Calcutta, seen



Somewhere in a city
Half a goddess unattended sits,
An early coat of crimson drying
Carelessly on Her clay-skin,
While on a wall, unintended,
Shines a sickle of crimson same:
A relic from a time of revolution,
Of ideals, of passions now dimmed.
A living picture of futility;
Of a quaint, anochronistic Beauty.

Somewhere in a city
Stands a grotesque juxtaposition:
A monument of yore,
With triumphant arches
And phallic columns of vanity
Piercing the sky with unabashed gore -
Surrounded by a wretchedness
Of wires and human dregs:
A fallen lion surrounded by a murder of crows.

Of the many wonders unseen,
In a city that lies dead as a corpse
With buzzing bees and maggots unclean,
Only a few have I known.
But every time, in liquid-neon nights,
When I venture out to my Muse:
A host of ugly surprises awaits me
As She reveals Her casual truths.

About this poem

A friend sent me an extremely thought-provoking street scene of an unfinished idol of Devi before a backdrop of Marxist iconography. Incidentally, both were in stunning red. I was immediately thrown into a trance about anachronism, piquant oddities and accidental beauty/irony that exist across so many elements of my city, Calcutta. And about how Calcutta never fails to inspire, darkly perhaps, but inspire nonetheless.

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Written on November 03, 2022

Submitted by anubratomusic on November 03, 2022

Modified by anubratomusic on April 04, 2023

50 sec read
119

Quick analysis:

Scheme Abxxxxcxaa Acdxadbxx exexxxax
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 854
Words 169
Stanzas 3
Stanza Lengths 10, 9, 8

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    "Calcutta, seen" Poetry.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 1 May 2024. <https://www.poetry.com/poem/141800/calcutta,-seen>.

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