Judit with the lace parasol
walked her dog by the creek
asked if I was an artist,
my dough encrusted fingers
mistaken for clay--- for her gaffe
received a cup of tea and a loaf of bread.
She seemed like a good soul,
at ease in her body
no small feat at this age.
She adopted a ten year old dog probably
closer to thirteen, but didn’t seem to mind.
She came to my house and upon my
bully‘s bark uttered a grandiose
“et tu Brutus” clearly intended for my ears
I invited her to our 4th of July,
a Hungarian to my Russian.
enemies in a new land at least
recognise each other
I’m weary of new friendships
having barely survived the old.
So when she left I was somewhat pained
but ever so relieved.
I pondered about it some days and wondered
if she thought that I compromised to have the
life I did or perhaps envied it or both?
All to the good, relationships
have an addictive underpinning,
and my solitude a reliable friend.
But as I said before, she was a good soul.
Judit of the lace parasol.
Antonia Baranov
There is a lovely poem hiding amidst the prose x
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