Over the Moon
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Imtiaz Dharker
Imtiaz Dharker grew up a Muslim Calvinist in a Lahori household in Glasgow, was adopted by India and married into Wales. She is an accomplished artist and documentary film-maker, and has published six books with Bloodaxe, Postcards from god (including Purdah) (1997), I Speak for the Devil (2001), The terrorist at my table (2006), Leaving Fingerprints (2009), Over the Moon (2014), and Luck Is the Hook (2018). All her poetry collections are illustrated with her drawings, which form an integral part of the books; she is one of very few poet-artists to work in this way. She was awarded the Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry for 2014, presented to her by The Queen in spring 2015, and has also received a Cholmondeley Award from the Society of Authors and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. Over the Moon was shortlisted for the Ted Hughes Award for New Work in Poetry 2014. Her poems are on the British GCSE and A Level English syllabus, and she reads with other poets at Poetry Live! events all over the country to more than 25,000 students a year. She has had a dozen solo exhibitions of drawings in India, London, Leeds, New York and Hong Kong. She scripts and directs films, many of them for non-government organisations in India, working in the area of shelter, education and health for women and children. In 2015 she appeared on the iconic BBC Radio 4 programme Desert Island Discs.
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Over the Moon - Imtiaz Dharker
Like that only
At the sign of the black flip-flop
crossed off in red, by the door
of the Ganesh temple, you are obliged
to take off your shoes, and this you do.
In the face of all the silent watchers
on the steps, you bend, struggle
to undo the laces and come up pink,
not, as a stranger might think,
out of embarrassment. No, you point
at your foot in its black sock,
and there, escaping it,
the pale slug of your naked toe.
You laugh because you know,
as all the watchers do,
that this is the way of things.
A sock inside a shoe is deemed
immaculate. A sock exposed
to public view, especially on its way
to god, will grow a hole.
Even the master of symmetry knew
this to be true. When Gabriel
and the dove fly in, the fabric of the day
wears thin and frays
around the virgin’s face.
Light folds itself over a boy’s head
and he is shirtless, shivering,
but believes the Baptist will turn
from the main event before too long
to tend to him. You
make a kind of offering
of frailty, an opening for the world
to show its grace
and as you point, the watchers,
children, street-dogs, bottom-scratchers
become your family. You
are a foreigner nowhere.
On imperfect feet, you go in to meet the gods,
the open-armed, the many-eyed,
the asymmetric, belly-shaking gods.
Taal
This music will not sit in straight lines.
The notes refuse to perch on wires
but move in rhythm with the dancer
round the face of the clock,
through the dandelion head of time.
We feel blown free, but circle back
to be in love, to touch and part
and meet again, spun
past the face of the moon, the precise
underpinning of stars. The cycle begins
with one and ends with one,
dha dhin dhin dha. There must be
other feet in step with us, an underbeat,
a voice that keeps count, not yours or mine.
This music is playing us.
We are playing with time.
Bombil, Bumla, Bummalo
At Britannia Café on Ballard Estate
late one afternoon, the poet
was discovered buying Bombay Duck
to take away, waiting to have it wrapped up
in a brown paper bag before he carried it home
fresh-fried and hot. This was where, by chance,
you met.
Simon Rhys Powell and Arun Kolatkar
sat on bentwood chairs and talked
about the art of frying and eating Bombay Duck,
how the bones were soft and melted
down the throat, how it could be swallowed
whole, with limba-cha-ras,
just like that.
The poet smacked his lips, you ate his words
as if they were Welsh, both of you savoured
the name itself, the taste on your tongues
of Bombil, Bummalo, Bombay Duck.
Two strange fish swimming in the mirrors of the café
like long-lost friends, bosom-buddies
brought together by a stroke
of luck.
Two lives too big to be packed away
in a brown paper bag like a take-away,
you will stay, you will still be there
on Ballard Estate when the boxwallahs
have come and the boxwallahs
have gone.
You will always be there in the mirrors
of Britannia Café, where you swallow life
whole, put your heads back and laugh
at how daft this thing is, not a fowl
but a fish, a dish named for a city,
Bombil, Bumla, Bummalo, Bombay
Duck.
Jurassic
Waking to Jurassic sounds
of crows above the banyan trees,
the distant hawking, spitting, radios
switched on, a hundred stereo TVs,
our bodies afloat in underwater light
and the night a foreign country, this
is how we learn each other, half-asleep,
in a language that invents itself
again at dawn, sometimes remembers itself,
sometimes forgets, and surprises us,
calling out at windows we have left wide open.
Number 106
We are waving to you from up here,
from the fourth floor to say
don’t worry about us, we are fine.
We may be strung out, trousers vest blouse
sari skirt on this washing line
but the sun is being kind to us.
Better here than down there
where you are passing
on the Number 106, crammed
into a hot window frame
with your loud loneliness.
We are floating here,
our hearts filled with soft