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Your land cast you out, So you settled on the wing of a poem. Perhaps its letters won’t mislead… the one who failed you. A homeland at the gate of hell, even if it seemed so— Abandon it, for it wasn’t worthy. The opposing trunk of the palm tree wasn’t shaken So that ripe promises, like dates, might fall into your hand, for the waves of a sea whose cruel desires perhaps tempted it… to **** you. Your land cast you out. The breast of Arabism was no longer enough to nurse you a dream, shadowed by darkness, its modesty within the borders. The lofty ones accepted exile with a dawn of sorrow that neglected you. And you, who took from your priest’s hand the ember of preservation for the eternity that will not betray you— you believed those dwelling beside your soul, and you were burned. Destiny did not will it for you. And it was as if they were the piece of candy, my child, that fell from your mouth. The sea does not nurse its children… Sleep, my beloved. It is a paradise for eternity, loftier than a false nectar we smell like a grave, its dwellers unconcerned. And the lamb concealed in its lips a song for the sorrow of your childhood. Sleep, my beloved. It is no longer from within history that your innocence is condemned or questioned. This is its nature: The sea does not nurse its children.
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Nov 16, 2025
Nov 16, 2025 at 4:48 PM UTC
The Sea Does Not Nurse Its Children
Your land cast you out, So you settled on the wing of a poem. Perhaps its letters won’t mislead… the one who failed you. A homeland at the gate of hell, even if it seemed so— Abandon it, for it wasn’t worthy. The opposing trunk of the palm tree wasn’t shaken So that ripe promises, like dates, might fall into your hand, for the waves of a sea whose cruel desires perhaps tempted it… to **** you. Your land cast you out. The breast of Arabism was no longer enough to nurse you a dream, shadowed by darkness, its modesty within the borders. The lofty ones accepted exile with a dawn of sorrow that neglected you. And you, who took from your priest’s hand the ember of preservation for the eternity that will not betray you— you believed those dwelling beside your soul, and you were burned. Destiny did not will it for you. And it was as if they were the piece of candy, my child, that fell from your mouth. The sea does not nurse its children… Sleep, my beloved. It is a paradise for eternity, loftier than a false nectar we smell like a grave, its dwellers unconcerned. And the lamb concealed in its lips a song for the sorrow of your childhood. Sleep, my beloved. It is no longer from within history that your innocence is condemned or questioned. This is its nature: The sea does not nurse its children.
Abdel latif Moubarak Egyptian poet
abdel-latif-moubarak
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Nov 16, 2025
Nov 16, 2025 at 4:48 PM UTC
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