Ghazal of Mansplaining 

April 25, 2026

I call on love, he opens the door of mansplaining
I seek succour, he scrapes the sore of mansplaining

For every word I use, he hurls a hundred better words
With hefty jargon he lines the shore of mansplaining

Poor woman poet, I repeat thoughts in verse after verse
He conjures new sparks from his store of mansplaining

He ridicules my voice–why passive, for God’s sake!
In the assertive active lies his roar of mansplaining

He knows my intent, my ire, and why I err
I tire him often with the chore of mansplaining

Even in sleep he wants the best for me
I must sit and interpret his snore of mansplaining

Each day he narrates anew how he serves my good
In a different genre, the same lore of mansplaining

I am complicated, he is straight
To straighten me is his core of mansplaining

From tea to terza rima, each subject is his bride
I envy none but his whore of mansplaining

He wants to twist my qaafiya, hammer my radeef
To advance at my expense his score of mansplaining

He might have made, dear Reader, a Ghalib out of her
But Basudhara blocked his number, his bore of mansplaining.

Basudhara Roy teaches English at Karim City College and writes, edits, reviews, and
translates poetry from Jamshedpur, India.

Basudhara Roy

Basudhara Roy teaches English at Karim City College and is the author of four collections of poems, the latest being A Blur of a Woman (Red River, 2024). Drawn to themes of gender, ecology, and mythology, she writes, edits, reviews, and sporadically curates and translates poetry from Jamshedpur, India.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Don't Miss

Paired

I take off my gloves to pull my suitcase

COVID Pandemic- A Double Emergency

Despite forming 15% of India’s population, we