If only I knew how to mold bricks out of lone I’d build you a house And paint it with flowers That mimic the colourless hues of your gaze
Leaves, I’d tie to stooping fingers Of our barren talks Fruits with moonlight in their stout tummies your chapped lips They envy the sweetness of Do you know? (Too bold a flattery, you say— Dare me then; dare you) Gentle I’d go Show them the tree And they’d make their nests In its laden boughs
A crown on your head Weaved out of patience I’d softly place If only I knew a way past this barricade That together we built A thousand years ago I’d be a flock of wild geese Guiding you out
Oh, my fluttering wings Calmed in the sky’s blue embrace I’d soar around in winters cruel I’d watch and watch The edges of our land
A bed I’d carve Out of roses and dawns Hang up my rivers By the glass windows shivering in our storm Oh, there is a kingdom I would like to save A bunch of bluebirds, and a quiet queen The slender moon far, far away
If only I knew A melody strong enough To cure this aching rebellion Oh, if I did! If I— I watched, and watched the shores Of our land No ships came with their armours ready Your own bluebirds, They fight now the flowers They ravage the fruits
If only I had a drop of divinity Sulking somewhere inside me I’d banish their light souls Out of their bodies But bluebirds, Are pretty And so is the mayhem And so is silence, And you aridity
Lurk at a distance, I know not What to build out of this lone