Sekhar Banerjee

Boulders

Like a glass of fine wine intoxicated
by its own essence – an ultraviolet god, you weave,
un-weave, you reweave your thoughts like an
apprentice Buddhist monk torn between your own thoughts
and something more than that while searching
for a warm hotel room before the night falls in a lonely
mountain town and sit and talk
about ordinary things and think of something like God.
Friends and enemies slowly grow apart one by one
after waiting for a final answer
when you traverse
through your unsocial days, half- absorbed, looking
for a destination that you can never be sure of.
Under the shadows of the Sun, you go farther
than you have always anticipated
when you started and now you wish to settle down
somewhere, familiar
and warm. May be a small town beside a large rock,
head-shaped,
almost like Buddha’s,
or a Stupa with an embroidery of lichens and your own
thought.
So that you can at least think
that divinity still exists, if only in boulders.

Sekhar Banerjee

Sekhar Banerjee is a Pushcart Award and Best of the Net Award nominated poet.  The Fern-gatherers’ Association (Red River, 2021) is his latest collection of poems. He has been published in Stand Magazine, Indian Literature, Arkana, The Bitter Oleander, Ink Sweat and Tears, The Lake, Madras Courier, Outlook, The Wire, The Wise Owl, The Bangalore Review, Kitaab and elsewhere. He is a former Press Secretary to the Governor, West Bengal. He lives in Kolkata, India.