| Autumn light |
There’s November in everything, cold air affixing to tough skin like curious fingers. | |
| By Andrej Hočevar / Ljubljana, Slovenia | |
| Tuesday, October 5, 2010 | |
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Getting Used to the Light There’s November in everything, cold air affixing to tough skin like curious fingers. Each evening is a small defeat, a poem never to be written. My body started speaking French. I can hardly understand it, I can’t catch up with it at all and have no idea where my words are going. That’s why I want to start this poem all over, I want to grab it and do with it what I do with your body – but a poem doesn’t always lie before a man as full and naked as a woman. Without any sleepiness I sleep like a shadow under a tree, the roots intertwining beneath me, and there, left forgotten on a branch, an apple. Its persistence is yellow and senseless. Here, there is no love – in a poem a woman can’t be easily exchanged.
The Sun is Shining Above Europe I’m still walking on damp sand flat-footedly pressing upon the history of the sea. Clouds are shedding from my body. The day already fuller than usual and the light lets its petals fall all over your neck. Previously I saw people carrying thick bouquets of leeks, big as a meter. Now the cold is spilling over the city and outside on the doorknob hangs a bag with two leeks, upright and more ordinary in size, while on the shellfish ever less visible pearls are forming – towards the end of the year everything returns to its usual routine. Neglected thoughts are arching through me, the city walking on me, wrapped in a woman’s hair for a scarf. I’d forgotten everything about this poem. At times, the hand that softly holds us suspended in air, shakes us like salt. Of all the lives I don’t live, this one is the best.
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| Last Updated ( Tuesday, November 2, 2010 ) |