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A blind woman stared at me no, that’s impossible without eyes one can’t stare maybe gaze, graze my soul feel me know who I am, without I even knowing, known sitting alone in a corner playing with pen and paper she can hear me, she can see me so she sits and stares in my direction mouth closed, lips form smile. At what does she smile? The mad woman, rocking back and forth to and fro, as if to music as if she’s seen notes on paper writings about her, her defects deflections, that’s all they are she cannot see that I stare at her no, lovingly watch, hopefully she knows I swear she knows it. Why else would she smile? Glasses block her eyes, thick, black as night, blacker probably, but who am I to compare? I’ve never seen like her, never not seen like her she draws in my being, I can’t look away I can’t, must feel her touch her face, tell her, “It’s going to be alright,” let her know I love her, that I need her. Her smile never leaves, she sees something I never will. Soon, she will walk over, strut magnificently, majestically, unperturbed by my probing eyes feeling her way across aisles on moving train, she will hold me in her arms, her untouched arms soft, yet weathered begging to be held, to hold me and tell me, just tell me, “Don’t worry, child, it’ll be alright.”
0
Aug 7, 2012
Aug 7, 2012 at 1:29 AM UTC
A Blind Child
A blind woman stared at me no, that’s impossible without eyes one can’t stare maybe gaze, graze my soul feel me know who I am, without I even knowing, known sitting alone in a corner playing with pen and paper she can hear me, she can see me so she sits and stares in my direction mouth closed, lips form smile. At what does she smile? The mad woman, rocking back and forth to and fro, as if to music as if she’s seen notes on paper writings about her, her defects deflections, that’s all they are she cannot see that I stare at her no, lovingly watch, hopefully she knows I swear she knows it. Why else would she smile? Glasses block her eyes, thick, black as night, blacker probably, but who am I to compare? I’ve never seen like her, never not seen like her she draws in my being, I can’t look away I can’t, must feel her touch her face, tell her, “It’s going to be alright,” let her know I love her, that I need her. Her smile never leaves, she sees something I never will. Soon, she will walk over, strut magnificently, majestically, unperturbed by my probing eyes feeling her way across aisles on moving train, she will hold me in her arms, her untouched arms soft, yet weathered begging to be held, to hold me and tell me, just tell me, “Don’t worry, child, it’ll be alright.”
joseph-valle
Written by
American
Aug 7, 2012
Aug 7, 2012 at 1:29 AM UTC
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