The Sleep-Walkers
In the town where I was born lived a women and her
daughter, who walked in their sleep.
One night, while silence enfolded the world, the woman
and her daughter, walking, yet asleep, met in their mist-veiled garden.
And the mother spoke, and she said: “At last, at last,
my enemy! You by whom my youth was destroyed – who have built up your life upon
the ruins of mine! Would I could kill you!”
And the daughter spoke, and she said: “O hateful
woman, selfish and old! Who stands between my freer self and me! Who would have
my life an echo of your own faded life! Would you were dead!”
At that moment a cock crew, and both women awoke. The
mother said gently, “Is that you darling?” And the daughter answered gently,
“Yes dear.”
(“The Madman” Khalil Gibran)
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