May 6, 2009

Ever?

The subtle radiance of a star-dewed flower

Emanates soft swishes in the night

And as you smile your lilac petal smile

The chrysanthemums bloom wild

The chrysanthemums bloom wild


Yes, they bloom. Even in gloom. Even in doom

You, star-shining within my substance

You who shall not wither

Why do smile so, my fleur?

Why, is that silence your speech?


Purple dew melts into the bowl of Aphrodite

Tender stirring, the dryad druid of love

Silence envelops the mystic green fumes that rise

Awakens again the me.

1 comment:

  1. ever hoped never such things happen;
    The United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima on 6th August 1945 — and every year people across the world commemorate this horrific crime, and renew their determination to destroy all nuclear weapons across this planet.

    This is a poem written and read by Turkey’s great poet Nizim Hikmet.

    The Little Dead Girl
    by Nazim Hikmet

    It is me knocking at your door
    at how many doors i’ve been
    But no one can see me
    Since the dead are invisible.

    I died at Hiroshima
    that was ten years ago
    I am a girl of seven
    Dead children do not grow.

    First my hair caught fire
    then my eyes burnt out
    I became a handful of ashes
    blown away by the wind.

    I don’t wish anything for myself
    for a child who is burnt to cinders
    cannot even eat sweets.

    I’m knocking at your doors
    aunts and uncles, to get your signatures
    so that never again children will burn
    and so they can eat sweets.

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