THE CHILD MEDITATES

THE CHILD MEDITATES

The oak-tree in front of my houseSmells different every morning.Sometimes it smells fresh and wiseLike my mother’s hair.Sometimes it stands ashamedBecause it doesn’t own the smellIt borrowed from our flower-garden.Sometimes it has a windy smell,As though it had come back from a long walk.The oak-tree in front of my houseHas different smells, like grown up people.My doll hides behind her pink cheeks,So that you can’t see when she moves,But it doesn’t matter becauseShe always moves when no one is looking,And that is why people think she is still.People laugh when I say that my doll is alive,But if she were dead, my fingersWouldn’t know that they were touching her.She lives inside a little house.And laughs because I cannot find the door.The colours in my roomMeet each other and hesitate.Is that what people call shape?Nobody seems to think so,But I believe that lines are dead shapesUnless they fall against each otherAnd look surprised, like the colours in my room!

The oak-tree in front of my houseSmells different every morning.Sometimes it smells fresh and wiseLike my mother’s hair.Sometimes it stands ashamedBecause it doesn’t own the smellIt borrowed from our flower-garden.Sometimes it has a windy smell,As though it had come back from a long walk.The oak-tree in front of my houseHas different smells, like grown up people.My doll hides behind her pink cheeks,So that you can’t see when she moves,But it doesn’t matter becauseShe always moves when no one is looking,And that is why people think she is still.People laugh when I say that my doll is alive,But if she were dead, my fingersWouldn’t know that they were touching her.She lives inside a little house.And laughs because I cannot find the door.The colours in my roomMeet each other and hesitate.Is that what people call shape?Nobody seems to think so,But I believe that lines are dead shapesUnless they fall against each otherAnd look surprised, like the colours in my room!

The oak-tree in front of my houseSmells different every morning.Sometimes it smells fresh and wiseLike my mother’s hair.Sometimes it stands ashamedBecause it doesn’t own the smellIt borrowed from our flower-garden.Sometimes it has a windy smell,As though it had come back from a long walk.The oak-tree in front of my houseHas different smells, like grown up people.

The oak-tree in front of my house

Smells different every morning.

Sometimes it smells fresh and wise

Like my mother’s hair.

Sometimes it stands ashamed

Because it doesn’t own the smell

It borrowed from our flower-garden.

Sometimes it has a windy smell,

As though it had come back from a long walk.

The oak-tree in front of my house

Has different smells, like grown up people.

My doll hides behind her pink cheeks,So that you can’t see when she moves,But it doesn’t matter becauseShe always moves when no one is looking,And that is why people think she is still.People laugh when I say that my doll is alive,But if she were dead, my fingersWouldn’t know that they were touching her.She lives inside a little house.And laughs because I cannot find the door.

My doll hides behind her pink cheeks,

So that you can’t see when she moves,

But it doesn’t matter because

She always moves when no one is looking,

And that is why people think she is still.

People laugh when I say that my doll is alive,

But if she were dead, my fingers

Wouldn’t know that they were touching her.

She lives inside a little house.

And laughs because I cannot find the door.

The colours in my roomMeet each other and hesitate.Is that what people call shape?Nobody seems to think so,But I believe that lines are dead shapesUnless they fall against each otherAnd look surprised, like the colours in my room!

The colours in my room

Meet each other and hesitate.

Is that what people call shape?

Nobody seems to think so,

But I believe that lines are dead shapes

Unless they fall against each other

And look surprised, like the colours in my room!


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