
Poetry at our Time
Shirani Rajapakse ( Sri Lanka )
On Deciding to Become a Poet
I cannot be
what I want to be.
Social constraints shut me in
frowning
on my extravagances.
Follies, they tell me,
that only fools and madmen
indulge in.
Follies.
They are not for the likes of me.
And since I cannot
be a fool
or madman
I hide myself inside of me and
smile at
society’s follies.
Deep Silence
We don’t talk
anymore. Words seem lost
all of a sudden.
We drift
away into oblivion
and lose ourselves in the crowd.
It’s easier this way. There is no need of explaining.
No time for reasoning.
Just enough space for a glance of acknowledgement
that here was a person we once knew
not so very long ago.
Distance pulls at the edges
like laundry trying to take wing, but stopped short
by the hold on the clothes line, ballerinas
practicing at the barre, and we help it along.
We drift further
and further away until it all seems like so
much history has piled up, hiding
us beneath its many layers.
We give up on us
because we can’t make the move.
Don’t want to be the first to speak
and break the spell. So we drift further away.
More silently than ships in
the night. We pass. We see. We move on.
So why does it hurt so much?
Somewhere in Myanmar
Contemplating the moment,
silence within, silence without. Suddenly
the splutter, splutter of an old
helicopter slices the air, large wings flapping
a peacock taking flight.
Concentration stops, I smile at
the memory moving out
of the moment.
Cold winter mornings in Delhi
many miles away, walking a lonely road
I paused for a peacock
to take wing in front of me.
Thrusting forward
a burst of speed on the runway
batting wings loud and noisy like a helicopter engine
he moved up, up to the sky, a flash of brilliant
blue to land on a branch at the far end
close his wings and disappear
into the forest cover.
My mind travels in time and space covering
great distances
while my body, a half bloomed lotus,
patiently waits its return.
Shirani Rajapakse is an internationally published, award winning poet and short story writer from Sri Lanka. She has authored eight books including “Offerings to the Blue God” – winner, 2024 State Literary Awards, Sri Lanka; “Samsara” – winner, Poetry Collection of the Year, 2023 Boao International Poetry Award, China, shortlisted 2023 State Literary Awards, Sri Lanka, shortlisted 2022 Gratiaen Awards, Sri Lanka; “Gods, Nukes and a whole lot of Nonsense” – winner, 2022 State Literary Awards, Sri Lanka; “I Exist. Therefore I Am” –
winner, 2019 State Literary Awards, Sri Lanka, shortlisted, 2019 Rubery Book Awards, UK; “Chant of a Million Women” – winner, 2018 Kindle Book Awards, USA, Official Selection, 2018 New Apple Summer eBook Awards for Excellence in Independent Publishing, USA &
Honorable Mention, 2018 Reader’s Favorite Awards, USA; “Breaking News” – shortlisted, 2010 Gratiaen Awards, and “The Way It Is”, Longlisted, 2025 Gratiaen Awards, Sri Lanka. Rajapakse also won the Panorama International Literary Award 2025, India, the Gran Premio
della Giuria (The Grand Jury Prize) – in the 2025 Ossi di Sepia Award, Italy, the 2013 Cha “Betrayal” Poetry Contest, Hong Kong, came second in the 2024 World Food Day Poetry Competition, Sri Lanka, was a finalist in the 2013 Anna Davidson Rosenberg Poetry Awards,
USA and was highly commended for the 2022 erbacce-prize for poetry, UK. Her work appears in Dove Tales, Buddhist Poetry, Litro, Berfrois, Flash Fiction International, Voices Israel, About Place, Mascara, Silver Birch, International Times, Harbinger Asylum, The Write-In and others. Rajapakse read for a BA in English Literature from the University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka and has a MA in International Relations from JNU, India. You can find her at shiranirajapakse.wordpress.com, and at amazon.com/Shirani-Rajapakse/e/B00IZQRAOA/
Gopikrishnan Kottoor’s ( Kerala_India)
Haunt
What words must I colour you with
to make you a painting,
You, who are already,
My poetry,
As with petals,
You shred me again?
Undress, and before you,
Let me be your mirror tonight.
I hold your feet, I hold your face
I open me in your eyes
As the sun opens night
What this is I do not know,
What you are, that without
There’s no more glow
And within, the delight grows
In a thought of you
Memory is a flower bough.
Once more, in such laughing winter
autumn flowers disappear.
What birds must I
Let fly
To you who have closed your eyes?
I’m lost, and in such wet darkness,
Why do you still light me
With your shadow?
2
This Body
This body
That I soap
Singing in the bathroom
With the hope,
That I can make it shine
as ceramic or bronze
And exhibit;
Have a shirt and coat
And walk the streets
Thinking the girls will tweet
Those that make
The heart bleat;
This body,
Michelangelo carved
in the name of beauty,
All that complex symmetry,
That secret desire,
nude all night
Looking for love with peacock heart:
This body
That’ll randomize,
searching everywhere for what is not,
collecting coloured shells
for beauty,
after the flesh rot
It is still beauty
After all is lost;
I must make peace
With this body,
That burned and burned
For a nameless pain;
That chose to embrace
And gift a kiss
To someone with lips
Of moon refrain,
This body,
I filled with flowers,
Gold, precious stones
I must let it
lie alone,
Bereft of the earth,
by the sea.
3
Apple Blossoms
Plethoric, in sun-soaked iridescence
Spectre white, with not a green leaf,
blossoms of fragrant frozen snow
Turn apple rain upon the bough.
Gopikrishnan Kottoor
’s recent works include the translation of ‘Ramanan’, by Changampuzha ( Kerala Sahitya Akademi), and the poetry collections’ Poems from America’, and ‘ A Land in the Sun.’ He is presently working on a travel book ‘The Golden Lane’, Travels Across Europe.
Snigdh Ganguly
Dreambird
Where is the lantern burning?
I could only see distant stars
In disguise of lying eyes
Looking at a promised dawn?
Where are the souls on fire?
I look inside the rust clouds
with incensed memories
and cold-blood desire
writhing in pools
of insomnia
Where is the sweet sleep?
I shut my dark to irk bright
Set flight in a distant sky.
Do all birds come back home?
My Pretty Whore
Night lay still
Dog toothed
Fishing for a boneless
Decay
I saw my pretty whore
I touched her thighs
The stained kohl
Of heartbreaks and
Dark less dreams
I didn’t look away
No I did not
Feel her nipples
Oozing with white
Poison
That enshrines
Lovers and the loveless
Alike
I saw my pretty whore
In the calm of shadows
I touched her thighs
The stained kohl
Cold Turkey
Words, unspoken
Undone
Injested in veins
Mothered by warmth
Of the unicorn
Sullen in its secrets
Oozing through pores
Kept ajar
For the last sunlight
In love with a window
Facing Shangri-La
One fix and the nearer I’m,
To stories untold
The Misogynist
You stuck like a fishbone
In the blood of throat
Throwing up isn’t an option
Rage too messy for floors
Promises worn like stickers
On tongue fierce and cold
Goodbye is so cliched
I’d rather put it on hold
The blasphemous forgot
God is reborn in hell
The misogynist hates change
Some profanity in exchange
Who’s to love, who’s to hate
Scripted in heaven’s fate
When ending knocks on doors
Find me dancing on the floors.
The road to ecstasy meanders
To a whirlpool of wild alienation
Fallen leaves of autumn, abyss
Sleeping in a bed of deprivation
The dark is still fixing a deal
With the befallen light
Where do the junkies find a home?
Snigdh Ganguly
A professional advertising copywriter, Snigdho is a post-grad in Media & Film Studies from the University of Sussex. He’s an avid cinema enthusiast who loves to collect films from all parts of the world. His poetry is deeply influenced by the works of Beat writers like Burroughs and Kerouac. A rebel heart, he dreams of a world where love, peace, and music coexist for a beautiful future.