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The Collected Poems of Bertolt Brecht

Page 43

by Tom Kuhn


  But the snowstorms have their hats on.

  The earthquakes have cash in their jacket pockets.

  The mountains step out of limousines.

  And the tearing rivers hold sway over the police.

  2

  In order to show what I see

  I read the portrayals of other peoples and other ages.

  A couple of plays I even copied, carefully

  Trying out their techniques and committing to memory

  Anything that might prove useful.

  I studied the portrayals of the great feudal figures

  In English writers, opulent individuals

  To whom the world served for them to unfold their greatness.

  I studied the moralizing Spaniards

  The Indians, masters of fine sentiment

  And the Chinese, who portray the family

  And the many-hued fates of people in the cities.

  And I set the sentences . . .

  And I set the sentences in such a way that their effects

  Became visible, so that

  To have spoken them, could make

  The speaker happy or unhappy. And others too

  Could be made unhappy, or happy, that the speaker spoke to them thus.

  (This made the watching of the plays more difficult: the first

  Effect was often achieved only on the second viewing.)

  I always executed . . .

  I always executed

  Every movement as before the gathering

  Which will adjudge it, just as someone

  Who carefully, anxious to recall precisely

  How it was and how it could be

  Serves up everything, the truth, to the judgement of

  The gathering which has the final decision.

  And the appearance of the houses and cities . . .

  And the appearance of the houses and cities

  Changed so quickly in my time, that going away for two years

  And then returning was as a journey to another city

  And in their great host the people changed their appearance

  In a few years I saw

  Workers entering the gate of the factory and the gate was high

  But when they came out again they had to bend low.

  And I said to myself:

  Everything changes and is only for its own time.

  So I gave every setting its mark

  And I branded every factory yard with the year, and every room

  As the drovers mark their flocks with their number, so as to recognize them.

  And the sentences too that were spoken there

  I gave them their mark, so that they were like quotations

  Of the transient, logged

  So that they should not be forgotten.

  What that woman in her work smock said

  Bent over the handbills, in those years

  And how the stock exchange traders spoke with their clerks

  Their hats pushed back, yesterday

  All that I furnished with the mark of impermanence

  The date.

  But I also offered everything up for astonishment

  Even the most familiar.

  That the mother offered her breast to the child

  That I reported as if it were something that no one would believe.

  That the porter slammed the door to the man in the freezing cold

  Like something that no one has ever seen.

  Suggestion to merge architecture with lyric poetry

  Why not adorn your splendid buildings with inscriptions

  Oh you who build them, rifles slung on shoulders?

  They ought to carry, chiselled in the boulders

  The slogans of the classes that construct them.

  Record as well how carefully you planned the use!

  And that it’s meant for all, write that down too!

  That for the first time you built something for yourselves

  So let the stone bear witness after you!

  As for your poets, those who sing in praise

  Of them who just this once in truth deserve it

  (The first to do so since the ancient days!)

  When then the mason asks them for the wording

  They’ll know, only the best, and those alone:

  For they can see, it’s hard to cut words into stone.

  What use is goodness . . .

  1

  What use is goodness

  When the goodly are at once struck down or else those are struck down

  To whom they are good?

  What use is freedom

  When the free have to live amongst the unfree?

  What use is reason

  When only unreason will procure the food that a body needs.

  2

  Instead of merely being good, exert yourselves

  To create conditions conducive to goodness, or better still:

  That make it superfluous!

  Instead of merely being free, exert yourselves

  To create conditions which make everyone free

  And make the love of freedom

  Superfluous!

  Instead of merely being reasonable, exert yourselves

  To create conditions which make the unreason of the few

  A poor business.

  As one who comes . . .

  As one who comes to the counter with an important letter after office hours: the counter is already closed.

  As one who tries to warn the city of a flood: but he speaks a different language: he is not understood.

  As a beggar who knocks on a door for the fifth time, where he has received food four times before: the fifth time he goes hungry.

  As one whose blood flows from a wound as he waits for a doctor: the blood goes on flowing.

  So we come and report that we have suffered misdeeds.

  When it was reported for the first time that our friends were slowly being slaughtered, there was a cry of horror. One hundred had been killed.

  But when a thousand had been killed and there was no end to the slaughter, silence descended.

  When the misdeeds come as the rain falls, then no one any longer cries halt.

  When the crimes pile up, they become invisible.

  When the suffering becomes unbearable, the screams are no longer heard.

  The screams too fall like the summer rain.

  Old woman outside the church

  Sunday morning. On the bench opposite the church

  An old woman of the lower classes.

  The organ is playing inside. She listens to the sparrows.

  Her sisters are praying to the god for mercy. She gleans

  A few warming rays of the sun as a tired reaper does

  Forgotten ears of corn.

  Letter to the playwright Clifford Odets

  Comrade, in your play Paradise Lost you show

  How the families of the exploiters

  Are destroyed in the end.

  What is the idea?

  Perhaps the families of the exploiters

  Are indeed destroyed. And if not?

  Would they stop exploiting as they fall into degeneracy, or

  Do we prefer to be exploited when they are

  Not degenerate? Should the hungry

  Go on being hungry so long as he who denies them their bread

  Is fit and healthy?

  Or do you mean to tell us that our oppressors

  Have already weakened? Should we

  Let our hands rest in our laps? Such were the pictures

  Comrade, that our housepainter painted for us, and overnight

  We got to feel the full force of our degenerate exploiters.

  Or might you even feel pity for them? Should we

  When we see the roaches leaving, shed a tear?

  You, comrade, who had pity for the man

  Who has nothing to eat, do you now have pity

  For him who has eaten himself sick?

 
; The tomb of the Unknown Soldier of the Revolution

  The Unknown Soldier of the Revolution is fallen.

  I saw his tomb in a dream.

  It lay in a peatbog. It was fashioned of two boulders.

  It bore no inscription. But one of the stones

  Started to speak.

  He who lies here, it said, marched out

  Not to conquer a foreign land, but rather

  His own. His name

  Is not known, but the history books

  Give the names of those who defeated him.

  Because he wanted to live like a human being

  He was slain like a wild animal.

  His last words were as a whisper

  For they came from a choked throat, but

  The cold wind carried them everywhere

  To the many cold and hungry.

  The passenger

  When many years ago I learnt

  To drive a car, my teacher made me

  Smoke a cigar, and if

  In the bustle of traffic or in a tight bend it

  Went out on me, he chased me from the wheel. He also

  Told jokes as I drove, and if

  Too occupied with driving, I did not laugh, he took the wheel

  Out of my hands. I feel unsafe, he said

  I, the passenger, take fright, when I see

  That the driver of the car is too occupied

  With driving.

  Since then, when I’m at work

  I make sure not to immerse myself too deeply in the work

  I pay attention to things around me

  Sometimes I interrupt the work in order to have a conversation.

  Driving faster than I can while also smoking

  Is a habit I have given up. I am thinking of

  The passenger.

  He who learns

  First I built on sand, then I built on rock.

  When the rock gave way

  I stopped building altogether.

  Then I built again, and often

  On sand and rock, as it came, but

  I had learnt.

  Those to whom I had entrusted the letter

  Threw it away. But those I had taken no heed of

  Brought it back to me.

  And so I learnt.

  The tasks I assigned were not carried out.

  When I came I saw

  They were wrong. The right things

  Had been done.

  From that I learnt.

  The scars are painful

  In the cold times.

  But I often said: only the grave

  Will teach me nothing more.

  The man who fears transience

  And he leaping swiftly from ice floe sinking

  To sinking ice floe

  Passing many a place which

  As he says he will see no more

  Now encounters only those who are passing away and hears

  Transience and flees and sees

  Sinking and breathless the yellow fleeting tree and

  Turns pale

  The people who stole the book that was yours . . .

  The people who stole the book that was yours in the cradle

  Reproach you for being ill-read.

  Sitting by the roadside or at the lathe

  If you eat your bread with grimy hands

  They tell you accusingly your table manners are bad.

  The man who defends himself when hands are at his throat

  And stopping his breath, there’s a law that intercedes

  And cries: He acted in self-defence. But

  That same law looks away and steps aside

  When they stop your bread and you defend yourselves.

  But you die if you don’t eat and if you don’t eat enough you die

  Only more slowly. All the years dying

  You are not permitted to defend yourselves.

  A glass of water for Comrade Alfred!

  1

  A glass of water for Comrade Alfred!

  The truth must come to his ears!

  Deal gently with Comrade Alfred!

  Don’t speak too harshly to dear Comrade Alfred!

  In the Party these seventeen years!

  2

  A mistake by Comrade Alfred?

  But why, but what, how come?

  That’s out of the question with Comrade Alfred!

  You’d best just ask Comrade Alfred!

  The back office, it must have been them!

  3

  A job for Comrade Alfred!

  What indeed could be finer!

  And that’s the best job for Comrade Alfred!

  So let’s give the job to Comrade Alfred!

  Our senior Party-liner!

  Poems in exile

  Just what they need for their livelihood

  That’s all they take from foreign ground. Sparingly

  They dispense their memories.

  No one calls to them. No one stops them.

  They are not scolded, they are not praised.

  As they have no present

  They try to lend themselves permanence. Only in order to reach their goal

  Which is far distant

  Do they attempt to better themselves.

  Carelessly the busy man fishes

  For a bite to eat. The sleepless

  Need no sleeping place.

  With their forebears

  They have more connections than with their contemporaries

  And most greedily they

  Who appear to have no present

  Look upon their descendants.

  What they say, they say from memory

  They travel without passport, without papers

  Journey from the land of freedom into the land of oppression

  I come from the land of freedom.

  The priests declare openly from the pulpits their opinion:

  That the exploited, when once they are dead

  Will escape exploitation. Above the clouds

  They sit and eat sweet bread.

  Those who were more long-suffering on earth get more bread.

  This is bread you can order in advance.

  The sacristan goes slowly between the pews and holds out the collecting tin

  To the hungry.

  From the land of freedom I came into the land of oppression.

  Now I have to choose.

  They sawed off the branches

  They sawed off the branches on which they were sitting

  And, shouting, exchanged knowledge of

  How one might saw faster, and fell

  Crashing into the depths, and those who looked on

  Shook their heads as they sawed and

  Went on sawing.

  On teaching without pupils

  Teaching without pupils

  Writing without fame

  Are hard.

  It is good to go off in the morning

  With your freshly written pages

  To the waiting printer, over the humming marketplace

  Where they sell meat and tools

  You sell sentences.

  The driver drove quickly

  He hadn’t had breakfast

  Every bend was a risk

  He steps hurriedly in

  He whom he came to fetch

  Has already gone his way.

  There speaks one to whom no one listens:

  He speaks too loudly

  He repeats himself

  What he says is wrong

  No one corrects him.

  Interrogation of the good man

  Step forward: we hear

  You are a good man.

  You are not corrupt, but the lightning

  Which strikes the house, is also

  Not corrupt.

  When you’ve said something, you stick with it.

  What did you say?

  You are honest, you say what you think.

  What do you think?

  You are brave.

>   Facing whom?

  You are wise.

  On whose behalf?

  You don’t think of your own advantage.

  Whose do you think of?

  You are a good friend.

  Also of good people?

  So listen: we know

  You are our enemy. That’s why we now want

  To stand you against a wall. But considering your services

  And good qualities

  Against a good wall and shoot you with

  Good bullets from good rifles and bury you with

  A good shovel in good earth.

  In long years of study . . .

  In long years of study

  We prepared ourselves to take part in the exploitation of the lower orders

  We studied jurisprudence, which is so difficult

  Because common sense contradicts it

  And what an effort we made, and once we were in a position

  To exercise injustice

  Then suddenly the race of your grandmother was to

  Decide how much of the loot you got!

  What has the race of your grandmother

 

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