Trafika Europe 7 - Ukrainian Prayer
TWO TALES Translated from Ukrainian by Michael M. Naydan
The Demon of Hunger
M y throat hurts. I can’t speak much. And to be honest, I don’t have anything to say. I think a lot, but for some reason don’t have my own opinion. I don’t know how to gauge what is happening with me and with people I know. I just know one thing – I’m very sentimental. Don’t be offended that I cry so much. That’s normal. I can cry even more. It’s just when I hear a sad story, tears gush out on their own from my eyes. I can cry all day and another night – I’ve confirmed that. When I cry I feel happy. Cleansed. I love to hear love stories the most. Sentimental ones. When two people love each other, and something
external prevents them from being together. I love it when the two lovers live their entire life separately, and die separately, but always remember each other, but have different husbands and wives, but never forget that strongest love of their lives. And when, for example, a man dies in the arms of a different woman (who, perhaps, also happens to love him), the other woman stands at the window, then at the cemetery, but not with everyone else, but off to the side, just to see him for the last time. O, you see, I’m already crying, but it’s normal, don’t stop me. Other people’s love stories affect me more than my own.
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