The Sky Some Halfway Blue

By Siettie


And purple, like a deep kind of sadness

Violently black at the corners

some kind of new


Children big and small have gone to school

Even before the first morning dew

Had begun to settle on a leaf, a plant

Out on a balkon, I said goodbye to you

There are kids in a forgotten basement

Sleeping deeply against a cold wall

Better off the streets, even better away 

From homes no longer looking for them

In the evenings they come out to play

But stay indoors after dusk

my mother used to say there are jinns

everywhere out on the streets even

the tall looming streetlights

Can't light up their shadows, ghosts of long

gone histories, amnesiac memories,

Nostalgic benevolence and dreameries.


The world has begun to cower in shame

From the grime and grit along its streets

The earth sinking rapidly beneath our feet

People slinking down the cobblestones

Bodies burying old bruises and fears

The sky some halfway blue


And purple, like a deep anxiety

Brought on by this new world order

Mad onthology, metaphysics, psychology

Even the greatest sleepless philosophies

Can't beckon the simplest kindness

There is no more gentleness

No activism for sensitivity

Just dogs out on the streets

The sky halfway black

Still sometimes blue.

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A Singaporean born and bred, Siettie always believes in the symbiotic pairing of Art and Literature, and has been drawing, painting and writing for as long as she can remember. She has taught art professionally for the last seven years, both in Singapore and Istanbul – whose light, love and melancholy she finds endlessly bewitching. She frequently makes paintings and pens poems surrounding this experience that combines both personal and public spaces.

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