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POEMS by Luan Rama


YOU, MY SACRED PSALM

A little church you wanted for a long time

a bell that spreads the word of love

whereas I, I looked for a single psalm

hummed in the old songs of the late Solomon.

But all the psalms were chaunted

in the whirlwind and sadness of time

mouth to mouth

bed to bed

breath to breath

in ruined synagogues and churches

that did not survive.

Then I asked for my very own

the haunted psalm, the humble and the grey

the psalm of the lips awakening the dead and the dawn

that fill the small bird chests and homes

the psalm that lightly steps on the grass

with green eyes,

with a crushed pomegranate dripping juice

the psalm for a lonely church erected

beside a stone-made altar

and a forgotten cult wall

where the monks have left a million words of prayer

under the celestial dome

with gods and deities falling in love.

For a church you asked

I found the purple psalm

at the palimpsest of all time

Laudamus the soul that has honored the hands

and holds me by his spirit

today is the glorified day

full of Mozart arches

cello and oboe

that elevate the world and our bodies

Praised, my holy psalm!


ELEGY FOR AEGEAN SEA DOLLS

For dolls, an elegy has never been written,

an elegy mourning their dreams,

but today on the Aegean coast,

an elegy alone too little seems to be,

for their faint eyes in the great calamity

burned and thrown by thunderstorms and lightning.

For the silent mouths of children left at sea

fleeing the war and the horror of the world,

there is nothing but their small shoes left,

the scarves of the lost mothers who knows where

and these nameless dolls without hands and feet,

without their adorned shirts

and eyes that no longer can speak of anything

from their hell-journey ,

dolls washed out on the Aegean coast ...

For dolls, elegies have never been written says the foamy wave,

never, repeats the wind that hits the rocks,

the wind that weeps with its Homeric tears.

This is the elegy of shoes that will not walk tomorrow,

the elegy of children who can no longer dream,

the elegy of their extinguished eyes in the world of bullet-like wonders

in the Sea of the Dead Humanism...


(Translated by English Miranda - Shehu Xhilaga)



Luan Rama, from Tirana, Albania, is a scholar, filmmaker, editor and writer. He graduated in journalism from the Faculty of Political and Juridical Sciences, University of Tirana, and subsequently specialized in filmmaking and communication in France, at Paris VII Denis Diderot University. His career spans more than fourteen years as a screenwriter of award-winning feature films, documentaries and cartoons for Albanian cinema studios.

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