
There are metro cats and metro cats
Some live in bungalows, some in flats;
Some wear saris, some wear jeans;
Some are middle-aged, some in teens.
All with razor-sharp tongues and claws
Who can trigger a war without a cause.
Lady Novelist
I have for you such awesome liking
Novelist femme of Penguin Viking!
Minister’s daughter, sybarite’s spouse
Who never learnt to keep a house;
Script writer with a bohemian past
More explosive than a bus bomb-blast.
Diplomat’s or biz tycoon’s squaw
At daggers drawn with ma-in-law;
Or an idle DU teacher
Rewrites her life as fiction feature.
Scandal-digging media dame
Of Society-and-Stardust fame;
Or an NRI New York-based
Who never heat and dust has faced.
Hardened libber whose tales disclose
Man the monster, cause of woes;
Ah! if he were wiped out from earth
Eve would laugh in eternal mirth.
Novelist femme of Penguin Viking
I have for you such awesome liking !
Old Mrs Beri of Jorbagh Found Murdered in her Bedroom
Her face is shrivelled like a walnut
She has small verbena eyes
And a large brinjally nose.
It had been rather quick
There were no signs of any fight
Her neck snapped without a crick.
Time seemed ample at her hands
Crocks of maquillage show it
Twice a day did she unlock
The bijoux upon the bed
And with pearls snow it.
Figgery lends a woman charm
So in her mind was drilled
Stone in the ear, stone in the nose
Fat bangles upon straw wrists.
For eighty-two she wasn’t old
At least to stand or sit
Beauty is another name for gold
She had lots of it.
Dastardly of the Gorkha boy
To hatch a scheme to strangle
With that trapcut necklace which
brought her joy
The sparkle and the spangle.
Snowy, her Pomeranian bitch
Now makes an eerie moan
Scarce knowing about that glyptic itch
Stilled mistress into stone.

Page Three Cat
It was a pert Customs panel
Smelled her illicit kit
While she was racing through the Green Channel
Heading for the exit.
Stop, stop, Madam, please stop!
Your baggage we want to check
At once they saw her jaw drop,
As she yelled ‘What the heck!
They slit open her VIP
Out spilled the silly things
Scores and scores of bijouterie
Bangles, carcanets and rings.
Did you take us to be blindfold
That you could run away with your booty?
Ten kilos of pristine-carat gold
Without paying any duty!
For personal use, Madam? We aren’t so dense,
These items all are so saleable –
You have committed an offence
Which is wholly non-bailable!
For the hungry scribe and stringer
It’ll be a juicy bit of news!
On such as you we laid our finger
And sent you to the calaboose!
Socialite Sheetal Mafatlal was arrested in the wee hours on Sunday at the Mumbai airport on her arrival from London for offences under section 135 (a) and (b), importing gold and jewellery without paying duties. Indian Express 12 June 2009
Mumbai Slumdweller’s Invitation to Prof. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak of Columbia University
We invite you to our little bivouaс
In a Dharawi chawl, Gayatri Spivak.
Untidy and unceremonial
Post-modern and post-colonial
To talk Derrida in your chaste French
Deconstructing our ambient stench.

Words of a Stuck-up Artiste
‘If you haven’t heard of me,’ said Sonal Mansingh,
‘You know nothing of Indian dancing.
To Draupadi
Mistress legendary
How did you cope with polyandry?
The hungers and thirsts
The variegated lusts
Of multiple husbandry?
Blue Stockings of the ‘Book Review’
Blue stockings of the Book Review
Us, humble folk, do envy you.
Could you be from the cultural coven
Of Nehru Memorial or Azad Bhawan?
Could you be from the teaching crew
Of Jesus-Mary or JNU?
Or Miranda or LSR?
Lodi Estate and Vasant Vihar
– Your usual habitats, and posh
New Friends, Great Kailash.
Keep you canine pedigreed
Not tykes like us of lowly breed.
How oft we see you exit and enter
Brit Council or the American Center.
You Austen Jane, you Dickinson Emily
From Bhadralok or Lingait family
Some Kobita Roy or Kamala Chari
Tamil Sangam or Kali Bari.
Dad or spouse, chaired-grandees,
Siblings, fizgigs or dandies.
Ayah-addicted, Maruti-driving,
Some arrived, some still arriving.
And though your wisdom pearls in print
Carry their own colonial squint.
Them all we cherish as quillings fine.
We never read between the line.
Blue stockings of the Book Review
Us, humble folk, do envy you.

Lady at the India International Centre
As she dawdles towards me in the hall
Trimorphous, sprawling on three sides,
A scalene triangle on the move
I feel somewhat curious
Seeing her cauliflower face so cream-calcified.
How could a person so real, beam a smile so spurious?
The perfume, the talcum, the wild hairdo –
Some tree-top breaking wind in a squall.
Sitting down in front she blocks my view
A buttress, behind whom I buckle like a mudwall.

The Lakme Fashion Show
‘Haute couture’, cries the haut-ton scribе
‘Is not prêt-a-porter’.**
Laymen at it have a jibe
‘It’s exhibitionism’, they say.
Sometimes the vamps walk the ramps
In rags that are so skimpy
And toiletry of harlotry
And hairdos so crimpy.
The Occident our brown girls apе
It’s, indeed, a weird saga
They don what white models drape
Even the Kermit*** of Lady Gaga.
*Women’s fashions are an eternal struggle between the admitted desire to dress, and the unadmitted desire to undress.
** Pret-a-porter daily wear.
*** Lady Gaga’s wacky ‘Kermit The Frogoutfit’. Women with empty heads stuff wardrobes. – George Bernard Shaw
Air Hostess
‘Come, fly Maharajah to far off lands’,
She seems to say with folded hands
Her stairway-sweetness scarcely melts
After she mouths ‘Fasten seat-belts’.
Rekha Tandon!
Even teeth and clear complexion
Saw her through a stiff selection
Peachblossom of the Boeing crew
Whom the Captain loves to woo.
On o’ernights at London!
The clever steward knows her games
‘A Smuggling Cat’, that’s what he claims;
In cahoots with Airport Customs staff
Who share her loot, half and half
For the job is always done!
She packs thick marijuana wads
Between French sanitary pads
And yellow metal in biscuits, bricks
She wangles in through soaps, lipsticks.
Rekha Tandon!
Into the cockpit now she slips
(That arch of neck, that sway of hips!)
She’s a doll you’d love to fly with
(In an aircrash, love to die with!)
Spick cateress, slick waitress
Rekha Tandon!

Diplomat’s Wife
Not Indian saris but Zandra Rhodes*
Stuff her spilling wardrobes.
Tampons and scents come from France.
She takes lessons in ball-room dance,
Guitar and violin – (learns from both things
Plucking brows simpler than plucking strings!)
For us reserves her frosty looks
Like Western dishes by Indian cooks.
Mangoes, melons she does not savour
Her tongue’s used to strawberry flavour.
For salads, her palate is no less
Not tomatoes, onions but watercress.
Leeks, pimento, Brussels sprouts
(Desi legumes cause tummy bouts).
*Some years ago Zandra Rhodes, an English fashion designer, came to India to exhibit what she called ‘Indian Designer Saris’. She put up a show with foreign women swaying in sundry apparels that bore as much resemblance to saris as a camel does to an antelope. Later, it was learnt that her trip was sponsored by the wife of an Indian diplomat.
Nouveau Riche
Has acquired wealth
Faster than social graces.
It bulges
Through pachydermic
Wads of her belly.
The slimming centre
In the town thrives
On her caterpillar form.
Her lipstick’d mouth
As an over-painted
Post-box slit glints
With the spawl of smut.
None tells her
At the beauty parlour
It is the ogre of her mind
Needs a facial massage.
She blinds you
With her ritzy dazzle
Sparkling her rings
Flashing her tops. Magazine ads
Fuel the fires of her shopping binge.
Diehard fop,
Carried by vanities
As a sugar granule by ants.
I have seen many women go into beauty parlours but not one beautiful woman coming out.
John Updike

Housewife
I
A palate has endless wants. These seasonings –
Slicing tomatoes, mincing onions, scrabbling
Ginger, flensing cloves of garlic. I
Am sentenced to the kitchen. The same
Culinary cycle, mornings, noons and evenings. First
Awaiting my kids’ return from school
Then my man’s, from office. Is this all
To a woman’s life? I ask. The cooker
Answers through skirls and whistles. Now I switch
To sifting flintlets from lentils upon a plate
Of stainless steel, notching in marble
The nicks of days with my chopping knife.
II
Should I have joined a careerist’s queue –
Steno, air-hostess, college-lecturer, scribe?
Traded my home for a table and a chair?
A libber like Beauvoir or Germaine Greer
Smoking like a chimney, quaffing Lager beer?
‘Is that’, my man would say, ‘what you want to be’?
Then break into a falsetto and sing,
‘The bandwagon of “feminism is but a rickety van
One woman’ll ditch another, the minute she gets her man.’
‘Our city-bred female has turned into a pest’,
Reverting to his harangue I alone know best
‘To ape in this manner, the petticoats of the West’.
* Gloria Steinem’s marriage is proof positive of the emotional desperation of aging feminists who, for over 30 years, worshipped the steely career-women and callously trashed ‘stay-at-home moms’.
– Culture Analyst Camille Paglia, on Steinem’s first marriage at the age of 66 to activist David Bale (News Week Dec 25, 2000).
When I harp on the tedium of my grind,
He cuts me sharp. ‘What is a working girl, heart? A purse
Of dubious worth, an unsure foot upon a pencill’d heel.
Sworn enemy of home and hearth
Whose budget is planned and spent
On textiles, talcum and scent.
‘Don’t you see’, I pule, ‘Don’t you see,
How you’ve shut me in the cage of domesticity?
Oh, how often I picture myself as a swallow in the sky,
Then swallow the entire picture in my eye
Thinking of my chattels and chores.
Telly sitcoms and soaps depress me even more.
‘Don’t two love-birds need a spreading tree
To build a nest?’, he tells me
‘What bugs other women, bugs you too.’
‘I know what the vice is,
Or shall I call it an affliction? It’s identity crisis.
Come off it’, he pleads, ‘Come off it.’
‘Mother-bird of my fledglings, darling spouse,
‘Queen of the kingdom of my house.
For that’s what you are, aren’t you?’ and he hugs me close.
Wiping away tears running down my nose.
But his blandishments do not quell my yearning
And long after the kitchen fires turn cold, I keep on burning.
For women, generally speaking, there is greater servitude in outside employment than there is in married life. Shouldn’t women, therefore, choose the servitude of love to that of money?
Mother-In-Law
Constantly reminds father-in-law
He is miles inferior to her
In lineage. Boasts of conceiving
Seven sons
Not a single daughter.
The week is a round
Of rituals. Monday for Siva,
Tuesday for the simian deity,
Wednesday for Vishnu,
The Sunday’s ‘kirtan’
Completes the hebdomadal cycle.
Her professed disdain
For gold and jewellery
Is gullible as a silkworm’s
For mulberry leaves;
The price range of the latest
In chiffon and voiles
At her finger tips.
A picture of piety
In abstinence and the weekly
Fast of silence yet her ear-antennae
Catch the faintest scandal-signals
In the neighbourhood.
A sleuth to reckon with,
The daughters-in-law well know
Her remote-sensing eye that can scan the finest
Hairline cracks in their connubial walls.
Eager to be arbiter in piffling feuds,
Her terms of peace leave both sides irked.
Presently the search is on
For a matrimonial match
For the youngest son. ‘A good girl
For the boy is all that I want’, she says.
(Don’t we know, she’d rather have
A squint-eyed wench
With ample dowry for a bride!)
Five-Star PR Girl
You may find her alert, adroit
At Meridien, Taj, Maurya, Hyatt
This well-groomed Hospitality Cat
Trained to catch the Ritzy Rat,
Conscious in her heart of hearts
Hotel biz performance charts
Zoom not by smiles at lowly doormen
Floor-stewards, chefs, cooks and storemen,
But by enticing some Croesus brash
With gold cuff-links and crates of cash.
Words Of A Loving Daughter-In-Law
Am sick of her presence and idle chat
Hope she kicks the bucket soon, my mother-in-law
Then I’ll have my own five-bedroom flat
And all the gold in her almirah.
Has spilled the beans (she is such a talker!)
The bank in which she has hired a locker.
Though I can’t boast of wit or class
Her only son I could bewitch
No big-earner he, and so, alas!
Only what she bequeaths will make us rich
Should she live long, I would grow old
What use then this posh flat and gold?
* A property dispute was behind the disappearance of senior BJP leader Harshvardhan’s sister, Asha, who was drugged by her daughter-in-law, Reena Singhal, with an intention to kill her and grab her property and wealth. Express Newsline 31 Aug 2011
A City-Mom’s Advice To Her Newly-Wedded Daughter
Said the mother of the bride, after she was wed
‘Beti, pray your saas-sassur are soon dead.
Because you happen to be their only son’s spouse
Their dwelling unit, then, will become your house.’
‘The flat we live in will go to your brother
It can’t go to you because we have no other.
So let me offer you some sound advice
(Most folks won’t deem it decent or nice).’
‘Offer your in-laws oily sweets, please,
It, perhaps, could lead to diabetes.
Stack their fridge with Amul-butter packs
They trigger, I’m told, quicker heart attacks.’
A practical bride should have just one goal
Hasten in-laws to their grave, then pray for their soul.

A U.S. Visa For Graduate Program
If you’re Culture-Vultures, listen Buddies,
The latest craze is Gender Studies –
Take the case of Savithri Nair
Who nurtured one burning desire
(Though her grades were low, nor recos good)
To reach Liberty Statue and Hollywood.
She learnt from an American Center Cat
How Twain and Whitman had become Old Hat
Gone were the days of Faulkner, Hemingway,
This was the age of Morrison and Winfrey,
Cut out the crap of all male blighters
Just critique the periods of female writers.
She crammed well for the oral exam
At Delhi Chancery of Uncle Sam
Held her own as a glib talker
On Naomi Wolf and Alice Walker
Spoke as a women’s champion true
‘Not just a feminist, am a Lesbian too’
‘Wow!’, cried the Yankee at her interview,
‘No one more deserves the visa than you.’

Poetess Bilingual
At the Writers’ Program at Iowa
She arrives, our Anna Akhmatova;
Her artful airs and Dravidian looks
Null accent clipped and talk on books
Chasing WASPS with bashful verses
Alas! Their response rather terse is.
Back home, quickly switches loyalty
From Uncle Sam to British Royalty.
Now Emily’s tossed and Frost forgotten,
Whitman a bore and Poe’s rotten;
The finest poets are Keats and Browning,
The finest river, Thames for drowning!
Soon the Council chaps invite her
To Cambridge Seminar on Brit writer;
And though the weather there be colder
She speaks far beyond the folder
And collects a pulp-heap gathering dust
As gifts – courtesy Wallace Trust.
She oohs and ahs when reaches home
Crushed under each weighty tome;
From English then she turns to Tamil
Polishing verse like nails’ enamel
Behold how she waxes high
O’er Kural, river Madurai.
The Indian English versifier
Earns now her bilingual ire;
The lowly Tamil bellatrist
She fogs him with her London mist.