English Poem “Chicago Zen” Poet A. K. Ramanujan complete poem with summery for Students.

Chicago Zen

By K. Ramanujan

 

I

 

Now tidy your house,

dust especially your living room

and do not forget to name

all your children.

 

II

 

Watch your step. Sight may strike you

blind in unexpected places.

 

The traffic light turns orange

on 57th and Dorchester, and you stumble,

 

you fall into a vision of forest fires,

enter a frothing Himalayan river,

 

rapid, silent.

 

On the 14th floor,

Lake Michigan crawls and crawls

 

in the window. Your thumbnail

cracks a lobster louse on the windowpane

 

from your daughter’s hair

and you drown, eyes open,

 

towards the Indies, the antipodes.

And you, always so perfectly sane.

 

III

 

Now you know what you always knew:

the country cannot be reached

 

by jet. Nor by boat on jungle river,

hashish behind the Monkey-temple,

 

nor moonshot to the cratered Sea

of Tranquillity, slim circus girls

 

on a tightrope between tree and tree

with white parasols, or the one

 

and only blue guitar.

 

Nor by any

other means of transport,

 

migrating with a clean valid passport,

no, not even by transmigrating

 

without any passport at all,

but only by answering ordinary

 

black telephones, questions

walls and small children ask,

 

and answering all calls of nature.

 

IV

 

Watch your step, watch it, I say,

especially at the first high

threshold,

 

and the sudden low

one near the end

of the flight

of stairs,

 

and watch

for the last

step that’s never there.

 

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