
1 minute read
The Dark Station
from Pegasus 2022-23
by Andrianna Solomonidou
At noon the sun burns as I make my way to the dark station. “To where?” the old man asks. “Do you know where you’re going?” I reply, “I’m tired.”
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The dark station is filled with people asking what time it is, worrying about an appointment, arguing, next to an apple juice stand. I think I can see birds flying in the distance.
I approach a clown. “Tell me something funny,” I say. “It’s funny how we fool ourselves. We learn how to be sad, so as not to be alone.”
The graffiti on the wall reads Truth. Truth is a crying baby with thorns for hands.
Time passes as I’m waiting in the dark station. Waiting for a train that is not coming.
by Antzelina Viktoria Fykatas
1. Homebody
This body is a house. A home?
What makes it a home?
The light shining through the grime-stained windows, The wallpaper, peeling, The curtains, frayed?
Or perhaps
The colourful cracks
Painted over In cobalt blue, In crimson red, In arsenic green, In shimmering gold; The halls and pathways twisting, writhing, turning, Leading through, Eyes
Eyes that watch, carefully and quietly, taking it all in, taking everything apart
A mind
That thinks, that feels and loves and hates
Creating a maze, so easy (too easy)
To get lost in;
A heart –It stubbornly refuses To quiet its gentle rhythm, The drums sounding on, And on, Slow and steady.
When is a house A home?
Why, when you love it.
2. Body/Self
Look in the mirror, See:
Crooked, tired eyes, Chewed lips, Red, scratched skin, Tangled golden hair
All too bright, too loud, too much In their exhaustion, their sadness, their joy.
Can you look away?
Tell me:
Can you try?
Do you want to?
Should you?
Is there a tragedy
Quite like a body That does not want to see itself, And a body, That cannot help but watch?
A leg that aches on rainy days, Scars from childhood adventures, Stretchmarks and organs And a heart and blood; Leg hair, too, And asymmetrical eyes (Are they really?) And a bumpy nose, Cracking wrists And pain in my bones, It’s not perfect. Maybe that’s fine. Because every body Is a story.
May I Tell Mine?