Kavita Ezekiel Mendonca was born
in Bombay to Prof. Nissim Ezekiel and Daisy Ezekiel. She attended Queen Mary’s
School, St. Xavier’s College, Bombay University and Oxford Brookes University,
U.K. She holds Bachelor’s and Masters’ Degrees in English, American Literature
and Education. Her career spanned over four decades in Indian colleges,
American International Schools and Canada, teaching English, French and
Spanish. She’s a published poet and has her poetry page at https://www.facebook.com/kemendoncapoetry. Kavita also
writes short fiction. Her work is strongly influenced by her father’s work. (The
late Nissim Ezekiel was an eminent poet, well-known in India and overseas).
My
Road
I’ll
dare to walk on
‘The
Road Not Taken’
Perhaps
it’s the one others have forsaken.
This
is the road that may lead nowhere
I’ll
still walk on without a care
But
if I should arrive at last
I
will have all my dreams surpassed.
If
I get lost, I’ll cry for help
Still
glad to have remained true to self.
And
crunch the leaves under my foot
Those
that haven’t yet turned to soot.
And
if perchance help does not come
I’ll
stop the walking and break into a run.
Haibun of the Able Seaman
It is incredible what a man will do when he wants to
return to his home in India, from a foreign land, especially when his
companions for three years had been Philosophy Poetry and Poverty, his lodging
an ‘attic with mice for friends’, that’s how he described it to me. Perhaps
that was a metaphor; his way of explaining cheap accommodation. I am inclined,
as always, to believe him. What irony to learn that this same man would win an
award for being a deck hand! It’s a true story I never tire of reading about…
certificate of ‘Able Seaman’ awarded to him, my poet father. A father with a
slender fame, delicate glasses that would blow into the waves of the ocean, at
the hint of the faintest breeze, and the thin wrists that made him always want
to wear a long- sleeved shirt, to cover them. By the longest stretch of my
imagination, I can’t picture him scrubbing the decks of the cargo ship,
carrying coal to Indochina. His companion, who was supposed to travel with him
would later change his mind, so he had to travel alone. He braved the elements
with that same determination that kept him abroad for four long years. Despite
the ‘three P’s’, his constant companions, (the philosophy and poetry, he didn’t
mind) the call of home becoming stronger than ever, he must find a way to
return. Perhaps the sea had a poetry of its own, made its own music, in the
sounds of the wind on the waters. His ocean journey would land him in his
beloved city, Bombay, to carve words into posterity.
Call of the homeland
Poems in wind, waves, water
The human spirit
Insight
Even
as an older woman
My
preferred color is still black
Matched
with the white blouse with the usual ruffles loved in youth,
I
plan to age, gracefully, though,
* “The best laid schemes o' mice an' men /
Gang aft a-gley.”
Determined
to enjoy a well-earned pension
Though
it may be small
Undecided
whether to spend it on shopping or mortgage.
I
shall sit on the patio when hit by cabin fever in winter
Dressed
in cap, mitts, boots, and scarf
Forgo
the favorite past time of a walk
For
fear of slipping on the deceptive black ice on the sidewalks.
In
summer I will admire the perennials
as
they miraculously return, each year
To
bloom once more.
I
will continue to invoke the poetic muse
Writing
poems about birds and fountains
I
may have written before,
Still
in a mellower vein now.
I
will walk up and down the house with slower gait
With
perhaps a stair lift to aid my climbing
To
the bedrooms upstairs.
Yet,
continuing to praise God for His many blessings
Praying
that the angry squirrel will bring only smiles
And
be blessed with a house full of cats.
‘Happiness
is a choice’, my wise father told me,
But
sometimes sadness will have to come
For
the sprightly steps you once were able to take,
Or
the quick reflexes with which you were able
to
flick a persistent wasp away.
Perhaps
if I ‘rev’ up my engines now
And
put more fuel into the passing years
I
can show myself how I intend to grow older
Dyeing
my hair to preserve the distant memory of youth,
I
can still make my presence felt in the classroom
Endearing
myself to the young ones, with both beauty and knowledge.
And,
oh yes, I should start writing my epitaph
For
my family and friends to remember me by,
And
commend me to posterity.
* “To a Mouse,” by Robert Burns: “The best laid schemes o' mice an' men / Gang aft a-gley.” Which means the best plans may not work out.
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