Open Link Night #368
Hello, fellow poets! Today I am hosting my first Open Link Night. As most of you may know, OLN allows you the opportunity to share ONE poem of your choice with the rest of the dVerse community. There is no particular theme or form to be followed. If you missed the deadline for a recent prompt, you could also use this as a chance to respond to it.
You are welcome to use the mini-prompt offered below.Today I would like to share excerpts from one my favourite Indian poets writing in English. Vikram Seth’s “The Golden Gate” came out in 1986, when I was a young girl. I read it much later, when I was writing rhyming poems in my diary feverishly, hoping to publish one day and become famous! 😉

What fascinated me was that the entire novel was written in sonnet form (Onegin sonnet or Pushkin sonnet), that too in iambic tetrameter! I had just begun to read modern poets and the magazines and newspapers that I read, (most of us in India did not have internet in the late 80s) indicated that rhyming was passe. Reading The Golden Gate gave me hope that the traditional form of poetry did have an audience/readership.
Below are a few sonnets from the novel.
How beautiful it is, when waking,
To find one’s lover at one’s side;
The delicate slow light is breaking
Irresolutely through the wide
Bay windows of their bedroom, falling
On Liz’s hair, and John’s recalling
How last night she untied it, how
It flowed between his hands; but now
She lies asleep, unswiftly breathing;
Her thoughts are not with him, her dreams
Traverse the solitary streams
Of inward lands, yet her hair, wreathing
The pillow in a mesh of light,
Returns to him the fugitive night
1.16
Sweet Siamese of rare refulgence
With chocolate ears and limbs of tow,
Jan gives them love, food, and indulgence
The cats take this for granted, show
Scant deference to their human betters;
In splendour Jan can ill afford,
In silken bed, on sumptuous board
They fatten. Though, when out of favor,
The L and C on their beds are
Interpreted “Louise” and “Catarrh,”
Jan relishes the warmth and savor
The deeds of Cuff and Link confer,
The love they deign to yield to her.
13.4
Patron of your beloved city,
O San Francisco, saint of love,
Co-sufferer in searing pity
Of all our griefs, whom from above
Birds would alight on, singing, feeding
Within your hands–hands pierced and bleeding
With Christ’s own signs–who, stigmatized
As dupe and clown, apostrophized
The sun in its white blistering starkness
As brother, and the blistered moon
As sister, and who, blind at noon,
Opened your heart and sang in darkness–
And where it was, sowed light, look down.
Solace the sorrows of your town.
Here’s another favourite…
All you who sleep tonight
Far from the ones you love,
No hands to left or right,
And emptiness above –
Know that you aren’t alone.
The whole world shares your tears,
Some for two nights or one,
And some for all their years.
You can take inspiration from any of the sonnets above and write a poem in the sonnet form, if you wish.
Or use the poem “All you who sleep tonight” as a springboard to write about your own sleeplessness.
If you are new to dVerse, here’s what to do:
Write one poem of your choosing, no required topic/form/length OR write one poem inspired by the mini-prompt provided above.
Post the poem on your blog and add the URL for your poem to Mr. Linky below.
Remember to either tag dVerse in your post, or include a link at the end of your poem that leads readers back to dVerse.
Do come back to read what others have posted.
Have fun.

Hello everyone! Welcome to OLN. Looking forward to reading your poems. I forgot to mention in the post that the link will remain open till 11.30 pm EST of August 31st.
The bar is open. Please let me know what you would like. I baked apple crumble for desert and there is plenty for everyone, served with vanilla icecream.
Hi Punam – I’ve just eaten but can’t resist apple crumble – its that time of year here with apples and blackberries ripening.
Thank you for the prompt – I personally do not like sonnet rhyme but what an interesting novel – I’ve taken that one line and made something of an unrhymed poem!
Apple crumble coming up for you, Laura! I loved your poem and where you took that line.
Good evening poets, and thank you Punam for hosting. I’ve linked up an old poem from four years ago. It will be the last post from me for a week as I’m off to spend time with my daughter and grandsons for a week. I’m posting and running tonight, but will be back tomorrow to read and comment. Enjoy reading and commenting.
Hi Kim. I hope you have a wonderful time with your daughter and grandsons. Enjoy your stay.
Thank you, Punam.
You are welcome.
Such a nice warm presentation….a whole novel in sonnet form ….so interesting, by the famous Vikram Seth.
Anything apple is lovely.
Hi Ain. It is quite an interesting novel.
Apple crumble with vanilla icecream coming up for you!
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nice choice with Vikram Seth. I have enough apples outside to last me through the winter—I’m gathering the ones that have fallen from recent storms for the neighbor’s hens. But blackberry (crumble did I hear?) sounds divine. Thanks for hosting!
Hi. I am glad you liked the excerpts shared. Alas! Blackberries are not available easily here. Thanks for joining in.
I shared a dark little poem that I wrote too late for last week’s dVerse OLN. I hope you enjoy it!
Thanks for sharing Vikram’s poetry!
Thanks for joining in, Nolcha. Glad you liked Vikram’s poetry.
Hi Punam! And everybody else at dVerse! It’s been an incredibly busy back to school week. I’d love some apple crumble with ice cream please!
Hi Melissa! Good to see you. A large serving of apple crumble with a double scoop of icecream for the exhausted mom.
Thank you for hosting, Punam. What an interesting book you have presented to us. I am amazed that the novel is written in Sonnets and even more amazed that when translated to English it all flows and works so very well! On this hot day a chocolate milkshake would be delicious!
I am extremely sorry for the delay, Dwight. A chocolate milkshake especially for you.
I am glad you enjoyed knowing about Seth.
No problem. Milkshakes are good any time!! :>)
😊👍🏼
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Hi Punam, What a fun prompt tonight, and perfect timing. I was writing sonnets this morning. I hadn’t heard of the Pushkin sonnet before, and enjoyed the new (to me) form. Thank you.
Hi Maria. I am so glad you wrote a Pushkin sonnet. It was an excellent write. Thank you!
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penned and linked (no particular theme or form– but def NOT a sonnet). thank you for hosting!
Thanks for joining in. I loved your poem.
Thanks for hosting, Punam! I remember reading some of Seth’s The Golden Gate years ago and, like you, I found his use of sonnets to organize the ‘novel’s’ form to be fascinating!
My pleasure, Chris. Yes, indeed very fascinating.
Thanks for the prompt, Punam, Vikram’s novel is indeed an object lesson in the strength of rhyme, properly wielded, and by chance, the poem I wrote last week for my writing group, has echoes of the last extract you chose. I shall try and get hold of The Golden Gate now…
Oh! And diabetes be blowed – hit me with a plate of your Apple Crumble please!
I glad you liked reading about Seth. I hope you enjoy reading it.
Ah! As far as the apple crumble is concerned, diabetes shall not be blown! My son is a T1 diabetic so I did make a batch with stevia, so large serving of apple crumble with sugar free icecream coming up just for you, Andrew!
By the way, I loved your poem.
Thank you for hosting Punam,
Thank you for hosting, Punam. I just added mine, and I will catch up with reading over the weekend. 😊