Kirmen Uribe

1970 / Ondarroa / Spain

The River

There was a time a river ran through here,
there where the benches and the paving start.
A dozen rivers more underlie the city
if you believe the oldest citizens.
Now it's a square in the workers' quarter,
that's all, three poplars the only sign
the river underneath keeps running.

In everyone here is a hidden river that brings floods.
If they are not fears, they're contritions.
If they are not doubts, inabilities.

The west wind has been shaking the poplars,
people barely make their way along on foot.
From her fourth-floor window a grown woman
is throwing articles of clothing.
She's hurled a black shirt, a plaid skirt,
the yellow silk scarf and the stockings
and the black-and-white patent-leather shoes
she wore the winter day she came in from her town.
In the snow they looked like frozen lapwings.

Children have gone racing after the clothing.
The wedding dress exited last,
has been clumsy and perched on a branch,
too heavy a bird.

We've heard a loud noise. The passersby have been startled.
The wind has lifted a poplar out by its roots.
They could be an old woman's hand
awaiting any other hand's caressing.
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