Nostalgia
Someday I will die,
and even if they send my soul to the
heavens,
I know I will be forever homesick.
For sure I will be longing for my days on
earth,
remembering old surprising scarlet red
sunsets,
preceding soft nights where happily I had
met
some lovely and unforgettable women,
sisters
our race has refined in such a beauty
never seen
anywhere or anytime else.
Longing for a world made by ourselves, humans
full of many faults, sins and mismatches;
stripped
of gifts inherent to a God or a Creator,
however
never lacking incessant and true-hearted a
love.
Longing for the smell of wet ground from
which
our ancestors once were created;
longing for the birds’ carol perched on
trees
where indomitable free winds sway their
leaves
leaving also their song;
longing for the days of glory on winning
struggles
once we had supposed were lost.
Longing for a man once alive who believed
he could one day be a king in his kingdom.
(First published in Algebra of Owls,
February 01, 2017)
Saints
and Sinners
We founded churches, schools, hospitals,
we created priests, teachers and
physicians;
some of us we acclaimed kings and judges,
some others, beggars and prisoners.
We care for our children, instilling in
them
those dreams we were not able to fulfill.
We have changed our course many times,
both on the road and in our minds,
so little different from those primitive
hordes,
turning to the wind like a ship of old
sailors.
We have never had even that natural gift
of birds,
who know from birth their journeys and
returns
in each season of their lives.
Saints and sinners, side by side, we write
our history,
which, someday, will be read, and they
will know that,
if we lacked wit and sapience,
there has been always a plenty of love.
A love full of disappointments, but
blended with the joy
of alone colonizing a planet given to
unknown ancestors,
which, despite life’s scars, has been
always handed
to ever welcome new generations.
First published in Free Lit Magazine, The
Chaos issue, September 28, 2018.
Dangerous
Regression
Sometimes I visit the past, long ago,
perilous
and suspicious a world.
The road I take has been built entirely by
me,
in very hard a way no one at least dreams
of.
Rough a path and full of so many
deviations,
that even I, well used to, I go so
timorous.
Now, it is clear there were no other
choices,
for only this way would lead me where I
am.
Where and what I must be ever since I was.
In this visit, I see friends, lovers,
enemies,
grandfathers and cousins, see also myself.
Then, undoubted alive, they talk to
me,
ask for news and soon we are
laughing,
like old comrades who were absent for so
long.
On leaving, one or other intend to follow
me,
but I go home alone.
I suspect that past is jealous of its
deeds
and hides from us how it has weaved
them.
I think we must go there as few times
we are capable of.
First published in Taj Mahal Review, Dec
21, 2021
Inward
Nobility
I cannot accept the sacred and solemn
as private of the Popes and Bishops,
Kings and Judges.
On the various facets of daily life,
in the streets, avenues and alleys,
houses and hovels, by
hugging a friend long not seen,
returning an unexpected smile,
giving a hand to the child and
listening to some elderly,
stopping to hear the birds
and the buzzing of the bees,
admiring the beauty of the horizons
and the flowers of the gardens, and,
for the exasperation of all the demons,
making love, not war;
there is genuine a solemnity,
also, grandeur and nobility, as
at the cathedrals, palaces and courts.
And so, we go easily moving
hard and heavy the wheels of time,
towards uncertain and unknown days.
First published in Red Wolf Journal,
August 10, 2016.
Guilty
a Heart
So many beauties spread by the way,
I cannot pass without enjoying one by one.
Indeed, there are some ones so beautiful
that,
besides to enjoy, should also be
worshiped,
tribute and respect to the Common
Creator.
Unhappily, I have amorous and stubborn a
heart,
perhaps a delinquent one,
used to fall in love almost every
day.
Could be it hard and insensitive,
just as almost all of them,
so I would pass fast and safe,
impassible and passionless.
But it usually picks up a song,
from unknown a spell,
fairy music of the wind, or, who
knows,
resurrected Ulysses’ mermaids singing,
that, poor me, I cannot resist.
Then, I go, amazed and fascinated,
sometimes in despair and strained,
along with loving brothers and
sisters,
daily struggling to move hard
and harsh the wheels of time.
(Published in Red Wolf Journal, Aug 8,
2021)


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