Friday, April 20, 2018

Margot Lescaut Prose

A Clown

I am an invisible man. People like me are called unlucky ones. Though I can’t say that my destiny betrayed me because I don’t recall anything from my life to consider it being unlucky. I don’t recall anything special either to call it luck. The luck would never even notice me.
Maybe I have it from my birth. My mother heard about her pregnancy when she was five months pregnant… the rest of four months I did not disturb her with my existence. And the birth was so sudden she even couldn’t make it to maternity. I was born at home.
‘’He is such a quite and calm child, it’s hard to notice him’’
And so I was growing up. No one could even know if I existed.
I was so used to my non-existence that I constantly tried to stay out of sight.  I started playing with my toys when my siblings left the room.
We used to have a large room in an attic for playing. You could see all kinds of things in the room. Starting with toys and finishing with the old stuff. The stuff that my parents didn’t need anymore and  the stuff that they couldn’t get of either.
One corner of the room was occupied by old and neglected things.
The second corner was my sister’s. She had dolls and rubber toys on her shelf. Pencils and drawing papers were on the nearby desk.
The third corner was my brother’s.  He kept a tricycle, a chest filled with beautiful pebbles and stones, colored ping pong balls and different size footballs.
The fourth corner was my elder brother’s property.  He made curved wooden toys and stored them there.
The wooden clown was my favorite. I remember my brother took a long time to curve and paint that toy. He was very proud of his art piece. He separated the clown from the other toys. It was sat in the most honorable place, on the top shelf. That clown could overlook the whole attic and other toys. I was among the other stuff in the clown's field of vision. I would stare at him and make up different stories about his friends and mine.
I had a desire to hold the clown sometimes and to take him to the backyard. Then to have dinner together and go to bed together. There were so many things I wanted to share with him! Bedtime stories. But I knew my dream would never be true. First of all, I was so short that I couldn’t reach the top shelf. Secondly, my brother would take so much care of his clown that he would never let anyone touch it - not even my siblings.
I didn’t have my own space in the attic, so I used to play with my brother’s colored ping pong balls, and sometimes I would swing on my sister’s horse, or I would entertain myself with my brothers wooden soldiers. My clown was the last pleasure. I would put a stool in the middle of the room. I would sit there, staring at him, and then we both would start travelling together. We would chase grasshoppers in the valley. We would spy on frogs by the pond and throw stones at them. We would steal fruit from the trees, sneak into the shed and eat. That stolen fruit was so delicious!
Who knows how many times we travelled to the moon with a flying carpet? How many times we saved the princess from the evil witch, how many heroic things we did together. Only when I heard grandma’s footsteps approaching on the stairs, did I remember it was bedtime. I had to follow her.
Mother rarely was at home. She worked at the Laundromat and very often had night shifts. Granny would always take me to bed but she never lied in my bed with me. She drew back the covers for me, undressed me, put me in the bed, folded the blanket, put out the lights and left the room.
Once, it happened so that my dad accidentally left the ladder in the attic. The roof was leaking, so he dragged the ladder from the yard to fix the roof.
I recklessly rushed to the ladder and dragged it from one of the corners with great difficulty. I put the ladder against my clown’s shelf and climbed up. My dreams of reaching the clown were nearly fulfilled, but the ladder slipped away and I dropped on the floor with the shelf.
…Hooray! For  the first time in my life, everybody noticed me.
I broke my arm but I didn’t care too much about it. I felt so sorry for my clown. I just glanced at him once. His body parts were scattered on the floor.
There was a punishment for me. A week restriction- no visits to the attic! My punishment became severe when Mizzles attacked me. Three weeks passed and I didn’t have any ideas about what happened to my clown.
My birthday was coming… I didn’t like that day because my mom and dad were never at  home. I was constantly waiting. Not for some miracles to happen, but for something new and exciting at least. But that day also would pass like the other days. That is, as long as I didn't count that holiday pie, which my granny used to make.
And there was birthday morning. I smelled a freshly baked pie in bed but I was too lazy to open my eyes. Then, all of sudden, I remembered that they had promised me to let me go to the attic. I jumped out of bed immediately, got dressed and rushed upstairs. I was so excited that I even didn’t look at the breakfast table.
I saw a wooden stool in the middle of the attic. A box was on it with a golden ribbon. With bated breath I rushed over and opened the box....
I didn’t believe in my eyes – there was my favourite clown in the box with a birthday card!
I can’t recall if I had ever experienced that kind of emotion in my life. I can’t even call it joy. I think I didn’t have a name for it because that emotion completely overly captured me.
The broken head of the clown was fastened to its body, and the neck was wrapped with a tiny hand knitted scarf to hide the scar. My sister made that special scarf and my brother fixed the clown.
I don’t remember how long I had my clown hugged closely against my chest. Then granny came up and took me to have breakfast. Everybody was at home, my mom and even dad. Everybody was sitting around the table. The birthday pie was cut into pieces.
I don’t recall if I had ever experienced that kind of joy in my life. I have never been that happy before or since.
Then my mom died. She got sick in the laundry mat and pneumonia killed her. Then there was my elder brother’s death. He suffered from a strep throat infection and he died despite the doctors attempts to save him. 
Two years later my dad went away to war. He never came back. My granny became so weak from the disaster that she also passed away. Our relatives sold everything that we had and they took us with them to live.
The only thing I took from my house was the clown. The clown and a pair of clothes were tied up together in a sack. That clown was the sweetest memories from my past.
I was taken to the town of my aunt and uncle.
They had a beautiful house. My uncle was a banker and he was a respected man in the whole town, I never saw him smiling. It seemed like a smiling face was regarded as a shame for a respectable person. His reputation would be badly affected if he ever smiled. He didn’t treat me either badly or kindly. In fact, I didn’t exist for my uncle. My aunt was also very busy with her errands. Very often the days passed so that no one would even talk to me. Though I always had my devoted listener, my clown. I never spent even one day without him.
Once I went to the bathroom to take a bath and I left my clown on the bed. When I returned, the clown wasn’t there any more. I wen to my aunt and frantically asked her where my clown was. She told me that she bought new clothes for me and she ordered the maid to get rid of my old clothes. She added that the maid probably threw my clown away also. I was running down the stairs when I heard her last words. I rushed to the garbage can.  The clown was wrapped in my old clothes and was sitting there. I took him, hugged him, and locked myself in my room.
I left the house the next morning…
I travelled around to so many places and met with so many people in order to find shelter. Meanwhile, I was already turning sixteen when I came across the travelling circus and became a member of it. At first, they gave me some odd jobs to do. I was working as hard as I could. I didn’t need to be very responsible in what I was in charge of doing. I was surviving with the money I was earning.
One day, a little circus clown broke his leg and he was off from the group for six months. The circus director didn’t think much to find the replacement and I got the job offer to be a circus clown. It was such an unexpected proposition for me, that I got so confused that I didn’t accept it and I couldn't refuse it.  He noticed how hesitant I was and he gave me some time to think about it. I was so exciting and thrilling that I couldn’t manage to sleep that night. That job was so strange and so close at the same time for me. It seemed like I had to put on my precious friend’s shoes. The friend, who used to share all my worries and joys.
How could it be possible to become famous all of a sudden? At least, for the person who would never been noticed in his life. I had all of those thoughts before it became dawn. The morning appeared, and I was more courageous than I had been that night. I accepted the job.
After two week trainings my new life began.
Before performing, I would choose one of the spectators from the audience and imagine that they were my toy clown. I would dedicate my performance to them. I was so deep into my role that I wouldn’t notice where the clown ended in me and where I would begin. Where I started and where the clown began. The simple applause I got was my payment. Though I deceived myself again. As soon as I left the stage and removed my makeup in my carriage, I became myself again. I still became ‘’whatever’’ and was still was lonesome with my wooden clown. I still shared my daily experiences with him.
One day, when I was usually looking for a spectator to choose, I noticed the most beautiful girl sitting in the second row. She had golden hair waving on her shoulders. Her blue eyes were so shining with happiness, that I completely forgot my clown. At the end of the performance I realized that I just played for that girl and not for my friend.
For the first time, I had betrayed him.
I was wandering around the city until late thinking about the golden hair girl and my clown dumped on the bed.
When I returned to the carriage, I was feeling so guilty that I didn’t tell any bedtime stories to my friend. This was the first time I had ever done this.
This continued for the following four months.
The girl noticed that all my attention was paid to her, and that is why she would never miss a single performance. I played just for her. Then I was wandering around in the city. I returned home late and went to sleep without saying anything.
One day, after my performance, I went to the carriage to remove my makeup. I left to go wandering around the city. I heard footsteps following me. I turned around and saw the girl. She was following me. I was so excited - I felt dizzy and couldn’t move.
She approached to me and asked:
"I always wanted to know where clowns live; can you show me your place?"
Before I could manage to answer her, she held me and pushed me so hard as if she was the hostess and not me. I don’t remember how I strolled to the carriage. I helped her to climb up the stairs and we went inside.
"Now I see where you live" she giggled and sat on the only chair. She glanced around the room. Suddenly she saw the clown, sitting in a clothes box (Since I stopped talking to him, I put him in that box). The girl sprang from the chair, and grabbed the clown from the box.

"How much he looks like you!" She screamed with surprise.

"I look like him." I said.

"How is that?" – She asked me, as she started comparing us.

"First he was, and then me." I replied. 

"What’s the difference, you both look the same to me, both funny clowns." she said. 

"Maybe you are right. We’ve been living together for a long time."

I didn’t know what else to say.

"You know, we are leaving tomorrow and I just came to say goodbye." She said. A terrible feeling surrounded all over me upon hearing this.

"Can you give me this clown as a gift? I want to have it as a memory from you. I will give you my hair clip in exchange." The girl told me. She removed her hair clip and handed it to me.

My heart started beating hard. My ears plugged up. All my body started shaking.
Two infinite things collided in me: My entire past and my love. My love was standing in front of me,
looking at me with the same face she would look at me with during the performance. I would feel
devastated if I refused giving the clown to her. I already had her hair clip, holding it tight.

As I opened my mouth to say yes, I took a furtive glance down at my clown. It was being held in girl’s
hands. All my childhood memories started floating around: my stool that I spent half of my childhood
 on it, my broken arm, my birthday, my family, all the heroic things my clown and I did together. I told
 her everything.

I saw tears in her eyes. She handed the clown to me. She slowly approached me, tiptoed and kissed
me with a crooked smile on her face.

"I will still give you my hair clip." She said. I didn’t see her off. I even didn’t look at her…
I don’t remember how long I was standing still. When I came to my senses, I grabbed my forgotten friend, hugged him hard and started crying loudly. First time in my entire life, I started crying out loud.
Since then, no one could disturb or intervene in our friendship.
I used to travel from town to town. I still looked for a single person in every audience who would replace my clown. I already passed the age of 30, and the circus group was slowly splitting up.
I appeared in the streets unemployed, I didn’t have any education, any knowledge or qualifications. So, I decided to become a clown again. A street clown who would entertain people who would pass by. I slept in the streets at night. I always had money to have food. Some people would bring food to me and I survived from month to month.
One day a taxi stopped in front of me and a little girl jumped out it. 
"Mommy, mommy! A clown! Can we get close to him?" – she called out loud as rushed towards me. She even didn’t wait for her mother’s permission.
I looked at her and time stopped… the same eyes… the same golden hair waving on her shoulders…
She was followed by her mother. I could hardly imagine that this elegant lady used to be that child. A long time ago that child was a copy of my only love.
"Let’s go, we don’t have enough time!" The mother said strictly. She grabbed the girl and she took her to a nearby candy store. 
Before they left the store I managed to crawl into my cave. I changed my clothes, washed my face and followed them to find out where they lived.
They crossed the street and walked. After chasing for several minutes they stopped at one of the houses. They walked up the stairs, opened the door and went inside.
After that, every evening, after finishing my working day, I would go to their house. I would sit on the bench hidden in a flower bed under their willow tree, and look up at their windows.
I almost returned to my past. Sitting on the stool, in the attic, staring at the clown with dreamy eyes. Making up thousands of different stories. I was the same little boy, but there was something unreachable on the shelf in front of me.
Who knows how many nights I spent on that bench… Sometimes drunk, sometimes sober…
How many times that elegant woman (who had transformed from the little girl that I used to know) passed by without saying hello. It is not surprising that she couldn’t recognize me. How could she recognize me without my makeup?  It is surprising that she even didn’t notice me. For her it was the same with anyone who was sitting under the willow tree. It was the same for her if the bench was empty or if somebody was sitting on it.
One morning, when the woman was taking her little girl to school. The little girl asked her mother:
"Mom, who is this man who is always lying on this bench?"
"He is probably a tramp." the mother replied.

I didn’t spend that night there. I returned to my cave. I went to that house in the morning again…
It was pouring down rain heavily. The paper box which I had brought from my cave was getting wet. I took my rain coat off and wrapped the box in it.
I passed the willow tree and the bench. I crossed the flower garden. I walked up the stairs and rang the doorbell.
A servant opened the door. The little girl was standing behind the servant, peeping out from behind her back.
I unwrapped the box from the raincoat and handed it to the girl.
"What is this?"  - she asked me smiling.

"This is a gift for you." I replied.

"A gift? What kind of gift? Can I open it?" She said as her eyes started sparkling impatiently.

"This is a toy clown and a hair clip. But please don’t open it now. Take it home."

"Thank you! I will show it to my mom!" – she said as she ran with the box inside.

The door was locked behind me. I left. I crossed the street and hid under a tree.

The door opened again. The mother came out at that time. She walked down the stairs. It was
still raining very hard. She didn’t have her raincoat on. She was looking around confused. She didn’t
know where to go. She couldn’t decide. She was obviously looking for someone.

That someone was hiding behind the tree and he secretly was looking at the only live and familiar
face from his past. Soon she was going to disappear behind the door.

She was standing in the rain for a long time. She turned back soaked, she walked up the stairs. Before
I could hear her slam the door shut I left the area…

My door had been already locked. So what was the use of hearing her slam the door shut behind
me?

 Translated by Madona Seliamshvili

Edited by Robby Delaware 



Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Ana Bochorishvili Prose


The Realm of Trees  

The sky used to be blue all of the time.  Whenever I opened my eyes and looked up I could not see anything else, just the color blue.  Clouds hardly ever appeared.  I did not know many colors,  only four; green, blue, white and the color of the bench located next to the swing at the park.  I had not been aware of that color for very long.  It was dark and not so pleasant to see.  The bench was broken in some places, which gave it a more gloomy appearance.  I would ask my mother about the color of the bench, but she would not answer my question.  She would open her many, many green arms and would say in a soft voice, “Tree-sha, you are too small for this.”  She did not speak to me about the color of the bench again.
 It is interesting.  What could be so special about that color?  The trees would not answer this question for me.  The unanswered questions were flying around me like a swarm of butterflies.  Even the butterflies were entirely blue.
I remember when I was young, a butterfly landed on my branch.  It’s wings were different colors, one wing was white and one wing was blue. Since my mother refused to tell me her secret about the color of the bench, I asked the butterfly.  The two-toned butterfly flew away without saying anything.  I was looking at the blue butterflies fluttering around me.  The blue and white one has never reappeared.

The color of the bench never seemed dark to me, but the bench was always dark.  When I looked through the known colors in my mind, I would always put those three colors together.  The dark color was a color I would forever remember.
A time passed, the bench became darker and my mother’s arms became strange and pale.
The old oak tree spoke abruptly to my mother.  “Tree-sha is too small and young.”  “Where is her fruit?”  I could hear his limbs shaking and cracking as he spoke to her.  I do not know why, but I felt pain.  I could feel how his anger shook my leaves.  My leaves were very soft and fragile.  My mom would cuddle me and always tell me what tender and lovely leaves I had.
She told the mighty oak, “Tree-sha needs some time.”   “I will care for her as best I can.” The little birds sang and whistled loudly to cover her voice because her voice was not as confident as her words. The oak tree scoffed.  “Really?  You cannot lie.  Lies do not work for you.  Can you not see how weak and small she is?  How much time does she need to grow up?  She will never grow up.”

“My tree-sha will grow up,”  my mom said in a persuasive voice.  She hugged me more tightly;  not a gentle embrace.  It was a gesture of something else; something I cannot explain.  Even still, I did not feel any discomfort.  I loved when my mom protected me.  I felt safe and sound in her arms.  Her branches would warm me at night and they would cool and calm me down by day.
Why did that old oak tree call me small and weak?  What did he mean with the words that I could not grow up?  I had many questions I wanted answered.  The next day I did not say anything to my mom about my questions.  She, herself,f seemed very sad and preoccupied.  I anticipated the cause for my mom’s sadness was much more important than the color of the bench.  The moon set seven times and seven times I still kept my questions quiet.  My heart told me that it was better to be silent.
My Mom at last broke the silence. “Tree-sha, you know how much I love you.”  Her timid words flew on the breeze and when they finally reached me, I felt goose bumps on my tender branches.

“I know, mom,” I quietly replied.  But my voice was not as confidant as the words I spoke.
She spoke even quieter, “No, you do not know.”   I spoke stronger, “I do not know how much you love me.  And, I do not know the color of that bench!”  As I stood pointing at the dark background my mom smiled, but it was not a happy smile.  “Tree-sha, you can find the answer to that question by yourself.”
My voice broke the silence this time.  “How are you?  I am here with you all the time, but you do not tell me the answers to my questions.”  I looked at her annoyingly, but she was not looking at me. 
She was staring at the blue sky.
I heard the rustle of the leaves and it was if they were saying never be late.  I hoped it was not too late.  I became confused, I could not understand her words.  I wanted to ask her my questions.  She wrapped her pale limbs around me, hugged me very tight and softly whispered into my ear, “I love you Tree-sha.  You should remember this.”    These were the last words I heard my mother say.  I love you Tree-sha.  You should remember this.  As she hugged me the last of her lovely leaves fell to the ground, and the wind whisked them away.   The following day I nervously looked for her, but she was nowhere to be found.  I searched for the old oak, but he had also disappeared.
For the first time in my life I felt the cold of night.
For the first time, I felt how much I missed my mom.
I asked the trees in the grove about my mom.  No one knew anything about her.  They would rustle their leaves and it sounded like laughter to me.  Maybe they were laughing in their hearts, laughing at my tiny branches and my endless questions.  It was hard not to pay attention to them.   I learned to let the wind sweep away their negative responses.  I learned to be calm and to stop my leaves from quaking so much.   I continued to count the moons 42, 43, 44.   I could not count the 45th moon.  It did not show it’s face.   By then I had learned that we cannot exist in the same place at the same time.  We could not react the same even if we had the same experience.   I couldn’t count the moons and I couldn’t stop thinking about my mom.  Why did she leave me?  Maybe somebody forced her.  I know into the depths of my heart that she loved me.  She loved me and would never leave me by choice.  I kept searching for her.  I would not give up.  The moon came back until it disappeared again.  I could not count how many times the moon appeared and disappeared again.  I felt as if infinity had passed since I left home.  I had never been anywhere outside the Realm of Trees in my young life.  Maybe I would have never gone outside the realm had my mom not disappeared.  I wanted so badly to see her with her beautiful green branches open in the meadow.  I smell her; I feel her warmth at sunset.  She was so sweet, so warm…. I had looked for her scent for a long time.  I could never find anything stronger or nicer than her smell.
Tree-sha…Tree-sha… Tree-sha…. I kept repeating my name over and over again.  I did not want to forget my name.  Little by little my mom’s face was fading, and so was mine.   Where my tiny limbs once were, strong and rough branches stretched forth.  How strong and fast they were growing worried me.  I had been a long time without my mom.  I could only compare my rough bark to the roughness of losing her.
It did not matter anymore.
I was in the park when the full moon appeared.  This was when I first saw people.  There were two of them;  a mother and her daughter.  The woman had long blonde hair that fell to her waist.  The little girl’s short bright hair waved in the wind.  This was the scent I longed for.  The scent I had sought to find again.
“Have your ice cream quickly, it is going to melt.”  There was no one around them.  I could hear the woman’s soft voice so clearly.  I did not even have to stop moving my branches to hear her words.  The little girl in a blue dress started eating the ice cream so quickly that she dropped the stick she was holding.  I do not know why, but if I could put my whole life into a container, that container would be a big container of those slippery sticks.  My life with my mom was like eating ice cream.  My childhood was like eating ice cream.   You think that the ice cream will never end, but it melts and it slips.  Then all of a sudden it falls.   You want to savor the sweetest taste, but if you don’t eat it quickly enough, it will slip and fall.  It drops and melts away with the time.  My childhood melted away.
The dropped ice cream didn’t seem to interest the woman and she took something from her purse.  It was white and it took my breath away to see how the bench colored smoke passed from her mouth.
How grey and black it is at the same time.  The ginger haired girl glanced at the smoke and smiled. “Mom, what is this?” “Nothing Alisa.” The woman answered exactly the way my mom would answer me.  My thoughts had already moved on.
Grey and black, black and grey…  I realized these were the colors my mom used to hide from me.  I asked myself again why these colors were special.  How stupid… I could not even finish my thoughts when the woman carelessly dropped something white on my leg.  Suddenly I became blind with pain.  It hurt me.  It hurt horribly.  Can it be more painful than when a child hurts their knee playing ball?   Would it be more painful if the moon and the sun did not rise?  These were unanswered bitter questions, which reminded me every night of my most painful memory.  It was when my mom left me.
“Oh, these humans… they cannot realize the many stupid things they do, poor sweet girl.”   I felt  someone  tenderly touching my injured branch.  The touch felt like soft leaves.  I opened an eye to see who was caressing my wound.  There was a young tree next to me, which was angrily rustling his green leaves.
“Have you woken up?” he asked me with a sigh of relief and gently removed his leaves from me.  “Even the neighbors heard you screaming.  Has it happened to you yet?  It is strange.  It is stranger than humans.  By the way, my name is Tree-war.  What is your name?”  As soon as he saw the expression on my face, he held out his branch for me to shake.  I politely extended my hand to him and told him my name was Tree-sha.
 “It is a beautiful name,” he said.  He seemed to sing my name.  “Tree-sha, Tree-sha, Tree-sha.”   It had been a long time since somebody addressed me by my name.  It was strange to hear.
“What is wrong with these people?”  I shrieked.  Are they going to burn me?  How horrible of them!”
“They act like this all the time.  Why are you surprised?” my new friend inquired.  “It is true, changes are never late. But when it comes to humans, things are too complicated.” 
We were still in the park, and it was still warm.  I looked around and when I could not see the blonde woman I calmed down.  My branch was still painful, but a little less than it was the day before.  It had been a long time since I talked to some one.   The words burst out of me.  I talked more and more with Tree-war.  I told him everything and how I left to find my mom.  I saw a flash of sadness in his eyes.
“My parents were taken by humans.”  It was the first time my questions were answered before I even asked them.   “I have not seen them since.”  I did not know what it all meant.  Neither did Tree-war.  “I do not know why mine abandoned me.”  I sadly complained.  “I think your mom did the right thing.”  “Look at yourself Tree-sha!”   Tree-war was leaning his strong branches towards me.  “I think you are an apple tree.  And you are growing up.  Can’t you see?”  I looked.   Here and there on my branches were round shapes.  I had noticed my branches becoming stronger almost twenty moons before.   “Your apples appear to be red.” sang Tree-war to me.  I smiled when I heard a new color.  It was the most wonderful color, after blue of course.   Tree-war asked, “Do you want to go back to the Realm of Trees? I am sure your mom will be there. I can come with you.”    Tree-war opened his branches wide as if he were ready to leave.  
“Will you really come with me?” 
“Yes.  We’ve know so much about each other.  I think we were already friends.  There is nothing left for me here.  Why shouldn’t I go with my friend to find her mother?”  Tree-war smiled warmly.
I felt the warmth inside my heart.   Suddenly I saw a butterfly.  As if it weren’t enough already, she was sitting on Tree-war’s head.  One of her wings was blue, the other one white.  It was the same butterfly I had seen so many moons ago.  The butterfly taught me to trust.
More than ever, I was aware of the colors around me. 
My mom would hug me tightly at the Tree Realm.
This time, I would not be under her shade.  I would be in the open space where I could see the sun, the moon and the colorful butterflies.
I hoped my mom would meet me there, but  I would not worry if she was not able.  
Mothers need their children.  They need this even more than the children do.
I remembered she loved me.
I was not cold that night in the open space of the meadow.
And for the first time in my life, I fell in love with my friend.

Ana Bochorishvi

Translated by Madona Seliamshvili 
Edited by Amy Simmons  






Thursday, April 12, 2018

English-Georgian Idioms - ქართულ-ინგლისური იდიომები: Margot Lescaut Poetry A Georgian taleThey coul...

English-Georgian Idioms - ქართულ-ინგლისური იდიომები:

Margot Lescaut Poetry
A Georgian tale
They coul...
: Margot Lescaut Poetry A Georgian tale They couldn’t stand each other since the date of their wedding Or they thought they d...


Margot Lescaut Poetry

A Georgian tale

They couldn’t stand each other since the date of their wedding
Or they thought they didn’t
Because they never gave personal space and time to each other
In order to understand the reason of their disdain
They couldn’t split up on the first month
What would people say, ‘’That was too quick’’
They couldn’t split on the first year either.
The wife hated her man.
She took all the blame for her pregnancy
Thinking: It would disappear in a 9 month period
The husband thought;
The baby will be born, everything is going to change.
What would people say, the pregnant woman escaped
The nine months passed. The wife’s feeling didn’t change
The new baby did not help the man get over his thoughts
They couldn’t split after that
People would say, she ran with a newborn baby,
Or he kicked a woman with his baby…
There was another baby…
They couldn’t get over the burden of each other at this time either
What would people say; He left two children and escaped’’
The third time when there was a baby boy,
The wife was thinking,
Maybe his heart would melt by having a baby son
No hearts became softer, the man became stranger
But still they couldn’t split

What would people say;
He left three kids and escaped or
Where was she running with her three kids?
When the wheel of the Mill started rolling backward,
They faced the death of their child, grandchild, sister, brother, mother, father and the other ones
Then they starved to death
They lost a lot and they also found a lot
There was the presence of their children’s and grandchildren’s weddings,
But nothing made them unite as one
Neither the sadness they shared, nor the happiness
The didn’t split
What would people say,
There was not time to split
In disaster, in happiness
Them they got old and they split up
There were not the people who would say anything…
Then they died. First the man died and then the woman
The children came and decided
To bury them together
That would make the things easier for them
And the people wouldn’t have to say
‘’They were buried separately’’



If I were God


If I were God,
I wouldn’t love everything unconditionally
And then I would be a word
If I were God,
I wouldn’t sculpt the human from clay just to get over boredom
First I would have fallen in love sculpting
If I were God,
First I wouldn’t make a man and then a woman
I would create both of them at the same time
They both would be fruit of my love
I would never prefer my lovely children,
I would never single out them
As mothers don’t ever do
If I were God
I wouldn’t plant a single enlightening tree of evil and kindness
But I would plant ten of them and tell my children to try each fruit and educate
If I didn’t want them to know the difference between evil and kind
Then I would never plant any trees
If I were God,
The rebellious Angel’s sins would make me laugh
Conversely,
I would be happy if I saw someone desired to learn more
I would answer all his questions,
My warm words would make him serve me
I would give him a preference as the wisest,
The most sensible, striving for perfection
I wouldn’t punish him for that and wouldn’t curse him forever
I am not scared to be afraid of competition
I am not conceited, why he started making competition with me
Why isn’t he obeying me
Because I am God and not the person pursuing small things
If I were God, I wouldn’t test my children’s love
I would accept them as they are
If I were God, I would tell people that
Happiness and joy would bring them with me

As happier they were, The road to approach me would be easier
If I were God,

I wouldn’t send humans disasters and torture to remind myself
I would send them just happiness and the power to spread happiness with others unconditionally
I would be hanging out close by, Even if they wouldn’t notice
If I were God,
I would let children live longer than their mothers
And every mother would live to see their children have grandchildren
If I were God,
Sick people would be cured with the love given to other sick people and not with the drugs
Everybody would heal each other and it would be like a flash mob
If I were God
I would never ask anything from people besides to make each other happy
There would be no need to praise or sacrifice,
Therefore I am God.
If I were God,
I would bestow humans the free will to do kind things
And the love trading would be measured with sizes and weights
If I were God,
I wouldn’t quell instincts, love and nature in humans
I wouldn’t let them be locked up like monks somewhere to praise me
If I were God,
But thank God I am not the One



Every Morning


In the mornings, at seven
When I am not sleeping or I am already awake,
I sit on the balcony and
Look at the empty street
Nothing is heard besides the dropping garbage in the cans
And the sound of janitors mopping
In the mornings, at seven,
When I am not sleeping or I am awake,
I see an old woman walking on the sidewalk with her French bulldogs
on the other side of the street, right under my balcony,
I see an old man dressed in sportswear
The man walking the opposing direction of
The lady with the dogs
I see him walking with slow steps, getting fit
I’ve never seen that woman or the man to change sides on the sidewalks,
They never overlap as parallel lines.
But in my thoughts I do overlap their roads.
I imagine, that one day they discovered each other
And then I remember that in our country,
‘’ They are too old for that’
And I see them off with my eyes to the end of their street

In the mornings, at seven,
I take a seat on my balcony
And stare at the two old people
Who never cross as parallel lines



Mirror

At this time period, at about four or five in the morning
I see lights in front of my block.
If there lived a poet, she would write,
That at the time period, at about four or five in the morning
She sees lights in one of the windows, in front of her block
There lives a woman who is thinking that
That at the time period, at about four or five in the morning
She sees lights in one of the windows, in front of her block
If there lived a poet, she would write,
That at the time period, at about four or five in the morning
She sees lights in one of the windows, in front of her block
There lives a woman who is thinking that
That at the time period, at about four or five in the morning
she sees lights in one of the windows, in front of her block
Maybe the poet doesn’t live there



Translated by Madona Selimashvili
Edited by Robby Delaware