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FOUR WAY REVIEW

TWO POEMS by Rajiv Mohabir

by Rajiv Mohabir / Wednesday, 12 November 2025 / Published in Featured Poetry, Issue 34, Poetry
Man stands at seashore in a white shirt with a big grin, resting his hands on his head.

In Sixteen Bridal Adornments You Come,
 
          opening to another. What cannot be 
 
          carried from room to room?
          You line eyes in burned ghee
          cured under the full moon,
 
          toe rings gleam 
          against your dark
 
          skin, brush the doorstep 
          of stone. You open another
 
          door. Stay there, 
          standing. Your earrings flicker, 
          thresh gold: 
 
          a votive collaboration
          with candlelight.
 
          You need another
          to light your match.

 

अंतिम श्वास / At My Last Breath 

A crow perches on a deer’s collapsing 
ribcage in a field of cut corn stalks, gold 
tarnished beneath snowfall. The tractor blades 
that harrowed the fawn, rust in winter wind, 
snow-bitten into fragments. Tomorrow 
asphalt cracks widen with thaw. The red 
fox curling against the highway shoulder 
widens until it opens to earth, each cell 
lifting into arid light. When the crow 
comes for me I want to recall you full-
leafed at Gaviota beach, your swimsuit 
a whelk shell ashore; for the sun of you 
to pull me up, to release me to mist.
 

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Man stands at seashore in a white shirt with a big grin, resting his hands on his head.

About Rajiv Mohabir

Poet, memoirist, and translator, Rajiv Mohabir is the author of five books of poetry, the latest of which is Seabeast (Four Way Books 2025). His books have been awarded gold in Forward Indies and Eric Hoffer Medal Provocateur. His other honors include being finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award, the PEN/America Open Book Award, the Lambda Literary Award, the Randy Shilts Award for Gay Nonfiction, and both second place and finalist for the Guyana Prize for Literature. His translations have won the Harold Morton Landon Translation Award from the American Academy of Poets. Currently he teaches poetry at the University of Colorado Boulder.

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