Poem
Sharron Hass
THE MOUNTAIN MOTHER IS GONE
The mountain mother is gone. One nightshe went running down the road and left us
closed
in white crystal eggs
on the lowest sun terrace.
Time rocked us in whirlpools of
leaves and roaring wild beasts until darkness
burst in through the crevices, and we smelt the blood
giddy with loneliness and hunger
we sat down to play with silent flowers, our backs
to the sun-dial. The mountain mother has locked us
in anticipation. Sometimes the shadow of a passing bird
goes by and with it
a thought “did she have eyes?”
Our faces are close to themselves in the grass
clear, sorrowful
and clean of remembrance.
© Translation: 1997, Amalia Ziv
THE MOUNTAIN MOTHER IS GONE
© 1997, Sharron Hass
From: ‘Em ha-har ne’elma
Publisher: Helicon Tag,
From: ‘Em ha-har ne’elma
Publisher: Helicon Tag,
Poems
Poems of Sharron Hass
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THE MOUNTAIN MOTHER IS GONE
The mountain mother is gone. One nightshe went running down the road and left us
closed
in white crystal eggs
on the lowest sun terrace.
Time rocked us in whirlpools of
leaves and roaring wild beasts until darkness
burst in through the crevices, and we smelt the blood
giddy with loneliness and hunger
we sat down to play with silent flowers, our backs
to the sun-dial. The mountain mother has locked us
in anticipation. Sometimes the shadow of a passing bird
goes by and with it
a thought “did she have eyes?”
Our faces are close to themselves in the grass
clear, sorrowful
and clean of remembrance.
© 1997, Amalia Ziv
From: ‘Em ha-har ne’elma
From: ‘Em ha-har ne’elma
THE MOUNTAIN MOTHER IS GONE
The mountain mother is gone. One nightshe went running down the road and left us
closed
in white crystal eggs
on the lowest sun terrace.
Time rocked us in whirlpools of
leaves and roaring wild beasts until darkness
burst in through the crevices, and we smelt the blood
giddy with loneliness and hunger
we sat down to play with silent flowers, our backs
to the sun-dial. The mountain mother has locked us
in anticipation. Sometimes the shadow of a passing bird
goes by and with it
a thought “did she have eyes?”
Our faces are close to themselves in the grass
clear, sorrowful
and clean of remembrance.
© 1997, Amalia Ziv
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