You were so absent while washing your face in the morning, you never saw how the linden in the courtyard reached a limb through the bathroom window and shook sticky seeds into your hair. Your hair grayed in this working class neighbourhood you’d heard already as a child smelled like a ruined life. The turrets of the little Russian church once looked so fragile to you – you wanted to feed them carrots from your hand and croutons. Your heart was alive. Your heart was like an iodine rain over a crowd of crushed heads.
By Dan Sociu, from Sentimental and Naïve Poetry, translated by Oana Sanziana Marian