About the human conditions of helplessness, loss of love, and contentment. |
Gazelle I am the bustling blue sky Under where she sought shelter From her heartless hunter. Under where she softly cried Upon abruptly awakening From her soured green dreams. Where she looked as she skipped Across the waterless wastelands On her burned and broken feet. Gave her rain in her dry thirst And shrouded her with darkness When she wanted to hide in grasslands. Brought the sunlight to her hazy eyes And thousands of stars to accompany Her during her long and lonely nights. Embraced her with mist when vultures Circled overhead to eat her weakening Body as she rambled through the desert. Gathered her fading tears and sprinkled Them in her face when she began to forget The vicious nights under his raging rifle. Shattered her thickening skin with hail When she wanted to recoil into herself And lie frozen in the indifferent tundra ice. Entertained her with my lightning flashes And my passing clouds when she needed things To hold on to in the vacuum of her long-lost dreams. Shared with her the secrets of where my winds blew And the mysteries of how my colorful birds could fly And the terrible past of the constantly changing moon. Then, I watched her hunter sneak up on her with a rope And, putting it around her neck, led her through the jungle Back to his shady, crippled cabin, away from my longing gaze. And when she finally came out, a month later under the same moon, He whipped her to work, pulling crates of heavy, green lemons behind her As she dug her hind legs into the ground to muster enough strength to go on. With a laugh he shoved a hard rifle into her back when she lay down, weary From pulling his big carriage and luring other animals into his metal traps, But she remained expressionless, licking the flailing cuts on her stained belly. And one cold night, under the birds that flew south, I showed her the warm sun In the horizon, and with my lips on her broken cheek asked her to come back to me, But she mumbled that I was just a dream, and besides…she had gotten used to him. |