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Edwin

by Saikat Das

Saikat Das’ poem talks about a lonely old man that a boy spots every day on his way to school and who he calls Edwin.

When we passed the Dutch cemetery
We saw him sitting
Under the Gulmohar tree
I thought he counted
The butterflies;

There was a small garden
Behind it the graveyard;
Sometimes he sat by them
Giving the lonely white souls
His company

They left him there
To tend their dead
He was not white enough
To go with them

And we watched him
Only from behind the walls

When we drove past
The crumbling walls of the cemetery
To our school
My brother thought
He was the Selfish Giant

I called him Edwin
God knows why

But he liked the birds and
I knew
He would play with us
If we got in
But we never entered the garden
Like all else

And there he sat
Talking to the birds,
Picking flowers for the dead
And removing weeds
From the graves

When the sparkling sun
Broke through the Gulmohar
After the rain
He kept looking at it strangely

He did not ask for anything
He knew
He was not supposed to

When I saw him badly cough
I wanted to go and sit
By his side
His sweaters were worn and old
Like him
He never used a muffler

The whites are whites
Even in their graves:
The dead never rose to bury him

Only the butterflies mourned,
The birds poured in their songs
And the rain came

Then the weeds buried him
Under the tree
A little away

From the graves.

Saikat Das (39), comes from Chinsurah, a Dutch settlement on the banks of river Hugli. A teacher in a sub-urban High School, he dreams of writing a novel but has always ended up writing poems that wink at him rather mischievously, taunting his bouts of passion that never quite make it to a novel. But he hasn’t given up.
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