“Mawlai”- By Anjum Hasan

For seventeen years we passed through Mawlai in a bus —

saw waxy red flowers in the pomegranate trees and a man

pegging brilliant white napkins on a clothesline against the wind.

We didn’t live there and those who lived there didn’t care about

the buses passing through at all times of the day, right up against the

mauve beef hanging in its pockets of fat, and the shops with shiny strips

of tobacco showing through shadows, and the new houses and the

old houses where the same sort of people lived, or at least that’s

how we felt, passing through in buses for seventeen years.But we won’t be doing it anymore — looking out of a window

at a patch of maize in its copper earth, eggs in a wire basket,

hand-painted signs near open doorways that remind us

of sunlit drawings in children’s books about places that grow

sad in their unreality with every passing year, simple signs in

white paint — hangne ngi die tiar, hangne ngi suh jainsem.

We’ll forget what they looked like, the rough golden clapboard shops

with their unwrapped cakes of soap, the windows in houses no

bigger than a man’s handkerchief, and it will be difficult to remember

where each of the cherry trees stood because they flowered so briefly

before lapsing back into their dark green anonymity.

The graveyard on a gentle slope, the fence weighed down with roses!

We’ll want to urgently tell someone, if we ever happen to return,

that we knew this place, passed through it in a bus for seventeen years,

but having said that we won’t know what else to say about Mawlai

because we never really got off there or bought things from its shops

or stepped into someone’s boiled-vegetables-smelling house

to watch the street through netted curtains. We’ll keep quiet then

and try to ignore that sense which is not pain but has pain’s cloudiness

and its regret and its way of going and returning.
http://india.poetryinternationalweb.org/piw_cms/cms/cms_module/index.php?obj_id=10596

The moment here is the realization that for seventeen years we have passed through this place and all that is over and we shall never be returning to this place .The moment is the town of Mawlai lapsing into green anonymity.“We shall keep quiet and ignore that sense which is not pain but has pain’s cloudiness ,its regret and its way of going and returning.”

The moment is that we have all experienced when we pass through villages and towns in our bus journeys and as time passes and the journeys go on in the unfamiliarity of anonymous places ,they acquire a pain-cloudiness which returns again and again.

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