ISSUE 51 | Poetry | April 2022

‘Strings’ and other poems

Rochelle Potkar

Editor’s Note

In Sommerset Maugham’s Human Bondage the young Phillip one day musters courage to ask Monsieur Foinet if he truly has the talent to continue painting. The master generously studies Phillip’s sketches. Eventually Foinet says, “You will never be anything but mediocre.” However, he rushes to assure the young boy that the advice is well-meant: “I would give all I have in the world if someone had given me that advice when I was your age.”

Rochelle Potkar’s ‘Strings’ examines, among other things, the crushing realization of an absence of greatness. Histories, dysfunctional families and patriarchal expectations add their weight to already burdened characters. However, Potkar’s poems appear to structurally break out of these oppressions. The poems move around the page in interesting ways; the lines try to overcome the constraints of their own meanings. This form appears to echo the characters trying to escape their fates. This tug of war, between semantics and structures lends a poignant energy to Potkar’s pieces. It is entirely apt that one of them should be called ‘Art Installation’.

—Pervin Saket
The Bombay Literary Magazine

Art Installation

Six walls of a traditional house,

four for patriarchism.

And old men who hate women of confidence,

English speaking – fast and cunning,

who go to the bank, the airport,

making bouquets from spades, sugar from shards,

holding golden bars of golden cages

clanging steel cymbals not utensils

blue & white crockery down the aisles

thunder queens — quietening rooms without words.

When the crockery cupboard empties,

the modern man erects a door

 between the floors.

 Conjecture of partition.

 Borders of glacial gasps.

 New crockery fills in.

The old man now seethes over a bitter future

stopping his tongue

 as the door sways with no latches or bolts

his grandchildren returning to their cacophonous play dough,

under filaments of silence.

As the door hinges

to the wind,

modern men and women

 return to their battles,

 upturning Sisyphean stones

 stacked all around them

 from centuries,

 brim after 

 brim.

Strings

The only thing Shalom remembered with his last breath,

was his violin stolen at a Berlin concert.

Stradivari’s 960 violins – one surviving the ocean-blues

well-photographed.

A Stradivarius located in Chor Bazaar, shor bazaar

legend states if you lose anything –

like Queen Victoria sailing to Bombay,

you will… find it there.

Son Solomon makes a trip to Mumbai’s middlemen.

But the violin is gone.

A lady has taken off, just minutes ago…

Solomon finds her address. Dhobi Talao.

Mrs. Dias’ husband Frederick

played the violin when young,

before his father forced him into the 9-5’s.

 unburnt talent 

 burning bodies

Frederick bought a plane ticket

to watch Shalom.

It could have been him

 thirty-five years ago

when he entered the green room,

 downplaying the fiddle to the confines of his jacket.

Hollow wooden body resting between chin and chest

a scar ensconced suture-like across his neck

to the empty cough of lung and rib

with nothing to buy medicines,

Mrs. Dias sells old junk.

The non-artist son of a virtuoso understands this:

core of lost dreams, non-inheritance of genes, disapproved childhood

while his sister Greta is the maestro, protégé.

Solomon keeps the violin back to Frederick’s chest.

When Greta hears of it, she yells

You don’t understand a thing

about an artist’s life…While the non-artist

son wonders

if she understands

 a thing

 about life.

Author | Rochelle Potkar

Author Photo

Fictionist | Poet | Critic | Curator | Editor | Translator | Screenwriter

Widely-anthologized and award-winning, Rochelle Potkar is the author of three books of poetry and a story collection Bombay Hangovers. Her poetry film Skirt features on Shonda Rhimes’ Shondaland.