At the Zoo
by Uttaran Das Gupta

Befriending a couple is like arriving

in a European town where the language[1]

is unfamiliar to you. Schoolgirls sing

near the synagogue of apricots, sage—

 

What did you hear? What did you recognise?

Zucker, or cukr, or شکر or azucar[2]?

A forensic attempt can jeopardise

brunch plans—you’ve got the backseat in their car,

 

They take you one afternoon to the zoo:

hippopotamus, gazelle, great hornbill,

the gharial sunning itself, a kangaroo.

“What did we see last time? Is it here still?”

 

They laugh—you know you’ve misread

their intentions: they won’t confess a thing.

The tram surprises you. They walk ahead.

You try to listen to the schoolgirls sing.

[1] In Before Sunrise (1995), answering Jesse’s (Ethan Hawke) question as to how she speaks such good English, Céline (Julie Delpy) says: “I went to school for a summer in Los Angeles.” A little later, she playfully mocks him by saying: “I knew you were American. And of course, you don’t speak any other language right?” The action of the film takes place mostly in Vienna.

[2] German, Czech, Urdu, and Spanish words for “sugar”. They all sound very similar, pointing to a common root.

 

Published in Cider Press Review, Volume 23, Issue 6.

Uttaran Das Gupta is a New Delhi-based writer and journalist. He has published a book of poetry (Visceral Metropolis, 2017) and a novel (Ritual, 2020). He teaches journalism at O P Jindal Global University.

See all items about Uttaran Das Gupta

Visit Uttaran Das Gupta’s contributors page.

Leave a Reply