Take me to the home of my childhood

in the street called โ€œThe Gardenerโ€™s Gardenโ€

in my tongue, where the veranda overlooked a pond

of water hyacinth and carp, where my mother planted

a bougainvillea vine that painted the white concrete crimson.

Take me to the home where on sultry nights

we did our homework in candlelight, wiping sweatโ€”

where the street dogโ€™s barks and the rages of young men

out- of- work were drowned by my mother singing a raga.

Take me to the home in Delhi near the oil plant

 where my mother planted daikon and mustard greens and

sent baskets to every home. There were no girls to laugh with

but only the whistles of trains from the roof.

Take me to the flat just outside of town,

where in tiny pots dahlias still bloomโ€”

where my mother hand feeds the crow,

where after a life of feeding a husband, children, and grandchildren,

my mother hears the mynahs chirp.

as she sips her tea alone.


Lopamudra Basu is a professor of English and Philosophy and Chair of the Literature Committee at the University of Wisconsin-Stout, Wisconsin's Polytechnic University.