| Poems of Shamik
                Banerjeeby Shamik
                Banerjee
 To Mr.
                Biswas
 (first
                published by The Hooghly Review)
 
 Well, fine! Your throat's a factory of melodies
 Whose saccharin can give me long-term diabetes;
 You earned the sobriquet 'The Warbling Champion',
 And countless Grammy titles and awards you've won.
 Now, please come down to earth! Do not forget
                that
 You are my neighbour; plus, I hope you get that
 My study room's a foot away from your latrine
 (It's fetor and your hum: the causes for my
                spleen),
 So please abstain from thinking you're a Cardinal
 Or any songbird when you're in the urinal
 Lest me and other occupants go harum-scarum
 And make this law against you in a seated forum:
 If Mr. Biswas dares to quaver any song
 Again, he will be hog-tied, gagged, and hurled
                among
 The wild, where he can team up with the
                Chickadees
 And entertain a troop of hooting Chimpanzees.
 
 *~*~*~*~*~*
 
 The Devil's Best Plan
 
 (first
                published by Lighten Up Online)
 
 If there's one plot the devil's been successful
                at,
 It's storing half his vileness in an insect that
 Carries a fine-point needle which can burrow in
 Through any layer of furry pelts or human skin,
 With one objective only: to adeptly draw
 Life's sanguine drops like juice sucked through a
                paper straw,
 To turn our pleasant sleeptime (by its covert
                mission)
 Into a long and apoplectic clapping session.
 
 *~*~*~*~*~*
 
 The Fly
 
 (first
                published by The Hooghly Review)
 
 The puny, blackish, wingéd bull
 Kept daring me with overfull
 Aplomb within its turgid eyes
 While sitting on my bowl of rice,
 Then rubbed its hands as if the boss
 Of hooligans and planned to toss
 My peaceful supper time away,
 And fill me with intense dismay.
 So, then I thought to swat it flat,
 But did not have the knowledge that
 Its feelers were more active than
 The mere five senses of a man
 I missed. It flew. Hid in my hair,
 And God knows what amused it there;
 Annoyed my scalp for quite a while,
 Then flew off with a mocking smile.
 
 *~*~*~*~*~*
 
 The Sleeptime Torture
 
 (first
                published by The Hooghly Review)
 
 Please slow down, wife; there is no hurry.
 You must digest each grub you eat;
 Remember, this is chicken curry,
 And I don't want you to repeat
 That act which nearly ripped my brain
 By turning our quilt's flowery scent
 Into that of a sewer drain
 With your sound-muted bombardment.
 
 *~*~*~*~*~*
 
 A Photographer at Royal Indian Wedding
 
 (first
                published by The Hooghly Review)
 
 He stuck the camera's lens into
 The disheschicken, raita, rice.
 The guests, ingesting leisurely,
 Were taken by his great surprise.
 
 He got hold of the bride to click
 Some pictures of her dress in red,
 Gold chain, and shoes. He didn't spare
 Even the hairclip on her head.
 
 The day grows older. I'm afraid
 His passion may invoke a plight
 If he decides to photograph
 The wedded couple's long first night.
 
 *~*~*~*~*~*
 
 The Great Nighttime Problem
 
 (first
                published by Lighten Up Online)
 
 It's 2 a.m., and damn! The WiFi's dead
 No YouTube, Instagram or Spotify;
 This is the only moment that I dread
 
 Since I can't sleep with silence in my head,
 I need some voice to play on as I lie
 It's 2 a.m., and damn! The WiFi's dead,
 
 And now some loony thought will weave its thread
 Within my brain and leave me all awry
 This is the only moment that I dread;
 
 As patients go to pharmacies for med-
 icines, the Internet's my drug supply
 It's 2 a.m., and damn! The WiFi's dead;
 
 I planned to watch a movie, but instead,
 I'm staring at a wall as time goes by
 This is the only moment that I dread:
 
 I've had enough! I'm teaming up with Fred
 To teach a lesson to the IP guy
 It's 2 a.m., and damn! The WiFi's dead,
 This is the only moment that I dread.
 
 *~*~*~*~*~*
 
 My Cat Spies on a Hen
 
 My cat spies on a hen
 While crouching in his den,
 The shoebox by the door.
 
 What charm is in a chick
 That's not found in those thick
 Rugs we bought in galore
 
 For him to scratch and shred
 Or use them as his bed?
 Perhaps my cat is bored
 
 Of things now used and old,
 Just like me when I sold
 The French harpfull-ignored
 
 When Pa purchased a new
 One from the shop. So who
 Am I to underscore
 
 This change in my feline
 When I myself am fine
 With craving new hens more?
 
 *~*~*~*~*~*
 
 A Card for Mr. Whitten
 
 (first
                published by The Hooghly Review)
 
 Now that you have been mercilessly bitten
 By two unruly mongrels, Mister Whitten,
 I hope you've got the feel of actual pain
 That you'd imposed on Oliver McClain,
 The high school chap you browbeat for six years.
 But now your sepsis has paid for his tears.
 
 Herewith, I send a bunch of shrivelled flowers
 A likely gift to match your tragic hours.
 A theurgist told me, "For a swifter cure,
 He must consume a one-eyed bat's ordure."
 So, here's a pack. That's all I had to tell
 You, and I hope
 for your recoveryyou soon end up in hell.
 
 *~*~*~*~*~*
 
 A Few Lines on My Brain
 
 About a recent blunder,
 Followed by mother's thunder
 That tore my ears asunder,
 It's thinking, thinking, thinking!
 
 But when there is a phase
 As puzzling as a maze,
 It slogs for exit ways.
 It's xylophone stops clinking.
 
 The proper way to tell
 The next-door mademoiselle
 That she's indeed a belle
 Is what it keeps on planning.
 
 Or when it learns that packs
 Of crispy, salty snacks
 Are somewhere on the racks,
 It's always keen on scanning!
 
 Although I say, "I'm done!"
 With the fall of the sun,
 My brain's hell-bent on working
 And never thinks of shirking!
 
 *~*~*~*~*~*
 
 The Strategy
 
 'Your own kin are the moochers of your wealth.'
 I am a strong believer of this quote.
 So when my cousin asked me for some bucks,
 A gob of 'cautiousness' slid down my throat.
 My brain cells were alerted when she came.
 They screamed, "She'll hoodwink you and run
                away!
 Her shadow will not fall upon this city.
 You must crush down a leech that comes your way!".
 But since I could not straightaway decline
 Her asking (as this manner was unfit),
 I had to fabricate a solid plan
 To make my answer clear and subtly hit
 Her with a "screw off!" So, I made use
                of
 This old belief 'A morning dream comes true'
 By telling her this dramatical tale:
 "Oh! sis, I dreamt about a girl like you
 Who took some cash from me, but on her way,
 Two muggers who had trailed her down the lane
 Cudgelled her from behind, then snatched the
                purse,
 And left her there all bruised-up and in pain.
 It might sound whacky, but do we not know
 That dawn dreams are always indicative
 Of something realin this case, something
                BAD!?
 So, if you get hurt, I will not forgive
 Myself in this life! I should better let
 You travel with an empty purse instead
 Of one that's note-stuffed. Your life's more to
                me.
 I'd rather see you penniless than dead."
 
 *~*~*~*~*~*
 
 Toyshop Mister
 
 Toyshop mister, show some toys
 Fit for my seven-year-old boys.
 I guess a whip top or a ball
 Would be the perfect choice for all.
 
 Toyshop mister, show a few
 Dollhouses for my girl of two.
 But if you have a bongo set,
 She would be much amused, I bet!
 
 Toyshop mister, please be fast!
 My children bawl like thunder's blast.
 If I don't make it home by four,
 My wifey's ears will be no more.
 *~*~*~*~*~* |