Poezi Lirike Te Shkurtra Apr 2026
Eris came too. She was now a painter. When Artan read her poem aloud, she wept—not from sadness, but from recognition. “I forgot I felt that way,” she whispered. “But the poem remembers.”
That night, Artan did not read a long lecture or a famous sonnet. He read only the short lyric poems. One by one. Like small mirrors held up to small, honest truths. When he finished, he placed the notebook on a table and said: poezi lirike te shkurtra
Artan smiled sadly. He added it to his notebook, between a poem about a child’s first laugh and another about bread fresh from the oven. Eris came too
He didn’t write them. He collected them from strangers. Over forty years, anyone who entered his shop and felt a sudden, sharp emotion—love, grief, wonder, regret—could sit at the small oak desk by the window and write down what their heart whispered in under twenty words. No names. No dates. Just the feeling, distilled. “I forgot I felt that way,” she whispered
One grey November afternoon, a young woman named Eris stormed in, rain dripping from her coat. Her eyes were red. She didn’t browse. She marched to the desk, grabbed a pen, and wrote furiously. Then she left without a word.