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And so he sat there
on the old stone bench
of his forefathers.
He glanced back at her
with a gesture of uncertainty,
as if everything in the world changed its meaning.
Perhaps it was because he thought of her as something else,
her name, her form,
rather than who she really is.
It is not unusual, when distracted, to get two things confused.
With or without wine;
this is how things come to be.
He shifted toward the kiln
muttering a litany of vulgarities,
and meanwhile - hoping that he was the sole listener of such words -
he scanned the floor
observing the tiny fragments of baked clay and dust in their union.
He shut his mouth
and watched the worker ants carry pebbles
of clay and bread crumbs
twice thier size
to a small mound somewhere outside.
She called out to him for breakfast.
Bread, cheese, and coffee
remained unchanged
But the mornings and nights
have changed.
The house will change.
From their previous waking hour,
between the white linens
wrinkled with playful agitation,
did she tell him in the secure silence
of their bedroom
that her period was two weeks late.
And for a moment he lay there
with simultaneous happiness and fright
creeping up from his gut to his chest.
In the rarest moment of his life
he realised that he was a child
once upon a time.
A father, and an embryo,
and a fragment of clay.
- by Commissar Noir |
- Poetry And Lyrics
- | Submitted on 06/17/2010 |
- Skip

Comments (2 Comments)
- foxymama228 - 08/16/2012
- Words could never describe what detail and passion u have in your writing.
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- Jaqwenne - 06/18/2010
- Commie, I'm jealoussss. ;-;
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