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The Collected Poems of Bertolt Brecht

Page 13

by Tom Kuhn

And spoke a sentence towards noon

  Felt in the evening some joy again

  Some peace was all he asked when night came down

  Once waters flowed through him and animals

  Vanished in him and he was never full

  Whether he gobbled air or gobbled bulls

  And now: feeble

  Lupu Pick and Manke Pansche

  Bitter were the words they uttered

  Crooked were the ways they went

  Seven long years long and thus were

  Seven of their years spent.

  Lupu Pick and Manke Pansche

  White hair, faded skin

  With his left, already dim, eye

  Lupu Pick saw him and struck

  Saying nothing, aiming surely

  Him a blow across the neck.

  Pansche understood in terror

  Thick and hairy he withdrew

  Crablike to the paddyfields

  There thought up a thing or two.

  And he came back carrying buckets

  Full of wine and rice and meat

  Which he rammed and which he poured

  Down the enfeebled Lupu’s throat.

  Lupu Pick, once he was sated

  Drove him with a single look

  Off into the wet dog-kennel

  Such a brute was Lupu Pick.

  Yes, he pinched the cheek (but which cheek

  I forbear to disclose)

  Of Manke Pansche’s wife and came then

  Tottering to him in the trees.

  Hoarsely yelled, beating his hairy

  Chest, the brutal Lupu Pick:

  Come out here, dog Manke Pansche

  Feeling for him with a kick.

  Ballad of the old woman

  On Monday she rose up from her bed again

  A thing they had thought she never would have done

  Flu for her was as a sign from heaven

  Since autumn she’s been nothing but skin and bone

  For two days all she vomited was phlegm

  And when she rose she was as white as snow

  Coffee was her only drink by then

  They’d given her the last rites weeks ago

  And now once again she has risen up from death

  The last rites after all were premature

  This time, she said, she had been very loath

  To say goodbye to her walnut chest of drawers

  Even though there’s worm in it, you get

  Attached to a venerable piece like that, truth is

  She’d have missed it, you might say. God look after it

  And now she’s bottled a few more blackberries

  And had her teeth fixed, because you eat

  Quite differently with teeth, you lay

  Them handy by in a coffee cup overnight

  And there they are for going into town next day

  And also the children have written her a letter

  They are wholly in God’s hands from now on

  With God she will get through another winter

  And the black dress too is still in good condition

  On the proper enjoyment of spirituous liquors

  Others mostly knock back a glass just like that

  And get nothing from it but the drinker’s heart complaint

  But when I drink, the world goes down with a grin

  And I stay a minute longer. I feel that gives my life some point.

  I like reading the paper the while, till my hands

  Start trembling a little, then I don’t seem

  To be getting drunk on purpose. I like to pretend

  I know nothing about alcohol because at home

  My mother advised me strongly against it

  It was her secret sorrow, you might say.

  But step by step I got into its clutches and not

  Without benefit. I can feel my own red heart.

  I feel that even my low life is not a mistake and all in vain

  I honour the great thinkers. I understand them. I see the world as it is

  And sometimes, if the image is not too far-fetched

  Like a drunken carrier pigeon, I even fly over Mont Cenis.

  I really do hear—you will not believe this, I know—

  The rustling of tobacco fields on a bitter sort of plain

  I know they ceased to exist four thousand years ago

  But truly they do still bring me a certain solace.

  Evening in the menagerie

  Again the woman’s in labour

  Again we hear her screams

  And jokes are being served

  Around the bare rooms

  I cracked my joke for the Captain

  Today again it fell flat

  Again he didn’t get it

  I must do better than that

  A little snow has fallen

  On the black wet boards today

  Playing cards with Piotr

  Passes some time away

  At night it’s a good deal better

  If you smoke. But those

  Tricks with the phoney knife

  Have long since ceased to amuse

  Oh getting through the nights

  Is harder than anyone knows

  When the level of boredom rises

  You can always chew your toes

  The next-door captain’s nails

  Will last him another trip

  But I was not economical

  And mine are all used up

  In the sheds more out of the wind

  It will be quieter by now

  But up here there’s a wind tonight

  And the thatch is worn nearly through

  The trotter has done with dunging

  Smoke’s all I can taste now

  Perhaps if he can manage it

  I will manage it too

  The song of the roses of the Shipka Pass

  It was a Sunday in my boyish years

  And Father sang in that fine bass of his

  Sang in the supping of the wine and beer

  The song of the roses of the Shipka Pass.

  And again a Sunday and again in his

  Fine bass voice our father sang to us

  And not of lilac did he sing nor lilies

  He sang of roses on the Shipka Pass.

  With tears in his moustache and frequently

  Still Father in his fine bass sang to us

  And did not sing of the roses of Mycenae

  No, only of roses on the Shipka Pass.

  Often when we could not keep our eyes open

  Still from the last time Father had in his

  A tear or two and he sang once again

  The song of the roses on the Shipka Pass.

  His grave was dug already but even then

  Though rather pale he sang out nonetheless

  That he might personally be forgotten

  But roses would still bloom on the Shipka Pass.

  Epistles to the Chicago people

  2

  Once kept to yourselves, the traffickers’ derisive laughter

  At the markets in one continent or another

  How it must have shaken you, and the cold in the regions of the fourth depth

  Will have impregnated your skin.

  Do you still love the blue eyes of the horse-thieves?

  But when you come into the shelters

  I shall look at your backs

  To see whether the winters have marked you.

  By your dead wrists

  I shall be able to show your children

  Whether you have stood in the rivers

  Between chunks of ice and the black fish

  And know something of the planet.

  Oh in reality there are only

  Conquered and cowards.

  Well then.

  Thoughts of a gramophone owner

  1904 I acquired it and I’ve never been sorry.

  I always keep it hidden during the day.

  Something for the
dark hours of life, a nice piece of joinery

  And the voice of Adelina Patti in it, pickled, as you might say.

  The singer Adelina Patti died in 1911

  God rest her soul, I’ve got her voice the way you get

  Anything in life, for money, and a bit of paper saying where and when.

  Her voice is still pretty good and will do me for a long time yet.

  One day, I shouldn’t wonder, it will sing to my grandchildren as well.

  Adelina I called it from the start. Because

  Of an occasion when, being in drink, we fell

  My dear Adelina’s voice is not quite what it was.

  But it is remarkable and has astounded cleverer men than me

  The things life brings. How far

  We’ve come with our technology that she

  In her wooden box is still singing Traviata!

  In our grandparents’ day such a thing would not have been possible.

  Lots of the arts were doomed to oblivion and that was that.

  We are after all further on in good as well as ill.

  A machine like this means a sort of immortality, does it not?

  Often George says, Tonight bring tobacco and Adelina round my place

  I’m bad with my nerves. And there she is, the whole shebang

  And sings her Traviata and he puts on his most respectable face.

  For eighteen years, be it said, Traviata’s all she’s sung.

  Many a time I might have bought other records, I admit

  And right from the start my wife wanted something to shimmy to

  But at the last moment I’ve always thought better of it:

  Multum non multa’s my motto and no one but Adelina would do.

  Sentimental memories before an inscription

  1

  Between those yellowed papers that meant something once to me—

  Drink before you read—get drunk, you really ought to—

  A photograph. And there inscribed I see:

  PURE. PRAGMATIC. NASTY. And my eye begins to water.

  2

  She always washed with almond soap

  The flannel too was hers, that hangs above

  The Tokay recipe and the Java pipe

  To mask the smell of love.

  3

  She was the earnest type. She didn’t swim. She spent her days

  In thought. Demanded sacrifice for art.

  She loved love, not her lover. And her gaze

  Remained undimmed by rose-tinted affairs of the heart.

  4

  She laughed out loud. Thought suffering was dumb

  She had no bees in her bonnet, disdained all fads and freaks

  She could give the cold shoulder, had it under her thumb

  Just thinking about it gives me the shakes.

  5

  That’s how she was. By God I wish that, when I’ve breathed my last

  People might read on my own grave: Requiescat

  B.B. PURE. PRAGMATIC. NASTY.

  No doubt you sleep well under that.

  Christmas legend

  Christmas Eve and we, the poor

  All night long will be sitting here

  And the room is cold that we house in

  And the wind that blows outside blows in.

  Come, dear Lord Jesus, enter too

  For truly we have need of you.

  We sit around this holy night

  Like heathen who never saw the light.

  The snow falls cold on these bones of ours.

  The snow cannot bear to be out of doors:

  Snow, come indoors with us, for sure

  They’ll not house you in heaven either.

  We’ll brew up a toddy and then we’ll feel

  Warmer and easy, body and soul.

  We’ll brew a hot toddy. Round our thin walls

  Blindly some brute beast fumbles.

  Quick, beast, come in with us—your kind too

  This night has nowhere warm to go.

  We’ll feed our coats to the fire and so

  We’ll all be warmer than we are now.

  Oh the joists will glow and we shan’t freeze

  Not till the hour before sunrise.

  Come in, dear wind, dear guest, welcome:

  Like us, you have no house and home.

  German sell-out

  O my dark beloved country, you

  Are impoverished

  Gnarled tragic oak, what do you get

  From the enslavement of the man sawing you to pieces?

  Wild deep-travelling rivers what

  Do you earn? Who do you belong to? Whose

  Works do you drive?

  Bright beech tree, how many

  Sweaty hands will you go through

  Before you are turned into warmth that costs a lot?

  Things you need to know

  1

  You can be as pure as the driven snow and I still say

  It has nothing whatsoever to do with inner purity

  You might cure yourself of it with herbal tea

  But Jeppe drinks schnapps and that’s the effrontery.

  2

  Nobody is to be blamed for wind, of course not

  Every one of us has overindulged now and then

  But surely there are better ways of managing it

  Truly, people think you are sneering at them.

  3

  Comfort, and a bit of fun too, are all very well but you need to know

  What is permissible and what is quite out of order

  Nobody’s asking you to martyr yourself but you do

  Have to have limits when there are other people’s feelings to consider.

  4

  And at family parties especially we are not used to that sort of behaviour

  There it might indeed give real offence and even

  Have repercussions, it shows your judgement to be poor

  And quite simply we count on guests not doing that in front of the children.

  Lala

  Many a girl was robbed of her lily

  But I got stung like no one I know

  For I got the sort of lover who truly

  Could teach the Devil a thing or two.

  When he had turned me soft in the head

  I clenched my teeth and I thought that’s what

  Comes of not listening to Mam and Dad

  But he felt no shame whatsoever, the rat.

  He had the nerve to lay hands on a virgin

  And wasn’t up to it. Drip. And then

  In the neither-this-nor-that condition

  Coolly he sends her home to her mother again.

  He said he’d never had any trouble before

  Only with me. I said: You’re the withered tree

  And you practise on me! Better by far

  You trotted off home yourself and didn’t go leading virgins astray.

  He said he couldn’t understand me, why wasn’t I glad

  I wouldn’t get pregnant with him? I was speechless!

  As though I care anything about anything at all if I’ve had

  Nothing from it. The louse, he couldn’t care less

  If an innocent girl is undone.

  His sort will put you out for the rubbish collection.

  His sort don’t give a fig when the harm has begun to be done

  Just so long as he has had his side of the fun.

  The procession in Capri

  In the days before he was forgotten

  True, in remembrance of him every year

  They carried his images through their towns.

  But they led with everything necessary

  To kill him

  Nails, to tear holes in his flesh

  The cock, to betray him

  The dice, to part his garments

  But after the image of his corpse

  They carried his mother

  So high that heaven was too low

  And had to be lifted and carried alon
g behind her.

  A short epistle alluding to some disagreements

  1

  A man who likes writing is glad

  To have a topic.

  When the Suez Canal was built

  One man became famous because he was against it.

  Some write against the rain

  Others oppose the waxing and waning of the moon.

  If their feuilleton is nice to look at

  They become famous.

  2

  If a man lays his nose

  On a railway line

  It will be cut off

  When the train comes

  Be it ever so infallible.

  But it can lie there

  Till somebody finds it.

  3

  For two hundred years during its construction

  The Great Wall of China was opposed.

  Then it stood.

  4

  When the railway trains were young

  The owners of stagecoaches disparaged them:

  They had no tails, didn’t eat oats

  And riding in them you couldn’t see the countryside slowly

  And where did you ever see a locomotive that could defecate?

 

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