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by Wislawa Szymborska


  Soul, don’t take offense that I’ve only got you now and then.

  My apologies to everything that I can’t be everywhere at once.

  My apologies to everyone that I can’t be each woman and each man.

  I know I won’t be justified as long as I live,

  since I myself stand in my own way.

  Don’t bear me ill will, speech, that I borrow weighty words,

  then labor heavily so that they may seem light.

  A LARGE NUMBER

  1976

  A Large Number

  Four billion people on this earth,

  but my imagination is still the same.

  It’s bad with large numbers.

  It’s still taken by particularity.

  It flits in the dark like a flashlight,

  illuminating only random faces

  while all the rest go blindly by,

  never coming to mind and never really missed.

  But even a Dante couldn’t get it right.

  Let alone someone who is not.

  Even with all the muses behind me.

  Non omnis moriar—a premature worry.

  But am I entirely alive and is that enough.

  It never was, and now less than ever.

  My choices are rejections, since there is no other way,

  but what I reject is more numerous,

  denser, more demanding than before.

  A little poem, a sigh, at the cost of indescribable losses.

  I whisper my reply to my stentorian calling.

  I can’t tell you how much I pass over in silence.

  A mouse at the foot of the maternal mountain.

  Life lasts as long as a few signs scratched by a claw in the sand.

  My dreams—even they’re not as populous as they should be.

  They hold more solitude than noisy crowds.

  Sometimes a long-dead friend stops by awhile.

  A single hand turns the knob.

  An echo’s annexes overgrow the empty house.

  I run from the doorstep into a valley

  that is quiet, as if no one owned it, already an anachronism.

  Why there’s still all this space inside me

  I don’t know.

  Thank-You Note

  I owe so much

  to those I don’t love.

  The relief as I agree

  that someone else needs them more.

  The happiness that I’m not

  the wolf to their sheep.

  The peace I feel with them,

  the freedom—

  love can neither give

  nor take that.

  I don’t wait for them,

  as in window-to-door-and-back.

  Almost as patient

  as a sundial,

  I understand

  what love can’t,

  and forgive

  as love never would.

  From a rendezvous to a letter

  is just a few days or weeks,

  not an eternity.

  Trips with them always go smoothly,

  concerts are heard,

  cathedrals visited,

  scenery is seen.

  And when seven hills and rivers

  come between us,

  the hills and rivers

  can be found on any map.

  They deserve the credit

  if I live in three dimensions,

  in nonlyrical and nonrhetorical space

  with a genuine, shifting horizon.

  They themselves don’t realize

  how much they hold in their empty hands.

  “I don’t owe them a thing”

  would be love’s answer

  to this open question.

  Psalm

  Oh, the leaky boundaries of man-made states!

  How many clouds float past them with impunity;

  how much desert sand shifts from one land to another;

  how many mountain pebbles tumble onto foreign soil

  in provocative hops!

  Need I mention every single bird that flies in the face of frontiers

  or alights on the roadblock at the border?

  A humble robin—still, its tail resides abroad

  while its beak stays home. If that weren’t enough, it won’t stop bobbing!

  Among innumerable insects, I’ll single out only the ant

  between the border guard’s left and right boots

  blithely ignoring the questions “Where from?” and “Where to?”

  Oh, to register in detail, at a glance, the chaos

  prevailing on every continent!

  Isn’t that a privet on the far bank

  smuggling its hundred-thousandth leaf across the river?

  And who but the octopus, with impudent long arms,

  would disrupt the sacred bounds of territorial waters?

  And how can we talk of order overall

  when the very placement of the stars

  leaves us doubting just what shines for whom?

  Not to speak of the fog’s reprehensible drifting!

  And dust blowing all over the steppes

  as if they hadn’t been partitioned!

  And the voices coasting on obliging airwaves,

  that conspiratorial squeaking, those indecipherable mutters!

  Only what is human can truly be foreign.

  The rest is mixed vegetation, subversive moles, and wind.

  Lot’s Wife

  They say I looked back out of curiosity.

  But I could have had other reasons.

  I looked back mourning my silver bowl.

  Carelessly, while tying my sandal strap.

  So I wouldn’t have to keep staring at the righteous nape

  of my husband Lot’s neck.

  From the sudden conviction that if I dropped dead

  he wouldn’t so much as hesitate.

  From the disobedience of the meek.

  Checking for pursuers.

  Struck by the silence, hoping God had changed His mind.

  Our two daughters were already vanishing over the hilltop.

  I felt age within me. Distance.

  The futility of wandering. Torpor.

  I looked back setting my bundle down.

  I looked back not knowing where to set my foot.

  Serpents appeared on my path,

  spiders, field mice, baby vultures.

  They were neither good nor evil now—every living thing

  was simply creeping or hopping along in the mass panic.

  I looked back in desolation.

  In shame because we had stolen away.

  Wanting to cry out, to go home.

  Or only when a sudden gust of wind

  unbound my hair and lifted up my robe.

  It seemed to me that they were watching from the walls of Sodom

  and bursting into thunderous laughter again and again.

  I looked back in anger.

  To savor their terrible fate.

  I looked back for all the reasons given above.

  I looked back involuntarily.

  It was only a rock that turned underfoot, growling at me.

  It was a sudden crack that stopped me in my tracks.

  A hamster on its hind paws tottered on the edge.

  It was then we both glanced back.

  No, no. I ran on,

  I crept, I flew upward

  until darkness fell from the heavens

  and with it scorching gravel and dead birds.

  I couldn’t breathe and spun around and around.

  Anyone who saw me must have thought I was dancing.

  It’s not inconceivable that my eyes were open.

  It’s possible I fell facing the city.

  Seen from Above

  A dead beetle lies on the path through the field.

  Three pairs of legs folded neatly on its belly.

  Instead of death’s confusion, tidiness and order.

  The ho
rror of this sight is moderate,

  its scope is strictly local, from the wheat grass to the mint.

  The grief is quarantined.

  The sky is blue.

  To preserve our peace of mind, animals die

  more shallowly: they aren’t deceased, they’re dead.

  They leave behind, we’d like to think, less feeling and less world,

  departing, we suppose, from a stage less tragic.

  Their meek souls never haunt us in the dark,

  they know their place,

  they show respect.

  And so the dead beetle on the path

  lies unmourned and shining in the sun.

  One glance at it will do for meditation—

  clearly nothing much has happened to it.

  Important matters are reserved for us,

  for our life and our death, a death

  that always claims the right of way.

  The Old Turtle’s Dream

  The old turtle dreams about a lettuce leaf,

  when by that leaf, the Emperor appears.

  A century hasn’t changed him in the least.

  To the turtle it’s an ordinary affair.

  The Emperor appears in part, at any rate.

  The sun reflects on black shoes right below

  two shapely calves in stockings, spotless white.

  To the turtle this is just the status quo.

  Two legs paused en route from Austerlitz to Jena,

  above them, clouds where thunderous laughter roars.

  You may doubt the scene in all its splendor,

  and if that well-shod foot could be the Emperor’s.

  It’s hard to recognize someone from snippets,

  from the left foot only or the right.

  The turtle doesn’t know what he has witnessed.

  His childhood memories are slight.

  Emperor or not. How does it alter

  the mystery of what the turtle sees?

  The void has briefly yielded up a stranger

  who flickers back to life! From heels to knees.

  Experiment

  As a short subject before the main feature—

  in which the actors did their best

  to make me cry and even laugh—

  we were shown an interesting experiment

  involving a head.

  The head

  a minute earlier was still attached to . . .

  but now it was cut off.

  Everyone could see that it didn’t have a body.

  The tubes dangling from the neck hooked it up to a machine

  that kept its blood circulating.

  The head

  was doing just fine.

  Without showing pain or even surprise,

  it followed a moving flashlight with its eyes.

  It pricked up its ears at the sound of a bell.

  Its moist nose could tell

  the smell of bacon from odorless oblivion,

  and licking its chops with evident relish

  it salivated its salute to physiology.

  A dog’s faithful head,

  a dog’s friendly head

  squinted its eyes when stroked,

  convinced that it was still part of a whole

  that crooks its back if patted

  and wags its tail.

  I thought about happiness and was frightened.

  For if that’s all life is about,

  the head

  was happy.

  Smiles

  The world would rather see hope than just hear

  its song. And that’s why statesmen have to smile.

  Their pearly whites mean they’re still full of cheer.

  The game’s complex, the goal’s far out of reach,

  the outcome’s still unclear—once in a while

  we need a friendly, gleaming set of teeth.

  Heads of state must display unfurrowed brows

  on airport runways, in the conference room.

  They must embody one big, toothy “Wow!”

  while pressing flesh or pressing urgent issues.

  Their faces’ self-regenerating tissues

  make our hearts hum and our lenses zoom.

  Dentistry turned to diplomatic skill

  promises us a Golden Age tomorrow.

  The going’s rough, and so we need the laugh

  of bright incisors, molars of goodwill.

  Our times are still not safe and sane enough

  for faces to show ordinary sorrow.

  Dreamers keep saying, “Human brotherhood

  will make this place a smiling paradise.”

  I’m not convinced. The statesman, in that case,

  would not require facial exercise,

  except from time to time: he’s feeling good,

  he’s glad it’s spring, and so he moves his face.

  But human beings are, by nature, sad.

  So be it, then. It isn’t all that bad.

  Military Parade

  Ground-to-ground,

  ground-to-air-to-ground,

  air-to-water-to-ground-to-ground-to-water,

  water-to-air-to-ground-to-air-to-air,

  ground-to-water-to-air-to-water-to-air-to-ground,

  air-to-ground-to-ground-to-ground-to-ground,

  Some Ground Air Water-

  The Terrorist, He’s Watching

  The bomb in the bar will explode at thirteen twenty.

  Now it’s just thirteen sixteen.

  There’s still time for some to go in

  and some to come out.

  The terrorist has already crossed the street.

  The distance keeps him out of danger,

  and what a view—just like the movies:

  A woman in a yellow jacket, she’s going in.

  A man in dark glasses, he’s coming out.

  Teenagers in jeans, they’re talking.

  Thirteen seventeen and four seconds.

  The short one, he’s lucky, he’s getting on a scooter,

 

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