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Poems New and Collected

Page 18

by Wislawa Szymborska


  Cat in an Empty Apartment

  Die—you can’t do that to a cat.

  Since what can a cat do

  in an empty apartment?

  Climb the walls?

  Rub up against the furniture?

  Nothing seems different here,

  but nothing is the same.

  Nothing has been moved,

  but there’s more space.

  And at nighttime no lamps are lit.

  Footsteps on the staircase,

  but they’re new ones.

  The hand that puts fish on the saucer

  has changed, too.

  Something doesn’t start

  at its usual time.

  Something doesn’t happen

  as it should.

  Someone was always, always here,

  then suddenly disappeared

  and stubbornly stays disappeared.

  Every closet has been examined.

  Every shelf has been explored.

  Excavations under the carpet turned up nothing.

  A commandment was even broken:

  papers scattered everywhere.

  What remains to be done.

  Just sleep and wait.

  Just wait till he turns up,

  just let him show his face.

  Will he ever get a lesson

  on what not to do to a cat.

  Sidle toward him

  as if unwilling

  and ever so slow

  on visibly offended paws,

  and no leaps or squeals at least to start.

  Parting with a View

  I don’t reproach the spring

  for starting up again.

  I can’t blame it

  for doing what it must

  year after year.

  I know that my grief

  will not stop the green.

  The grass blade may bend

  but only in the wind.

  It doesn’t pain me to see

  that clumps of alders above the water

  have something to rustle with again.

  I take note of the fact

  that the shore of a certain lake

  is still—as if you were living—

  as lovely as before.

  I don’t resent

  the view for its vista

  of a sun-dazzled bay.

  I am even able to imagine

  some non-us

  sitting at this minute

  on a fallen birch trunk.

  I respect their right

  to whisper, laugh,

  and lapse into happy silence.

  I can even allow

  that they are bound by love

  and that he holds her

  with a living arm.

  Something freshly birdish

  starts rustling in the reeds.

  I sincerely want them

  to hear it.

  I don’t require changes

  from the surf,

  now diligent, now sluggish,

  obeying not me.

  I expect nothing

  from the depths near the woods,

  first emerald,

  then sapphire,

  then black.

  There’s one thing I won’t agree to:

  my own return.

  The privilege of presence—

  I give it up.

  I survived you by enough,

  and only by enough,

  to contemplate from afar.

  Séance

  Happenstance reveals its tricks.

  It produces, by sleight of hand, a glass of brandy

  and sits Henry down beside it.

  I enter the bistro and stop dead in my tracks.

  Henry—he’s none other than

  Agnes’s husband’s brother,

  and Agnes is related

  to Aunt Sophie’s brother-in-law.

  It turns out

  we’ve got the same great-grandfather.

  In happenstance’s hands

  space furls and unfurls,

  spreads and shrinks.

  The tablecloth

  becomes a handkerchief.

  Just guess who I ran into

  in Canada, of all places,

  after all these years.

  I thought he was dead,

  and there he was, in Mercedes.

  On the plane to Athens.

  At a stadium in Tokyo.

  Happenstance twirls a kaleidoscope in its hands.

  A billion bits of colored glass glitter.

  And suddenly Jack’s glass

  bumps into Jill’s.

  Just imagine, in this very same hotel.

  I turn around and see—

  it’s really she!

  Face to face in an elevator.

  In a toy store.

  At the corner of Maple and Pine.

  Happenstance is shrouded in a cloak.

  Things get lost in it and then are found again.

  I stumbled on it accidentally.

  I bent down and picked it up.

  One look and I knew it,

  a spoon from that stolen service.

  If it hadn’t been for that bracelet,

  I would never have known Alexandra.

  The clock? It turned up in Potterville.

  Happenstance looks deep into our eyes.

  Our head grows heavy.

  Our eyelids drop.

  We want to laugh and cry,

  it’s so incredible.

  From fourth-grade homeroom to that ocean liner.

  It has to mean something.

  To hell and back,

  and here we meet halfway home.

  We want to shout:

  Small world!

  You could almost hug it!

  And for a moment we are filled with joy,

  radiant and deceptive.

  Love at First Sight

  They’re both convinced

  that a sudden passion joined them.

  Such certainty is beautiful,

  but uncertainty is more beautiful still.

  Since they’d never met before, they’re sure

  that there’d been nothing between them.

  But what’s the word from the streets, staircases, hallways—

  perhaps they’ve passed by each other a million times?

  I want to ask them

  if they don’t remember—

  a moment face to face

  in some revolving door?

  perhaps a “sorry” muttered in a crowd?

  a curt “wrong number” caught in the receiver?—

  but I know the answer.

  No, they don’t remember.

  They’d be amazed to hear

  that Chance has beeen toying with them

  now for years.

  Not quite ready yet

  to become their Destiny,

  it pushed them close, drove them apart,

  it barred their path,

  stifling a laugh,

  and then leaped aside.

  There were signs and signals,

  even if they couldn’t read them yet.

  Perhaps three years ago

  or just last Tuesday

  a certain leaf fluttered

  from one shoulder to another?

  Something was dropped and then picked up.

  Who knows, maybe the ball that vanished

  into childhood’s thicket?

  There were doorknobs and doorbells

  where one touch had covered another

  beforehand.

  Suitcases checked and standing side by side.

  One night, perhaps, the same dream,

  grown hazy by morning.

  Every beginning

  is only a sequel, after all,

  and the book of events

  is always open halfway through.

  May 16, 1973

  One of those many dates

  that no longer ring a bell.

  Where I was going that da
y,

  what I was doing—I don’t know.

  Whom I met, what we talked about,

  I can’t recall.

  If a crime had been committed nearby,

  I wouldn’t have had an alibi.

  The sun flared and died

  beyond my horizons.

  The earth rotated

  unnoted in my notebooks.

  I’d rather think

  that I’d temporarily died

  than that I kept on living

  and can’t remember a thing.

  I wasn’t a ghost, after all.

  I breathed, I ate,

  I walked.

  My steps were audible,

  my fingers surely left

  their prints on doorknobs.

  Mirrors caught my reflection.

  I wore something or other in such-and-such a color.

  Somebody must have seen me.

  Maybe I found something that day

  that had been lost.

  Maybe I lost something that turned up later.

  I was filled with feelings and sensations.

  Now all that’s like

  a line of dots in parentheses.

  Where was I hiding out,

  where did I bury myself?

  Not a bad trick

  to vanish before my own eyes.

  I shake my memory.

  Maybe something in its branches

  that has been asleep for years

  will start up with a flutter.

  No.

  Clearly I’m asking too much.

  Nothing less than one whole second.

  Maybe All This

  Maybe all this

  is happening in some lab?

  Under one lamp by day

  and billions by night?

  Maybe we’re experimental generations?

  Poured from one vial to the next,

  shaken in test tubes,

  not scrutinized by eyes alone,

  each of us separately

  plucked up by tweezers in the end?

  Or maybe it’s more like this:

  No interference?

  The changes occur on their own

  according to plan?

  The graph’s needle slowly etches

  its predictable zigzags?

  Maybe thus far we aren’t of much interest?

  The control monitors aren’t usually plugged in?

  Only for wars, preferably large ones,

  for the odd ascent above our clump of Earth,

  for major migrations from point A to B?

  Maybe just the opposite:

  They’ve got a taste for trivia up there?

  Look! on the big screen a little girl

  is sewing a button on her sleeve.

  The radar shrieks,

  the staff comes at a run.

  What a darling little being

  with its tiny heart beating inside it!

  How sweet, its solemn

  threading of the needle!

  Someone cries enraptured:

  Get the Boss,

  tell him he’s got to see this for himself!

  Slapstick

  If there are angels,

  I doubt they read

  our novels

  concerning thwarted hopes.

  I’m afraid, alas,

  they never touch the poems

  that bear our grudges against the world.

  The rantings and railings

  of our plays

  must drive them, I suspect,

  to distraction.

  Off duty, between angelic—

  i.e., inhuman—occupations,

  they watch instead

  our slapstick

  from the age of silent film.

  To our dirge wailers,

  garment renders,

  and teeth gnashers,

  they prefer, I suppose,

  that poor devil

  who grabs the drowning man by his toupee

  or, starving, devours his own shoelaces

  with gusto.

  From the waist up, starch and aspirations;

  below, a startled mouse

  runs down his trousers.

  I’m sure

  that’s what they call real entertainment.

  A crazy chase in circles

  ends up pursuing the pursuer.

  The light at the end of the tunnel

  turns out to be a tiger’s eye.

  A hundred disasters

  mean a hundred comic somersaults

  turned over a hundred abysses.

  If there are angels,

  they must, I hope,

  find this convincing,

  this merriment dangling from terror,

  not even crying Save me Save me

  since all of this takes place in silence.

  I can even imagine

  that they clap their wings

  and tears run from their eyes

  from laughter, if nothing else.

  Nothing’s a Gift

  Nothing’s a gift, it’s all on loan.

  I’m drowning in debts up to my ears.

  I’ll have to pay for myself

  with my self,

  give up my life for my life.

  Here’s how it’s arranged:

  The heart can be repossessed,

  the liver, too,

  and each single finger and toe.

  Too late to tear up the terms,

  my debts will be repaid,

 

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