miyako73
01-11-2014, 02:45 AM
Dusts settling above their eyelids,
They all look at me as if my words
Are inaudible flutters of feathers.
I ask them the way to the market;
Their mouths unwilling, they glance
At the ruined shadows in the sun.
Across the fabric stall selling silk veils,
A woman covered in sewn rags cowers,
Her blinks sleepy, her long squints tired.
Only the east wind, scorching at noon,
Reaches her palm, touches her arm;
Her begging stare fails to stir anyone.
A boy who sings a prayer in his hum
Sits on the ground near the fruit stand,
Watching the noise of intoxicated flies.
His pride concealed by his amber eyes,
Hunger stifling his tongue, drying his lips,
He prays for the basket of berries to rot.
On the bench outside the coffee shop,
Where they burn tobacco and apple peels,
An old man rests, but his gaze is restless.
Checking the faces of the voices he hears,
He waits everyday for his missing sons
And his daughters he will no longer see.
I walk around the half-burnt market,
Along the bombed roads, on the paths
Leading to deep holes and more ruins.
I see a thousand Syrian eyes in Aleppo
But not a single drop of pain on a cheek;
They hold back their tears for the graves.
They all look at me as if my words
Are inaudible flutters of feathers.
I ask them the way to the market;
Their mouths unwilling, they glance
At the ruined shadows in the sun.
Across the fabric stall selling silk veils,
A woman covered in sewn rags cowers,
Her blinks sleepy, her long squints tired.
Only the east wind, scorching at noon,
Reaches her palm, touches her arm;
Her begging stare fails to stir anyone.
A boy who sings a prayer in his hum
Sits on the ground near the fruit stand,
Watching the noise of intoxicated flies.
His pride concealed by his amber eyes,
Hunger stifling his tongue, drying his lips,
He prays for the basket of berries to rot.
On the bench outside the coffee shop,
Where they burn tobacco and apple peels,
An old man rests, but his gaze is restless.
Checking the faces of the voices he hears,
He waits everyday for his missing sons
And his daughters he will no longer see.
I walk around the half-burnt market,
Along the bombed roads, on the paths
Leading to deep holes and more ruins.
I see a thousand Syrian eyes in Aleppo
But not a single drop of pain on a cheek;
They hold back their tears for the graves.