if i if i die tonight the ailing woman in my house will mourn over me for a year. the calls will ring in till all lines are exhausted. the biting opinions i have over every political, social issue will be shunned, lowered with me; the books on my wall, distributed. i only expect my poetry, just as biting but a little didactic, to be remnant in a decade's time. by then the maggots will have gone through my bones. i will be a distant memory who will come up in late tea conversations as an aftertaste. ifi die tonight, i will be buried by tomorrow. save a few, i will be forgotten overmorrow. let me not in the belly of this earth till I AM DONE. i will die when i do. I wonder how they say the world is fair I sit and breathe, drinking the toxic air The air that this city heaves on my neck I wonder how they say the world is fair It seems not more than an abysmal snare All I see are souls in havoc and wreck I sit and breathe, drinking the toxic air I want to ask… I do… but do I dare How greed and lust and vice to keep in check I wonder how they say the world is fair It doesn’t really take too much to care We forget we are no more than a speck I sit and breathe, drinking the toxic air No one does view people in distinct layers All akin yet all ranked like a card deck I wonder how they say the world is fair You who say good and evil are a pair One is scarce while the other is in pecks I sit and breathe, drinking the toxic air I wonder how they say the world is fair
Hanzala Mojibi is an Indian poet and writer from a literary background based in Delhi. He believes in some serious things like voicing the voiceless; and some non-serious things like the crunching of dead leaves healing the soul.