Lyrics The Other Side of the Line - Starecase
I
remember,
as
if
through
haze,
the
last
summer
before
I
die.
It
was
somehow
unusual,
blurry,
like
my
life
those
days.
And
not
just
mine...
I
was
very
ill
back
then,
so
to
me,
I
guess,
it
seemed
that
the
whole
lead
celestial
vault
lay
on
my
chest
and
didn′t
let
me
breathe.
The
rain,
that
fell
almost
every
day,
was
bluntly
drumming
on
the
metal
window
sill,
like
those
hollow
snare
drums
before
the
execution,
writing
out
some
strange
arabesques
on
the
misty
panes,
- messages
from
that
world,
understandable
only
to
me.
I
knew
that
the
end
was
nigh.
And
amazingly,
I
wasn't
sad
about
leaving,
although
I
loved
life
above
all.
The
beautiful
one,
joyful
and
careless,
my
children,
friends.
And
you,
of
course,
who,
even
for
yourself
didn′t
know
why,
inertly
came
and
sat
by
my
grave
for
a
while,
told
me
the
tidings,
or
just
remained
in
wistful
silence,
made
a
sigh
and
left...
What
else?
You,
certainly,
don't
know
anything
about
death.
I
didn't
know
either,
until
I
came
here.
Now
I
know
what
I
– with
a
certain
remorse
– only
guessed:
that
living
is
insolence.
Prodigal,
gratuitous
conceit.
Temptation,
which
is
hard
to
resist.
And
the
All-maker
himself
wanted
it
thus,
implanting
to
every
living
being
a
desperate
resistance
towards
death,
although
he
knew
it
was
inevitable.
I′m
lying
here,
in
the
rake
of
dark,
and
I
still
don′t
understand
why
did
he
give
the
joy
and
the
torture
of
living,
when
he
exactly
determined
the
end
to
us
all...?
And
when
and
what
it
will
be
like.
And
now...
Now
it's
like
I′ve
never
been
ill
at
all.
Admittedly,
it's
a
bit
dull,
but
I′ll
get
used
to
it.
I've
met
some
neighbours,
they
explained
it
to
me,
- it
needs
a
certain
amount
of
time
to
pass
until
the
soul
abandons
the
body
and
leaves...
There,
upstairs.
They′re
all,
together
with
me,
on
that
trial
internship.
Waiting.
Only
later
does
the
decay
begin.
Then
we
won't
be
able
to
converse.
Bones
don't
speak.
You
asked
me
once,
- when
we
theoretically,
dare
I
say,
philosophically,
talked
about
death,
like
something
abstract
and
very
distant
from
us,
- do
I
believe
in
afterlife?
It
was
a
notional
mistake:
Life
exists
only
on
the
other
side
of
the
line;
over
here
is
resting,
stout
and
unshadowed
silence,
in
which
we
wait
to
become
what
we
were
meant
to
be
- dust
in
cosmic
infinity.
Do
you
remember
that
grey
dove
that
persistently
came
to
our
window
and
patiently
waited
with
its
dark
little
eyes,
like
the
head
of
a
thumbtack?
Half-jokingly
we
were
saying
that
she,
maybe,
was
my
mother,
killed
during
the
war...
And,
really,
it
seemed,
while
she
twirled
her
head,
that
she
was
asking
me:
"
How
are
you,
child?
Are
you
well?"
- and
she
never
receded
from
the
window
sill,
like
a
watch-guard,
as
if
she
was
taking
care
of
me.
Afterwards,
she
unexpectedly
disappeared.
You′ll
laugh,
but
I,
deep
inside,
started
to
believe
that
it
was
Her
and
I
was
saddened
that
she
was
gone.
She
came
back
a
year
later,
when
I′ve
gotten
ill.
She
didn't
move
away
from
the
window
since.
Up
until
I
died.
She
no
longer
comes,
you
say?
...
I
don′t
know,
it's
kind
of
confusing...
Maybe
those
stories
aren′t
just
morbid
nonsense.
Maybe
I'll,
someday,
become,
let′s
say,
some
puppy
that
you'll
take
for
yourself
in
your
isolation,
that
you'll
coddle
and
feed,
and
it
will
love
you
the
way
I
loved
you.
Silently
and
devotedly.
Like
"an
intern"
that
doesn′t
know
where
his
soul
will
be.
I′m
waiting
for
a
schedule.
After
that,
you
won't
have
to
come
anymore;
we
might
meet
somewhere
else.
If
that
doesn′t
happen,
it
doesn't
matter.
A
man
is
definitely
dead
when
he′s
forgotten.

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