Poems New and Collected

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Poems New and Collected Page 19

by Wislawa Szymborska


  and I’ll be fleeced,

  or, more precisely, flayed.

  I move about the planet

  in a crush of other debtors.

  Some are saddled with the burden

  of paying off their wings.

  Others must, willy-nilly,

  account for every leaf.

  Every tissue in us lies

  on the debit side.

  Not a tentacle or tendril

  is for keeps.

  The inventory, infinitely detailed,

  implies we’ll be left

  not just empty-handed

  but handless, too.

  I can’t remember

  where, when, and why

  I let someone open

  this account in my name.

  We call the protest against this

  the soul.

  And it’s the only item

  not included on the list.

  One Version of Events

  If we’d been allowed to choose,

  we’d probably have gone on forever.

  The bodies that were offered didn’t fit,

  and wore out horribly.

  The ways of sating hunger

  made us sick.

  We were repelled

  by blind heredity

  and the tyranny of glands.

  The world that was meant to embrace us

  decayed without end

  and the effects of causes raged over it.

  Individual fates

  were presented for our inspection:

  appalled and grieved,

  we rejected most of them.

  Questions naturally arose, e.g.,

  who needs the painful birth

  of a dead child

  and what’s in it for a sailor

  who will never reach the shore.

  We agreed to death,

  but not to every kind.

  Love attracted us,

  of course, but only love

  that keeps its word.

  Both fickle standards

  and the impermanence of artworks

  kept us wary of the Muses’ service.

  Each of us wished to have a homeland

  free of neighbors

  and to live his entire life

  in the intervals between wars.

  No one wished to seize power

  or to be subject to it.

  No one wanted to fall victim

  to his own or others’ delusions.

  No one volunteered

  for crowd scenes and processions,

  to say nothing of dying tribes—

  although without all these

  history couldn’t run its charted course

  through centuries to come.

  Meanwhile, a fair number

  of stars lit earlier

  had died out and grown cold.

  It was high time for a decision.

  Voicing numerous reservations,

  candidates finally emerged

  for a number of roles as healers and explorers,

  a few obscure philosophers,

  one or two nameless gardeners,

  artists and virtuosos—

  though even these livings

  couldn’t all be filled

  for lack of other kinds of applications.

  It was time to think

  the whole thing over.

  We’d been offered a trip

  from which we’d surely be returning soon,

  wouldn’t we.

  A trip outside eternity—

  monotonous, no matter what they say,

  and foreign to time’s flow.

  The chance may never come our way again.

  We were besieged by doubts.

  Does knowing everything beforehand

  really mean knowing everything.

  Is a decision made in advance

  really any kind of choice.

  Wouldn’t we be better off

  dropping the subject

  and making our minds up

  once we get there.

  We looked at the earth.

  Some daredevils were already living there.

  A feeble weed

  clung to a rock,

  trusting blindly

  that the wind wouldn’t tear it off.

  A small animal

  dug itself from its burrow

  with an energy and hope

  that puzzled us.

  We struck ourselves as prudent,

  petty, and ridiculous.

  In any case, our ranks began to dwindle.

  The most impatient of us disappeared.

  They’d left for the first trial by fire,

  this much was clear,

  especially by the glare of the real fire

  they’d just begun to light

  on the steep bank of an actual river.

  A few of them

  have actually turned back.

  But not in our direction.

  And with something they seemed to have won in their hands.

  We’re Extremely Fortunate

  We’re extremely fortunate

  not to know precisely

  the kind of world we live in.

  One would have

  to live a long, long time,

  unquestionably longer

  than the world itself.

  Get to know other worlds,

  if only for comparison.

  Rise above the flesh,

  which only really knows

  how to obstruct

  and make trouble.

  For the sake of research,

  the big picture

  and definitive conclusions,

  one would have to transcend time,

  in which everything scurries and whirls.

  From that perspective,

  one might as well bid farewell

  to incidents and details.

  The counting of weekdays

  would inevitably seem to be

  a senseless activity;

  dropping letters in the mailbox

  a whim of foolish youth;

  the sign “No Walking on the Grass”

  a symptom of lunacy.

  NEW POEMS

  1993–97

  The Three Oddest Words

  When I pronounce the word Future,

  the first syllable already belong? to the past.

  When I pronounce the word Silence,

  I destroy it.

  When I pronounce the word Nothing,

  I make something no nonbeing can hold.

  Some People

  Some people flee some other people.

  In some country under a sun

  and some clouds.

  They abandon something close to all they’ve got,

  sown fields, some chickens, dogs,

  mirrors in which fire now preens.

  Their shoulders bear pitchers and bundles.

  The emptier they get, the heavier they grow.

  What happens quietly: someone’s dropping from exhaustion.

  What happens loudly: someone’s bread is ripped away,

  someone tries to shake a limp child back to life.

  Always another wrong road ahead of them,

  always another wrong bridge

  across an oddly reddish river.

  Around them, some gunshots, now nearer, now farther away,

  above them a plane seems to circle.

  Some invisibility would come in handy,

  some grayish stoniness,

  or, better yet, some nonexistence

  for a shorter or a longer while.

  Something else will happen, only where and what.

  Someone will come at them, only when and who,

  in how many shapes, with what intentions.

  If he has a choice,

  maybe he won’t be the enemy

  and will let them live some sort of life.

  A Contribution to Statistics

  Out of a hu
ndred people

  those who always know better

  —fifty-two,

  doubting every step

  —nearly all the rest,

  glad to lend a hand

  if it doesn’t take too long

  —as high as forty-nine,

  always good

  because they can’t be otherwise

  —four, well maybe five,

  able to admire without envy

  —eighteen,

  suffering illusions

  induced by fleeting youth

  —sixty, give or take a few,

  not to be taken lightly

  —forty and four,

  living in constant fear

  of someone or something

  —seventy-seven,

  capable of happiness

  —twenty-something tops,

  harmless singly,

  savage in crowds

  —half at least,

  cruel

  when forced by circumstances

  —better not to know

  even ballpark figures,

  wise after the fact

  —just a couple more

  than wise before it,

  taking only things from life

  —thirty

  (I wish I were wrong),

  hunched in pain,

  no flashlight in the dark

  —eighty-three

  sooner or later,

  righteous

  —thirty-five, which is a lot,

  righteous

  and understanding

  —three,

  worthy of compassion

  —ninety-nine,

  mortal

  —a hundred out of a hundred.

  Thus far this figure still remains unchanged.

  Negative

  Against a grayish sky

  a grayer cloud

  rimmed black by the sun.

  On the left, that is, the right,

  a white cherry branch with black blossoms.

  Light shadows on your dark face.

  You’d just taken a seat at the table

  and put your hands, gone gray, upon it.

  You look like a ghost

  who’s trying to summon up the living.

  (And since I still number among them,

  I should appear to him and tap:

  good night, that is, good morning,

  farewell, that is, hello.

  And not grudge questions to any of his answers

  concerning life,

  that storm before the calm.)

  Clouds

  I’d have to be really quick

  to describe clouds—

  a split second’s enough

  for them to start being something else.

  Their trademark:

  they don’t repeat a single

  shape, shade, pose, arrangement.

  Unburdened by memory of any kind,

  they float easily over the facts.

  What on earth could they bear witness to?

  They scatter whenever something happens.

  Compared to clouds,

  life rests on solid ground,

  practically permanent, almost eternal.

  Next to clouds

  even a stone seems like a brother,

  someone you can trust,

  while they’re just distant, flighty cousins.

  Let people exist if they want,

  and then die, one after another:

  clouds simply don’t care

  what they’re up to

  down there.

  And so their haughty fleet

  cruises smoothly over your whole life

  and mine, still incomplete.

  They aren’t obliged to vanish when we’re gone.

  They don’t have to be seen while sidling on.

  Among the Multitudes

  I am who I am.

  A coincidence no less unthinkable

  than any other.

  I could have different

  ancestors, after all,

  I could have fluttered

  from another nest

  or crawled bescaled

  from under another tree.

  Nature’s wardrobe

  holds a fair supply of costumes:

  spider, seagull, field mouse.

  Each fits perfectly right off

  and is dutifully worn

  into shreds.

  I didn’t get a choice either,

  but I can’t complain.

  I could have been someone

  much less separate.

  Someone from an anthill, shoal, or buzzing swarm,

  an inch of landscape tousled by the wind.

  Someone much less fortunate,

  bred for my fur

  or Christmas dinner,

  something swimming under a square of glass.

  A tree rooted to the ground

  as the fire draws near.

  A grass blade trampled by a stampede

  of incomprehensible events.

  A shady type whose darkness

  dazzled some.

  What if I’d prompted only fear,

  loathing,

 

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