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Breadwinner    
 
Down the hill, over pebbles and rocks, 
we chase after him, he after the stream, 
and rush into an old stone-slate hut. 
 
Out comes the gush of his laughter. 
We are panting a chorus now. Our hands 
on our knees, and cheeks, city-red. 
 
Now he, my father, is a little boy 
flaunting his 'phoren' toy, while we,  
twenty-first-century camera kids, 
witness the wooden chakra, 
and the chant of the millstones.
 
 He unites with his fourteen-year-old 
								    fatherless self, carrying a sack of wheat  
								    or corn for three miles. His voice  
								    cues our lips into smiles, till 
								    dew descends into my eyes 
								    wishing to embrace  
								    his fifty-year-old feet. 
                                     
                                    He has shouldered three  
                                    generationshis mother,  
                                    siblings, our mama and us, 
                                    and he is still humming like the stream, 
                                    like the grindstone.  
                                     
                           He is the wheat, 
the watermill, the roti in my mouth. 
			
						
						 
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