Harvest MoonA Poem by Cristina MoldoveanuMany waters flew down in a row. I couldn’t see my traces anymore: barefoot child footprints, hoofs, wagon wheels piling up like volcano cinders drifting in the wind. People had a shrill voice, a kind of old knife blade stuck in dry earth, they were coming home with dust in their collars, the moon’s craters were no more visible.
I began to drink water only from a spring source carrying it at sunset in a cold pitcher its shadow was trembling as I walked by along with my too long shadow, like two brotherly waves.
For a time I stood close to the ground, a butterfly wing on a broken earthenware, feeling my heart growing bigger, its walls withdrawing inside it, a bulldozer overturning the rubble.
I was hardly breathing, compressed by demolished bricks detached from their foundation. Like a well without chains I couldn’t cry anymore, all my tears were lost.
Around rooster’s wake up two gray trains collided, the passengers forgotten on a long list in the church service were murmuring, dreams’ barrier broke below them. It was raining again. © 2012 Cristina Moldoveanu |
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1 Review Added on July 29, 2012 Last Updated on July 29, 2012 AuthorCristina MoldoveanuBucharest, RomaniaAboutPoor and alone, getting old in Bucharest, Romania more..Writing
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