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■ I know what you're thinking, father
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What does a woman usually do
After drudging in the kitchen So that ordinary things would sleep, dutifully, Within the cares' dark ring of the day? First she wipes her forehead with her right hand, She sits down on a stool near the table, She makes smooth The laced table cloth With her left hand, Then she embraces her temples, Slipping for a while In an imaginary slumber, A long train of portraits - the people she loves Roaming her. A bit later she carefully allows The dusk To overrun the room, a kind of some bitter foam. Over and over. Every evening. She turns the lights off And secludes, not to give rise To a riot of things. She keeps silent every moment... The woman starts resembling so much The ordinary things surrounding her, That, if you approached her, You could mistake her For a tea spoon, For a coffee cup or For a porcelain angel.
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