from trevor’s encyclopedia of lost things
Dawn and dusk
are my favorite times
of the day.
I get up early,
before drops of sunlight
dot the horizon
and walk
into the darkest part
of the night.
This morning
I set out
and walked
toward the main road
that leads to Havana.
The sky
lightened
on the eastern horizon.
An old man,
with white hair
and a weathered, wizened face,
wore a blue work shirt
and blue pants
rolled up
at the ankles.
He rode
a rickety,
classically framed
bicycle
with a red basket
attached
to it’s back.
“Buenos Dias,”
he said
with gentle, gravelly voice
as he pedaled his way
to get petrol
in a plastic bottle.
I turned left
to make my way
to places
in the town
I have not seen,
I have not been.
My feet flopped
rhythmically
against the road.
I could hear
clearly
for there was
a certain silence
on the road,
broken only
by the crow
of a rooster,
the laughter
of two friends,
and the grunt
of a tractor
pulling a cart
of sleepy-eyed children.
The sun rose
on the horizon
of sky and land.
It sat
on the trees
like a giant,
sun kissed orange.
I stopped
beside a field of sunflowers
along the road.
At first,
I saw
only the back
of their heads
I stepped
off the road
onto a dirt path
that led me
to the faces
of a thousand sunflowers
turned toward the morning sun.
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