KNOT Magazine
Fall Issue 2022
Shadab Zeest Hashmi
Ballad of Baby Gone Native
Baby Sahib brings her island fox
with a key tied to its hind leg
The voyage, a cadet-blue sleep
skirting Asia— war’s opioid peg
Baby Sahib takes tea with Ferozepur
cake in First Class, crumbs in curls,
first taste of Punjabi milk, first
puff of Shalimar dust on pearls
Baby Sahib rings the bell
with the blue ceramic princess
Ayah comes to freshen her nose with
monogrammed mulmul, clove-incense
Baby Sahib learns about the first automaton
to offer towels and soap— invention
of Baghdad— fashioned as an iridescent bird
(shooed from history, skipped all mention)
Baby Sahib eats tiffin cake
and dholi buns during lessons,
spills hot tea on the native tutor—
a pool of steaming indiscretions
Baby Sahib undoes the cat’s cradle
drops the Raj’s fork, eats with fingers,
salaams elder servants, hums ayah’s lori
to hop-scotch, gulab scent in her braid lingers
Baby Sahib out-howls Coleridge’s woman
wailing for her demon lover, learns the fact
of the cedar forest, filters river Alph
of the rabid visions that Kubla Khan enacts
Baby Sahib dons a Phulkari shawl
to the officers’ ball at the club
dazzles in chashm e bulubul (a bird’s eye radiating
silk floss), sustains glares and an icy snub
Baby Sahib hangs chambeli buds, marries her tutor
in the dusty Urdu library, over laddu, “biscoot,”
chai— with Ayah, cousin, and cook in attendance
The groom is suddenly called away, a forced recruit
Baby Sahib sees in a rain of bullets a fox feeding
on Gymkhana Cake, meat slices served on bayonets
She wants the pulse back in twisted necks,
detritus back into musk, wakes in a cold sweat
Baby Sahib finds that a broken teapot
is a bad omen, means a beloved’s death
Next to the morning glories: telegrams
coughing up miasma of beloved’s breath
Baby Sahib dances to the Widow’s Waltz
before lights go out in the ballroom
forever; in the emollient leather, ayah’s hand,
a lost husband in the sacred fig’s perfume
The Great Game
Poetry was a mastication of stolen pigeons
An ear bleeding on a stack of hay
A gold-edged battlefield wrote the novel
The painting was a swirling café called compulsion
A military band blared its brass baraat
to ravish oil brides across Asia
So I came back to the caravanserai
and found you broken luminescent as an egg
Writing on lymphatic glass
a manifesto of gestation
chronicles of a sometime star
brought down to pedestrian scale
The balcony is blushing with fruits
you have no time for
Our breath is once again held hostage
between the mongoose and the snake
Shadab Zeest Hashmi, a poet and essayist, is the winner of the San Diego Book Award, Sable Books' Hybrid BookPrize, and the Nazim Hikmet Poetry Prize. Her books include Kohl and Chalk, Baker of Tarifa, Ghazal Cosmopolitan and the forthcoming memoir Comb.