by Teuta Skenderi
It smells like my land,
like the soft soil in my mother’s garden
like a fistful of cold earth resting on my father’s chest.
It smells like seeds sprouting
and roses dripping dewdrops at dawn.
It smells like a hand-woven blanket
covering a stranger at night.
It smells like an untrodden forest and home-made wine,
like a coin rusting inside a wishing well.
It smells like wide open windows and doors,
a quince drying on the window sill waiting to be gifted.
It smells like a toothless kiss on a child’s forehead on his way to school.
It smells like a migrating bird’s feather free-falling.
It smells like my homeland in early autumn.
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