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The Song of a Little Girl from Acre

by Alisa Velaj

Inspired by what she has heard from her brother about the town of Acre during his brief stay there, Albanian poet, Alisa Velaj pens a poem about a little girl who aspires to become a poetess.

I do not know if one day I shall become a poetess
In my home city I have never felt the anxiety of cold weather
Or autumn’s arrivals or skies loaded with clouds
Wetting the roof of my house

I lack so many things I need to become a poetess
On hot nights mosquitoes redden my body
These cursed beings cover my body in swollen spots
They are so big that I fear people will see them despite my dress

In the morning I wake up early with my soul singing songs
At night I see lakes and seas and oceans in my dreams
So walking to school along streets without pavements
I close my eyes as if I were a swan or a gull
There I feel the bite of some other mosquito
Coming from the swamp on the left of the street…

Again I cry for I fear one day I shall not become a poetess
For I lack so many things
I lack the leaves, the rains, and the seasons
I lack everything that is free and beautiful

I am an only daughter of the season of palms
And a distant cousin of the desert cactus
I wear thorns to protect my water from evaporating
For everyday I water my sadness
With lakes, with seas, and with oceans…

English translation by Ukë ZENEL Buçpapaj

Alisa Velaj (born 1982, Vlorë, Albania) is an Abanian poet whose work has appeared in a number of international magazines including; “The Cannon’s Mouth”, “Poetica’ , “Time of Singing”, “The French Literary Review”, “Erbacce” “fourW twenty-five Anthology” etc Alisa Velaj has been shortlisted of the annual international erbacce-press poetry award in June 2014. Velaj’s first full-length collection of poems “A GOSPEL OF LIGHT” will be published by Aquillrelle during this year. Her poems are translated into English by Ukë ZENEL Buçpapaj.
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