Thursday, October 9, 2025

The Sleeper Train by Mary Kipps

 

Image / Laura Meinhardt

The Sleeper Train


No matter the scant sips of liquid

I allow myself in the hours before,

the nocturia of my age still intrudes

on my already fitful sleep. 

Silently, I pull on my sneakers,

slip between the curtains

of the sleeping compartment.


The unlit aisle of this swaying

second-class train is a minefield

of stray shoes, empty water bottles,

and lost pillows. But my destination,

when I finally reach it, is relatively clean

and, rare for India, has toilet paper.


Halfway back down the car,

I realize I am lost.

The sudden light from a mobile phone

two curtains ahead is followed

by a woman’s whisper. Here, ji.

The middle-aged Punjabi woman 

who shares my four-berth compartment

with her husband and brother will light my way twice more before dawn. 


© Mary Kipps


Mary Kipps

Mary Kipps enjoys composing in traditional forms as well as in free verse. A former Pushcart Prize nominee, her poems have appeared regularly in journals and anthologies across the U.S. and abroad since 2005.



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