Patterns in Henna

Fiction & Literature, Poetry
Cover of the book Patterns in Henna by Marguerite Thoburn Watkins, Xlibris US
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Author: Marguerite Thoburn Watkins ISBN: 9781462839957
Publisher: Xlibris US Publication: January 9, 2007
Imprint: Xlibris US Language: English
Author: Marguerite Thoburn Watkins
ISBN: 9781462839957
Publisher: Xlibris US
Publication: January 9, 2007
Imprint: Xlibris US
Language: English

The three sections in Patterns in Henna contain poems from three parts of my life; most of the first two sections are set in British India in the thirties, forties, or earlier, an era and place gone forever.

The poems in Section I are impressions from childhood with the point of view of a child or adolescent and reflect attitudes of the time.
Section II is about my father and his family. It is because of them that I spent my formative years in India. Many poems are based on family stories.
In Section III, I write in my adult voice about return trips to India and then move on to a group of more reflective poems.
I give a poem from each section as an example. I hope you enjoy reading them as much as I enjoyed writing them.

I.
Under the Gul Mohur Tree
(Jabalpur, Central India)

A gul mohur tree dominated our back garden.
Sun dappled through a thousand fern-like fronds,
the series of planes like Nepalese temple rooftops.
Here Chutan, the cook, fattened ducks,
and a goose for Christmas,
the former foragers resting like pashas in the green-gold shade,
slurping fresh water, eating handfuls of fine wheat.

Chutan prized the delicate spring leaves, pale yellow,
humbly approached my father,
"Huzoor," hands pressed together,
for permission to pick a few.
His wife prepared the tight-curled fronds
with wild coriander to make sabzi

. Racemes of flowers appeared with the hot weather,
resting above the foliage.
Gul mohur--rose peacock-- the Peacock-rose,
gold mohur, I called it as a child,
each blossom a shining gold,
igniting into orange, vermilion, scarlet.
Bright Indian sun sparkled
through airy shadows shifting over leaf-strewn earth
and the abandoned well,
deep enough for drowning.
White ants riddled the massive cover.

Once throbbing with a three-day headache,
(my mother blamed the Indian sun),
I pulled a mat under the gul mohur.
Air currents brushed leaf ribs,
waved pink-gold shapes through eyelids,
and I listened to insects,
then my father's footfall in dry grass.

He sat beside me,
coming between his classes
to sit quietly on the lip of the well
and press a wet towel on my forehead.

II.
Calling

A lammergeyer vulture
circled cloudless Indian sky
and from the lazy pattern
there dropped a single feather
veering in concentric whorls
until it dropped almost by
the hand of a young preacher
pondering his messages.
He fingered the stout quill,
gripped it firmly like a pen,
whittled a point. Having come
so far, started a letter
to his sister half a world
away on a Midwest farm.
Dear Isabella, he wrote,
then wondered what he could say.
Indian women do not learn
with their brothers as you did.
Their faces veiled, eyes cast down,
knowing nothing of the world,
they cry for teachers like you.

A mustard seed dropped in loam
springs into a tree. To his
surprise a letter arrived.
I come when the way opens.
When the heart is ready, doors
swing back, as they did for her,
founding a womans college.
With unruly locks confined
beneath a deaconess cap,
and full figure cased in black,
her life filled up with color
and generations of girls
from Lucknow, kingdom of Oudh.

Such small things can shape

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The three sections in Patterns in Henna contain poems from three parts of my life; most of the first two sections are set in British India in the thirties, forties, or earlier, an era and place gone forever.

The poems in Section I are impressions from childhood with the point of view of a child or adolescent and reflect attitudes of the time.
Section II is about my father and his family. It is because of them that I spent my formative years in India. Many poems are based on family stories.
In Section III, I write in my adult voice about return trips to India and then move on to a group of more reflective poems.
I give a poem from each section as an example. I hope you enjoy reading them as much as I enjoyed writing them.

I.
Under the Gul Mohur Tree
(Jabalpur, Central India)

A gul mohur tree dominated our back garden.
Sun dappled through a thousand fern-like fronds,
the series of planes like Nepalese temple rooftops.
Here Chutan, the cook, fattened ducks,
and a goose for Christmas,
the former foragers resting like pashas in the green-gold shade,
slurping fresh water, eating handfuls of fine wheat.

Chutan prized the delicate spring leaves, pale yellow,
humbly approached my father,
"Huzoor," hands pressed together,
for permission to pick a few.
His wife prepared the tight-curled fronds
with wild coriander to make sabzi

. Racemes of flowers appeared with the hot weather,
resting above the foliage.
Gul mohur--rose peacock-- the Peacock-rose,
gold mohur, I called it as a child,
each blossom a shining gold,
igniting into orange, vermilion, scarlet.
Bright Indian sun sparkled
through airy shadows shifting over leaf-strewn earth
and the abandoned well,
deep enough for drowning.
White ants riddled the massive cover.

Once throbbing with a three-day headache,
(my mother blamed the Indian sun),
I pulled a mat under the gul mohur.
Air currents brushed leaf ribs,
waved pink-gold shapes through eyelids,
and I listened to insects,
then my father's footfall in dry grass.

He sat beside me,
coming between his classes
to sit quietly on the lip of the well
and press a wet towel on my forehead.

II.
Calling

A lammergeyer vulture
circled cloudless Indian sky
and from the lazy pattern
there dropped a single feather
veering in concentric whorls
until it dropped almost by
the hand of a young preacher
pondering his messages.
He fingered the stout quill,
gripped it firmly like a pen,
whittled a point. Having come
so far, started a letter
to his sister half a world
away on a Midwest farm.
Dear Isabella, he wrote,
then wondered what he could say.
Indian women do not learn
with their brothers as you did.
Their faces veiled, eyes cast down,
knowing nothing of the world,
they cry for teachers like you.

A mustard seed dropped in loam
springs into a tree. To his
surprise a letter arrived.
I come when the way opens.
When the heart is ready, doors
swing back, as they did for her,
founding a womans college.
With unruly locks confined
beneath a deaconess cap,
and full figure cased in black,
her life filled up with color
and generations of girls
from Lucknow, kingdom of Oudh.

Such small things can shape

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