Agnes Stein

 

 

November

In the slate grey sky
the moon
cast off in pewter
turns a pallid cheek
distancing
its dark side
disdainful satellite observer
sailing free above the earth
sorrow etched in ice
thin shadow
sickle cut








 

 

 

There the sky was knowledge. I was aware of the sky from the earliest hours of the morning. Without an alarm clock I always woke when there was a change in the texture of the darkness…as if the night had thrown a voluminous cloak around a shining body….The dawn was incredibly swift.

By eleven the sky was burning white beating light. I can’t remember looking up into it. Girls walked quickly over the burning road in their bare feet, their sari ends pulled down over their heads to shade their eyes.

Under the banyan tree at noon there were strong cool winds but I don’t know how they came there from the burning plains.

While the sun went down we walked out toward the villages. Because of the flatness of the land the sky was immensely wide and high. When the sun was golden our shadows were long on the road. It struck the paddy fields horizontally a brilliant green. Tribal men and women walking single file toward their villages were black against the sky. Then the sun grew orange and the color growing darker covered half the sky, a fierce red. The other half of the sky was then in darkness. On those roads at sunset we drank, we breathed a freedom that was like pure water to a man parched with thirst.

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