataracted eyes, and sets out to meet

fellow occupants of fresh obituaries in stale newspapers.

Obituaries

That seek asylum from winter drought

in lost samovars of salted tea served with warm butter

at funerals of young militants to thirsty mourners.

Thirsty mourners

sit across each other in saffron tents

and lay bets on the average velocity of new guns

tested in old defense factories sewn on a frenetic metropolis.

They dust off

a dead militant’s arithmetic

books lying in sealed schoolbags

to find formulae for exact square area of elegies

cast by the hill-shrine on malkhah where pleas

tied on its latticed windows will be given a state burial.

They never agree on the circumferences of elegies

and so bargain a lump-sum settlement

of dinners over smelly kerosene evenings

and grainy news on BBC Urdu Radio. They hasten to sign

affidavits that declare on phone-in programs that the sorrow

of love was only a ruse, we were fated to suffer, and suffer our destiny.