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Page 7

by Wislawa Szymborska


  on a hundred-humped camel. That he nodded off

  beneath the palme d’or. That he will awaken

  when everything is counted

  down to the last grain of sand. What a man.

  He escaped our notice through the crack

  between fact and fiction. Immune

  to every fate. He shakes off

  every shape I give him.

  Silence grew over him, without a voice’s scar.

  Absence mimicked the horizon.

  Zero writes itself.

  A Note

  The first display case

  holds a stone.

  On it we note

  a faint scratch.

  A matter of chance,

  some people say.

  The second display case

  shows a piece of frontal bone.

  It cannot be proven—

  is it animal or human.

  Bones are bones.

  Let’s move on.

  Nothing here.

  What endures—

  just the old resemblance

  between a spark struck from a stone

  and a star.

  Severed by centuries

  the space of comparison

  remains the same.

  The space

  that lured us from the species,

  led us from the sphere of sleep

  before we knew the word sleep,

  in which whatever lives

  is born for always

  and dies without death.

  The space

  that turned our head human,

  from a spark to a star,

  from one to many,

  from each to all,

  from temple to temple,

  and that which has no eyelids

  opened in us.

  The sky rose

  from a stone.

  A stick branched

  into a thicket of endings.

  The snake raised its fangs

  from the bundle of its reasons.

  Time swirled

  in the rings of a tree.

  Howls of one awakened

  multiplied in echoes.

  The first display case

  holds a stone.

  The second display case

  shows a piece of frontal bone.

  We left the animals behind.

  Who will leave us.

  Through which resemblance.

  What compared to what.

  Conversation with a Stone

  I knock at the stone’s front door.

  “It’s only me, let me come in.

  I want to enter your insides,

  have a look round,

  breathe my fill of you.”

  “Go away,” says the stone.

  “I’m shut tight.

  Even if you break me to pieces,

  we’ll all still be closed.

  You can grind us to sand,

  we still won’t let you in.”

  I knock at the stone’s front door.

  “It’s only me, let me come in.

  I’ve come out of pure curiosity.

  Only life can quench it.

  I mean to stroll through your palace,

  then go calling on a leaf, a drop of water.

  I don’t have much time.

  My mortality should touch you.”

  “I’m made of stone,” says the stone,

  “and must therefore keep a straight face.

  Go away.

  I don’t have the muscles to laugh.”

  I knock at the stone’s front door.

  “It’s only me, let me come in.

  I hear you have great empty halls inside you,

  unseen, their beauty in vain,

  soundless, not echoing anyone’s steps.

  Admit you don’t know them well yourself.”

  “Great and empty, true enough,” says the stone,

  “but there isn’t any room.

  Beautiful, perhaps, but not to the taste

  of your poor senses.

  You may get to know me, but you’ll never know me through.

  My whole surface is turned toward you,

  all my insides turned away.”

  I knock at the stone’s front door.

  “It’s only me, let me come in.

  I don’t seek refuge for eternity.

  I’m not unhappy.

  I’m not homeless.

  My world is worth returning to.

  I’ll enter and exit empty-handed.

  And my proof I was there

  will be only words,

  which no one will believe.”

  “You shall not enter,” says the stone.

  “You lack the sense of taking part.

  No other sense can make up for your missing sense of taking part.

  Even sight heightened to become all-seeing

  will do you no good without a sense of taking part.

  You shall not enter, you have only a sense of what that sense should be,

  only its seed, imagination.”

  I knock at the stone’s front door.

  “It’s only me, let me come in.

  I haven’t got two thousand centuries,

  so let me come under your roof.”

  “If you don’t believe me,” says the stone,

  “just ask the leaf, it will tell you the same.

  Ask a drop of water, it will say what the leaf has said.

  And, finally, ask a hair from your own head.

  I am bursting with laughter, yes, laughter, vast laughter,

  although I don’t know how to laugh.”

  I knock at the stone’s front door.

  “It’s only me, let me come in.”

  “I don’t have a door,” says the stone.

  NO END OF FUN

  1967

  The Joy of Writing

  Why does this written doe bound through these written woods?

  For a drink of written water from a spring

  whose surface will xerox her soft muzzle?

  Why does she lift her head; does she hear something?

  Perched on four slim legs borrowed from the truth,

  she pricks up her ears beneath my fingertips.

  Silence—this word also rustles across the page

  and parts the boughs

  that have sprouted from the word “woods.”

  Lying in wait, set to pounce on the blank page,

  are letters up to no good,

  clutches of clauses so subordinate

  they’ll never let her get away.

  Each drop of ink contains a fair supply

  of hunters, equipped with squinting eyes behind their sights,

  prepared to swarm the sloping pen at any moment,

  surround the doe, and slowly aim their guns.

  They forget that what’s here isn’t life.

  Other laws, black on white, obtain.

  The twinkling of an eye will take as long as I say,

  and will, if I wish, divide into tiny eternities,

  full of bullets stopped in midflight.

  Not a thing will ever happen unless I say so.

  Without my blessing, not a leaf will fall,

  not a blade of grass will bend beneath that little hoof’s full stop.

  Is there then a world

  where I rule absolutely on fate?

  A time I bind with chains of signs?

  An existence become endless at my bidding?

  The joy of writing.

  The power of preserving.

  Revenge of a mortal hand.

  Memory Finally

  Memory’s finally found what it was after.

  My mother has turned up, my father has been spotted.

  I dreamed up a table and two chairs. They sat.

  They were mine again, alive again for me.

  The two lamps of their faces gleamed at dusk

  as if for Rembrandt.

  Only now can I begin to
tell

  in how many dreams they’ve wandered, in how many crowds

  I dragged them out from underneath the wheels,

  in how many deathbeds they moaned with me at their side.

  Cut off, they grew back, but never straight.

  The absurdity drove them to disguises.

  So what if they felt no pain outside me,

  they still ached within me.

  In my dreams, gawking crowds heard me call out Mom

  to a bouncing, chirping thing up on a branch.

  They made fun of my father’s hair in pigtails.

  I woke up ashamed.

  So, finally.

  One ordinary Friday night

  they suddenly came back

  exactly as I wanted.

  In a dream, but somehow freed from dreams,

  obeying just themselves and nothing else.

  In the picture’s background possibilities grew dim,

  accidents lacked the necessary shape.

  Only they shone, beautiful because just like themselves.

  They appeared to me for a long, long, happy time.

  I woke up. I opened my eyes.

  I touched the world, a chiseled picture frame.

  Landscape

  In the old master’s landscape,

  the trees have roots beneath the oil paint,

  the path undoubtedly reaches its goal,

  the signature is replaced by a stately blade of grass,

  it’s a persuasive five in the afternoon,

  May has been gently, yet firmly, detained,

  so I’ve lingered, too. Why, of course, my dear,

  I am the woman there, under the ash tree.

  Just see how far behind I’ve left you,

  see the white bonnet and the yellow skirt I wear,

  see how I grip my basket so as not to slip out of the painting,

  how I strut within another’s fate

  and rest awhile from living mysteries.

  Even if you called I wouldn’t hear you,

  and even if I heard I wouldn’t turn,

  and even if I made that impossible gesture

  your face would seem a stranger’s face to me.

  I know the world six miles around.

  I know the herbs and spells for every pain.

  God still looks down on the crown of my head.

  I still pray I won’t die suddenly.

  War is punishment and peace is a reward.

  Shameful dreams all come from Satan.

  My soul is as plain as the stone of a plum.

  I don’t know the games of the heart.

  I’ve never seen my children’s father naked.

  I don’t see the crabbed and blotted draft

  that hides behind the Song of Songs.

  What I want to say comes in ready-made phrases.

  I never use despair, since it isn’t really mine,

  only given to me for safekeeping.

  Even if you bar my way,

  even if you stare me in the face,

  I’ll pass you by on the chasm’s edge, finer than a hair.

  On the right is my house. I know it from all sides,

  along with its steps and its entryway,

  behind which life goes on unpainted.

  The cat hops on a bench,

  the sun gleams on a pewter jug,

  a bony man sits at the table

  fixing a clock.

  Family Album

  No one in this family has ever died of love.

  No food for myth and nothing magisterial.

  Consumptive Romeos? Juliets diphtherial?

  A doddering second childhood was enough.

  No death-defying vigils, love-struck poses

  over unrequited letters strewn with tears!

  Here, in conclusion, as scheduled, appears

  a portly, pince-nez’d neighbor bearing roses.

  No suffocation-in-the-closet gaffes

  because the cuckold returned home too early!

  Those frills or furbelows, however flounced and whirly,

  barred no one from the family photographs.

  No Bosch-like hell within their souls, no wretches

  found bleeding in the garden, shirts in stains!

  (True, some did die with bullets in their brains,

  for other reasons, though, and on field stretchers.)

  Even this belle with rapturous coiffure

  who may have danced till dawn—but nothing smarter—

  hemorrhaged to a better world, bien sûr,

  but not to taunt or hurt you, slick-haired partner.

  For others, Death was mad and monumental—

  not for these citizens of a sepia past.

  Their griefs turned into smiles, their days flew fast,

  their vanishing was due to influenza.

  Laughter

  The little girl I was—

  I know her, of course.

  I have a few snapshots

  from her brief life.

  I feel good-natured pity

  for a couple of little poems.

  I remember a few events.

  But

  to make the man who’s with me

  laugh and hug me,

  I dig up just one silly story:

  the puppy love

  of that ugly duckling.

  I tell him

  how she fell in love with a college boy;

  that is, she wanted him

  to look at her.

  I tell him

  how she once ran out to meet him

  with a bandage on her unhurt head,

  so that he’d ask, oh just ask her

  what had happened.

  Funny little thing

  How could she know

  that even despair can work for you

  if you’re lucky enough

  to outlive it.

 

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