I’m eating a little supper by the bright window.   The room’s already dark, the sky’s starting to turn.   Outside my door, the quiet roads lead,   after a short walk, to open fields.   I’m eating, watching the sky—who knows   how many women are eating now. My body is calm:   labor dulls all the senses, and dulls women too.       Outside, after supper, the stars will come out to touch   the wide plain of the earth. The stars are alive,   but not worth these cherries, which I’m eating alone.   I look at the sky, know that lights already are shining   among rust-red roofs, noises of people beneath them.   A gulp of my drink, and my body can taste the life   of plants and of rivers. It feels detached from things.   A small dose of silence suffices, and everything’s still,   in its true place, just like my body is still.       All things become islands before my senses,   which accept them as a matter of course: a murmur of silence.   All things in this darkness—I can know a...
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