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The Tale of the Swans
Swans once lived in the washbowl of the Great Lake From them, it is told, humans have descended. And every spring the people would go to the shore to greet the arrival of their good winged ancestors with white milk. This was long ago, it is told. So long ago, that it has turned into a fairy tale. But people have learned to hate one another... They cannot manage to share watering places and land. And he that has more sheep considers himself happy. And the white swans would circle in the sky, not understanding why in the spring no one meets them with white steaming milk. But one day a certain curious boy found out about his swan ancestry. He lifted his eyes to the sky in astonishment. To the empy sky, there were only huge steel birds sinking into the expanse with a roar, silent and sad... He trudged to the Great Lake in search of the white birds. He didn’t notice he had circled half the world. But he had found no swans. So he sat on the hot asphalt and began to cry- The boy had grown old. Squint your eyes into slits, like the mark left by the Mongolian saber, Absorbing the essence of earthy time from the sea of eternity drop by drop Why did the neighing avalanche sweep through... Trampling down the gardens, the fields? The century of super-epic speeds descends upon the steppe like daybreak. And punishment for the galloping of the horses, lasting too long. And for the flash of the swords, blind and raging. I recover my sight in the cities Where signs of the Gobi desert appear indistinctly. And I pass judgement upon the new times according to Europe, covered in birch. I hear the roots act as shaman, and I hear the rustle of the leaves, and the consciousness of a higher kinship Drowns out the voice of my blood.
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