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Poems New and Collected

Page 9

by Wislawa Szymborska

A silence that had its own throats once,

  its flutes and tambourines.

  Grafted here like a wilding

  by laughter and howls.

  Silence—but in darkness

  exalted by eyelids.

  Darkness—but in cold

  penetrating skin and bone.

  Coldness—but of death.

  On earth, maybe an earth

  in a sky that might be seventh heaven?

  Launched headfirst from the void,

  you’d love to know.

  Motion

  You’re crying here, but there they’re dancing,

  there they’re dancing in your tear.

  There they’re happy, making merry,

  they don’t know a blessed thing.

  Almost the glimmering of mirrors.

  Almost candles flickering.

  Nearly staircases and hallways.

  Gestures, lace cuffs, so it seems.

  Hydrogen, oxygen, those rascals.

  Chlorine, sodium, a pair of rogues.

  The fop nitrogen parading

  up and down, around, about

  beneath the vault, inside the dome.

  Your crying’s music to their ears.

  Yes, eine kleine Nachtmusik.

  Who are you, lovely masquerader.

  No End of Fun

  So he’s got to have happiness,

  he’s got to have truth, too,

  he’s got to have eternity—

  did you ever!

  He has only just learned to tell dreams from waking;

  only just realized that he is he;

  only just whittled with his hand né fin

  a flint, a rocket ship;

  easily drowned in the ocean’s teaspoon,

  not even funny enough to tickle the void;

  sees only with his eyes;

  hears only with his ears;

  his speech’s personal best is the conditional;

  he uses his reason to pick holes in reason.

  In short, he’s next to no one,

  but his head’s full of freedom, omniscience, and the Being

  beyond his foolish meat—

  did you ever!

  For he does apparently exist.

  He genuinely came to be

  beneath one of the more parochial stars.

  He’s lively and quite active in his fashion.

  His capacity for wonder is well advanced

  for a crystal’s deviant descendant.

  And considering his difficult childhood

  spent kowtowing to the herd’s needs,

  he’s already quite an individual indeed—

  did you ever!

  Carry on, then, if only for the moment

  that it takes a tiny galaxy to blink!

  One wonders what will become of him,

  since he does in fact seem to be.

  And as far as being goes, he really tries quite hard.

  Quite hard indeed—one must admit.

  With that ring in his nose, with that toga, that sweater.

  He’s no end of fun, for all you say.

  Poor little beggar.

  A human, if ever we saw one.

  from

  COULD HAVE

  1972

  Could Have

  It could have happened.

  It had to happen.

  It happened earlier. Later.

  Nearer. Farther off.

  It happened, but not to you.

  You were saved because you were the first.

  You were saved because you were the last.

  Alone. With others.

  On the right. The left.

  Because it was raining. Because of the shade.

  Because the day was sunny.

  You were in luck—there was a forest.

  You were in luck—there were no trees.

  You were in luck—a rake, a hook, a beam, a brake,

  a jamb, a turn, a quarter inch, an instant.

  You were in luck—just then a straw went floating by.

  As a result, because, although, despite.

  What would have happened if a hand, a foot,

  within an inch, a hairsbreadth from

  an unfortunate coincidence.

  So you’re here? Still dizzy from another dodge, close shave, reprieve?

  One hole in the net and you slipped through?

  I couldn’t be more shocked or speechless.

  Listen,

  how your heart pounds inside me.

  Falling from the Sky

  Magic is dying out, although the heights

  still pulse with its vast force. On August nights

  you can’t be sure what’s falling from the sky:

  a star? or something else that still belongs on high?

  Is making wishes an old-fashioned blunder

  if heaven only knows what we are under?

  Above our modern heads the dark’s still dark,

  but can’t some twinkle in it explain: “I’m a spark,

  I swear, a flash that a comet shook loose

  from its tail, just a bit of cosmic rubble;

  it’s not me falling in tomorrow’s news,

  that’s some other spark nearby, having engine trouble.”

  Wrong Number

  At midnight, in an empty, hushed art gallery

  a tactless telephone spews forth a stream of rings;

  a human sleeping now would jump up instantly,

  but only sleepless prophets and untiring kings

  reside here, where the moonlight makes them pale;

  they hold their breath, their eyes fixed on some nail

  or crack; only the young pawnbroker’s bride

  seems taken by that odd, ringing contraption,

  but even she won’t lay her fan aside,

  she too just hangs there, caught in mid-nonaction.

  Above it all, in scarlet robes or nude,

  they view nocturnal fuss as simply rude.

  Here’s more black humor worthy of the name

  than if some grand duke leaned out from his frame

  and vented his frustration with a vulgar curse.

  And if some silly man calling from town

  refuses to give up, put the receiver down,

  though he’s got the wrong number? He lives, so he errs.

  Theatre Impressions

  For me the tragedy’s most important act is the sixth:

  the raising of the dead from the stage’s battlegrounds,

  the straightening of wigs and fancy gowns,

  removing knives from stricken breasts,

  taking nooses from lifeless necks,

  lining up among the living

  to face the audience.

  The bows, both solo and ensemble—

  the pale hand on the wounded heart,

  the curtsies of the hapless suicide,

  the bobbing of the chopped-off head.

  The bows in pairs—

  rage extends its arm to meekness,

  the victim’s eyes smile at the torturer,

  the rebel indulgently walks beside the tyrant.

  Eternity trampled by the golden slipper’s toe.

  Redeeming values swept aside with the swish of a

  wide-brimmed hat.

  The unrepentant urge to start all over tomorrow.

  Now enter, single file, the hosts who died early on,

  in Acts 3 and 4, or between scenes.

  The miraculous return of all those lost without a trace.

  The thought that they’ve been waiting patiently offstage

  without taking off their makeup

  or their costumes

  moves me more than all the tragedy’s tirades.

  But the curtain’s fall is the most uplifting part,

  the things you see before it hits the floor:

  here one hand quickly reaches for a flower,

  there another hand picks up a fallen sword.

  Only then, one
last, unseen, hand

  does its duty

  and grabs me by the throat.

  Voices

  You can’t move an inch, my dear Marcus Emilius,

  without Aborigines sprouting up as if from the earth itself.

  Your heel sticks fast amidst Rutulians.

  You founder knee-deep in Sabines and Latins.

  You’re up to your waist, your neck, your nostrils

  in Aequians and Volscians, dear Lucius Fabius.

  These irksome little nations, thick as flies.

  It’s enough to make you sick, dear Quintus Decius.

  One town, then the next, then the hundred and seventieth.

  The Fidenates’ stubbornness. The Feliscans’ ill will.

  The shortsighted Ecetrans. The capricious Antemnates.

  The Labicanians and Pelignians, offensively aloof.

  They drive us mild-mannered sorts to sterner measures

  with every new mountain we cross, dear Gaius Cloelius.

  If only they weren’t always in the way, the Auruncians, the

  Marsians,

  but they always do get in the way, dear Spurius Manlius.

  Tarquinians where you’d least expect them, Etruscans on all sides.

  If that weren’t enough, Volsinians and Veientians.

  The Aulertians, beyond all reason. And, of course,

  the endlessly vexatious Sapinians, my dear Sextus Oppius.

  Little nations do have little minds.

  The circle of thick skulls expands around us.

  Reprehensible customs. Backward laws.

  Ineffectual gods, my dear Titus Vilius.

  Heaps of Hernicians. Swarms of Murricinians.

  Antlike multitudes of Vestians and Samnites.

  The farther you go, the more there are, dear Servius Follius.

  These little nations are pitiful indeed.

  Their foolish ways require supervision

  with every new river we ford, dear Aulus Iunius.

  Every new horizon threatens me.

  That’s how I’d put it, my dear Hostius Melius.

  To which I, Hostus Melius, would reply, my dear

  Appius Papius: March on! The world has got to end somewhere.

  The Letters of the Dead

  We read the letters of the dead like helpless gods,

  but gods, nonetheless, since we know the dates that follow.

  We know which debts will never be repaid.

  Which widows will remarry with the corpse still warm.

  Poor dead, blindfolded dead,

  gullible, fallible, pathetically prudent.

  We see the faces people make behind their backs.

  We catch the sound of wills being ripped to shreds.

  The dead sit before us comically, as if on buttered bread,

  or frantically pursue the hats blown from their heads.

  Their bad taste, Napoleon, steam, electricity,

  their fatal remedies for curable diseases,

  their foolish apocalypse according to St. John,

  their counterfeit heaven on earth according to Jean-Jacques. . . .

  We watch the pawns on their chessboards in silence,

  even though we see them three squares later.

  Everything the dead predicted has turned out completely different.

  Or a little bit different—which is to say, completely different.

  The most fervent of them gaze confidingly into our eyes:

  their calculations tell them that they’ll find perfection there.

  Old Folks’ Home

  Here comes Her Highness—well you know who I mean,

  our Helen the snooty—now who made her queen!

  With her lipstick and wig on, as if we could care,

  like her three sons in heaven can see her from there!

  “I wouldn’t be here if they’d lived through the war.

  I’d spend winter with one son, summer with another.”

  What makes her so sure?

  I’d be dead too now, with her for a mother.

  And she keeps on asking (“I don’t mean to pry”)

  why from your sons and daughters there’s never a word

  even though they weren’t killed. “If my boys were alive,

  I’d spend all my holidays home with the third.”

  Right, and in his gold carriage he’d come and get her,

  drawn by a swan or a lily-white dove,

  to show all of us that he’ll never forget her

  and how much he owes to her motherly love.

  Even Jane herself, the nurse, can’t help but grin

  when our Helen starts singing this old song again—

  even though Jane’s job is commiseration

  Monday through Friday, with two weeks’ vacation.

  Advertisement

  I’m a tranquilizer.

  I’m effective at home.

  I work in the office.

  I can take exams

  or the witness stand.

  I mend broken cups with care.

  All you have to do is take me,

  let me melt beneath your tongue,

  just gulp me

  with a glass of water.

  I know how to handle misfortune,

  how to take bad news.

  I can minimize injustice,

  lighten up God’s absence,

  or pick the widow’s veil that suits your face.

  What are you waiting for—

  have faith in my chemical compassion.

  You’re still a young man/woman.

  It’s not too late to learn how to unwind.

  Who said

  you have to take it on the chin?

  Let me have your abyss.

  I’ll cushion it with sleep.

  You’ll thank me for giving you

  four paws to fall on.

  Sell me your soul.

  There are no other takers.

  There is no other devil anymore.

  Lazarus Takes a Walk

  The professor has died three times now.

  After the first death, he was taught to move his head.

  After the second, he learned how to sit up.

  After the third, they even got him on his feet,

 

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