Jan 21, 2021

A Man Doesn't Have Time In His Life

A man doesn't have time in his life
to have time for everything.
He doesn't have seasons enough to have
a season for every purpose. Ecclesiastes
Was wrong about that.

A man needs to love and to hate at the same moment,
to laugh and cry with the same eyes,
with the same hands to throw stones and to gather them,
to make love in war and war in love.
And to hate and forgive and remember and forget,
to arrange and confuse, to eat and to digest
what history
takes years and years to do.

A man doesn't have time.
When he loses he seeks, when he finds
he forgets, when he forgets he loves, when he loves
he begins to forget.

And his soul is seasoned, his soul
is very professional.
Only his body remains forever
an amateur. It tries and it misses,
gets muddled, doesn't learn a thing,
drunk and blind in its pleasures
and its pains.

He will die as figs die in autumn,
Shriveled and full of himself and sweet,
the leaves growing dry on the ground,
the bare branches pointing to the place
where there's time for everything.

--- Yehuda Amichai (Note: From "The Selected Poetry of Yehuda Amichai", translations by ChanaBloch and Stephen Mitchell)

Jan 20, 2021

A Worker Reads History

Who built the seven gates of Thebes?
The books are filled with names of kings.
Was it the kings who hauled the craggy blocks of stone?
And Babylon, so many times destroyed.
Who built the city up each time? In which of Lima's houses,
That city glittering with gold, lived those who built it?
In the evening when the Chinese wall was finished
Where did the masons go? Imperial Rome
Is full of arcs of triumph. Who reared them up? Over whom
Did the Caesars triumph? Byzantium lives in song.
Were all her dwellings palaces? And even in Atlantis of the legend
The night the seas rushed in,
The drowning men still bellowed for their slaves.

Young Alexander conquered India.
He alone?
Caesar beat the Gauls.
Was there not even a cook in his army?
Phillip of Spain wept as his fleet
was sunk and destroyed. Were there no other tears?
Frederick the Greek triumphed in the Seven Years War.
Who triumphed with him?

Each page a victory
At whose expense the victory ball?
Every ten years a great man,
Who paid the piper?

So many particulars.
So many questions.

--- Bertolt Brecht

Jan 14, 2021

Bitter Cold

There is bitter cold 
At the borders of the city Of indifference. 
Wizened women and men 
And children below their teens 
Lie the frozen nights 
On bare tarmac, 
Surviving by the fire in their hearts, 
And the justice of their cause. 

A glow of truth from their being 
Warms the air and shames the 
Winter of crude impertinence, 
Even as their human bodies may 
Succumb to the December hell.

 Carrying the nursing warmth 
Of the soil in their bones, 
India’s farmers outface the urban 
Cold and show how the real freeze 
Lies in the swollen skull of authority 
Whose hollow cruelty may be stern 
Without human content, but whose 
Pride of office screams for pity. 

 This is truly a new beauty born 
That gathers histories 
Of courage and faith
 In the sounding of the people’s horn 
That may never be stilled 
Either by Nature’s extremes 
Or the flimsy robes worn By Pharaohs of the day. 
Yet again, the ploughshare shows the way.