Poem
Mona Arshi
Ghazal
Ghazal
Ghazal
I want to tune in to the surface, beside the mayflylisten to how she holds her decorum on the skin of the pond.
I want to sequester words, hold them in stress positions,
foreignate them, string them up to ripen on vines
and I want to commune with rain and for the rain
to be merciful, a million tiny pressures on my flesh.
I refuse to return as either rose or tulip but wish
to be planted under the desiring night sky.
I want to be concentrated to a line under the pleat of your palm
and for it to radiate opalesque under shadow.
I want God’s fingers to break and for you to watch
as I fold my sleeve, reveal each detail of my paling wrist.
© 2012, Mona Arshi
Mona Arshi
(United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, 1970)
Mona Arshi began writing poetry in 2008, after working as a human rights lawyer for Liberty, on high profile judicial review cases. She has spoken of how poetry for her is ‘the polar opposite of writing in a rule-bound legal discourse. Writing poetry involves forging space for creative accidents to emerge. Suspending intentionality means one submits to not knowing where poetry comes from, break...
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Poems of Mona Arshi
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Ghazal
I want to tune in to the surface, beside the mayflylisten to how she holds her decorum on the skin of the pond.
I want to sequester words, hold them in stress positions,
foreignate them, string them up to ripen on vines
and I want to commune with rain and for the rain
to be merciful, a million tiny pressures on my flesh.
I refuse to return as either rose or tulip but wish
to be planted under the desiring night sky.
I want to be concentrated to a line under the pleat of your palm
and for it to radiate opalesque under shadow.
I want God’s fingers to break and for you to watch
as I fold my sleeve, reveal each detail of my paling wrist.
Ghazal
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