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At The Train Station

It’s been three years since I last set foot in a train station. I, the nomad, have taken root. Naturally curious, I enjoy studying the characters that inhabit certain public places. Y et here, nothing has really changed: though the faces are different, I recognize them all. . * * * Sitting on a large duffel bag, leaning against a wall—there’s the student. He mutters to himself, eyes fixed on a thick blue binder, and despite all the noise filling the station, nothing could tear him away at this hour from his studies. A little further off, I spot a family waiting to greet one of their relatives. The father and mother chat together, glancing every five minutes at the clock. The children play, dart between their legs, circle around them, tap each other shouting, “Tag!” then burst into laughter; they bring into this hall the fresh, colorful breeze of youth. The father looks impatient, but on his face I can read a certain joy; he seems to be holding back a smile. As for the mother, however...

The Child-God

Running Kid - Photo de jonas mohamadi: https://www.pexels.com/fr-fr/photo/garcon-qui-court-pendant-le-coucher-du-soleil-1416736/

 

Is it due to my crossing of the dark country?… Nowadays, even my shadow shines… By learning to unlearn, I have found and freed the Child-God, cowardly abandoned and curled up in a blanket of forgotten dreams, from the prisons of the age of reason. His sibylline smile envelops my world in a bubble of sweetness, and the petals of his irises perfume my eyes with enamored stars. Insatiable, in crystalline laughter, he devours all my fears and transforms each of my fingers into a magician…

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