Dear Fat
Dear Fat
You’re damn famous
And the whole town knows
about it,
You’re in every malls,
cafes, libraries and university buildings—
You’re not in every
organic shops, Saturday markets, organic section in Sobeys
& Supermarket,
and definitely not inside my refrigerator (I am bluffing)
I can’t imagine being
close to you,
You are even within me,
within this body;
I wonder what’s going on
with you these days,
Dear Fat
Why are you so concerned
about few people only?
Why do you live within the
skin and bones of few while there are plenty?
You love flesh, don’t you?
You like to chew it slowly
And take away the glory on
your own,
Not me.
I keep chewing you
And the fat in me kills
you.
Lonely
The street is lonely
The wind doesn’t stop
yelling
The trees shiver in cold
While people live within
their insulated homes
Lonely, lonely, lonely
The sky is absolute grey
The surroundings severely
pale
St. John River mute like a
shattered lover
While people live within
their insulated homes
Lonely, lonely, lonely
Downtown is empty
King’s Place wears
dejected look
Traffic lights blink in
pain
One by one
While people live within
their insulated homes
Lonely, lonely, lonely
This house is so peaceful
I don’t feel any cold
The winds keep swooshing
outside
While I live within this
insulated home
Lonely, lonely, lonely
Arun Budhathoki, also
known as Daniel Song, is a prominent voice in the area of young Nepalese Poetry
in English. He has published five books so far: Edge, The Lost Boys of
Kathmandu, Poems on Sikkim, Prisoner of an iPad: New Poems and Second In Love.
His works have been
published in MadSwirl, North East Review, Driftwood Bay, NNATAN and Dead Beats.
Second In Love is his first collection of short stories. Arun is currently
pursuing MPhil in Policy Studies at the University of New Brunswick,
Fredericton, Canada.
His official page: https://www.facebook.com/arunbudhathokiauthor
No comments:
Post a Comment