ISSUE A6 | Poetry | February 2016

Lost Rickshaws: A Poem

Mihir Chitre

Lost Rickshaws

She says nothing, and how.

The radio plays a dirge

for December. Then when walking

was going from verse to worse

in the hay of our years, she infiltrated

the moonlight in my beers. My toothpaste

wasted on her charcoal lips.

The things I could do were few

and the things I couldn’t fewer.

The drugged street lamps; the lost

rickshaws in their long slumber. Now

she extends herself like a theorem

to the trigonometry of our last strife.

The France in her head is long liberated.

How a yes can destroy your life.