The Art of Weaving Time
Maybe you forgot, or dementia possessed you
before our union—how else could you keep aloof
from your soul, your other soul, your eupnoea?
You whispered in my ear, later asserting openly
how heart unites life to life, turns an enemy to a friend—
now everyone waits for a time to raze cells or heal.
I never wanted this awful detention, my love, when
microbes deface the world, scowling as ostensibly
invincible monsters, wreaking havoc with indemnity.
Nowhere does anyone dream to pass a lonely time
but the elusive assassin is driving us towards isolation
from our realm where we breathe with our souls.
Slipping into an invisibility outfit, the killer casts
a curved look at the humans all over the world,
giggling loud as if to mollify fury, rising from hell.
I'm waiting for a time, now quarantined within
vicious circles, to incite the frozen nerves of the world—
like a young woman weaving a quilt I weave time.
Mohammad Shafiqul Islam—poet, translator, and author of Inner State—teaches English literature at Shahjalal University of Science and Technology, Sylhet 3114, Bangladesh.
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