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ewelina-pochocka
ewelina-pochocka
I will present here great Polish poetry. Enjoy.
One heart, one heart is all I’m dreaming of One heart upon this sullen earth I seek. A heart to tremble with my heart in love, So that I be a meek one mid the meek. One pair of lips, wherefrom my lips for aye Would drink the drink of joy with no constraints. Two eyes that I could marvel at each day, And see myself a saint among the saints. One heart I need, two hands both soft and white To veil my eyes and gently bar the light, So I may fall asleep and by a touch Of an angel’s cheek be carried to the sky. One heart, one heart, so little though need I, I see and know that I demand too much.
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Sep 15, 2014
Sep 15, 2014 at 5:41 PM UTC
A SONNET (ONE HEART)
1 in the fourth book of the Peloponnesian War Thucydides tells among other things the story of his unsuccessful expedition among long speeches of chiefs battles sieges plague dense net of intrigues of diplomatic endeavours the episode is like a pin in a forest the Greek colony Amphipolis fell into the hands of Brasidos because Thucydides was late with relief for this he paid his native city with lifelong exile exiles of all times know what price that is 2 generals of the most recent wars if a similar affair happens to them whine on their knees before posterity praise their heroism and innocence they accuse their subordinates envious colleagues unfavourable winds Thucydides says only that he had seven ships it was winter and he sailed quickly 3 if art for its subject will have a broken jar a small broken soul with a great self-pity what will remain after us will it be lovers' weeping in a small ***** hotel when wall-paper dawns Zbigniew Herbert
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Sep 15, 2014
Sep 15, 2014 at 5:20 PM UTC
Why The Classics
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 another tree. Nature's wardrobe holds a fair supply of costumes: Spider, seagull, fieldmouse. 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 ruffled 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, or pity? If I'd been born in the wrong tribe with all roads closed before me? Fate has been kind to me thus far. I might never have been given the memory of happy moments My yen for comparison might have been taken away. I might have been myself minus amazement, that is, someone completely different. Wisława Szymborska
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Sep 15, 2014
Sep 15, 2014 at 5:03 PM UTC
AMONG THE MULTITUDES
When I pronounce the word Future, the first syllable already belongs to the past. When I pronounce the word Silence, I destroy it. When I pronounce the word Nothing, I make something no non-being can hold. Wisława Szymborska, translated from the Polish by S. Barańczak & C. Cavanagh
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Sep 15, 2014
Sep 15, 2014 at 4:57 PM UTC
The Three Oddest Words
Dying--you wouldn't do that to a cat. For what is a cat to do in an empty apartment? Climb up the walls? Brush up against the furniture? Nothing here seems changed, and yet something has changed. Nothing has been moved, and yet there's more room. And in the evenings the lamp is not on. One hears footsteps on the stairs, but they're not the same. Neither is the hand that puts a fish on the plate. Something here isn't starting at its usual time. Something here isn't happening as it should. Somebody has been here and has been, and then has suddenly disappeared and now is stubbornly absent. All the closets have been scanned and all the shelves run through. Slipping under the carpet and checking came to nothing. The rule has even been broken and all the papers scattered. What else is there to do? Sleep and wait. Just let him come back, let him show up. Then he'll find out that you don't do that to a cat. Going toward him faking reluctance, slowly, on very offended paws. And no jumping, purring at first. Wisława Szymborska, translated from the Polish by Joanna Trezecia
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Sep 15, 2014
Sep 15, 2014 at 4:52 PM UTC
Cat in an empty apartment
The onion, now that's something else its innards don't exist nothing but pure onionhood fills this devout onionist oniony on the inside onionesque it appears it follows its own daimonion without our human tears our skin is just a coverup for the land where none dare to go an internal inferno the anathema of anatomy in an onion there's only onion from its top to it's toe onionymous monomania unanimous omninudity at peace, at peace internally at rest inside it, there's a smaller one of undiminished worth the second holds a third one the third contains a fourth a centripetal fugue polypony compressed nature's rotundest tummy its greatest success story the onion drapes itself in it's own aureoles of glory we hold veins, nerves, and fat secretions' secret sections not for us such idiotic onionoid perfections Wisława Szymborska, translated from the Polish by Stanisław Barańczak & Clare Cavanagh
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Sep 15, 2014
Sep 15, 2014 at 4:46 PM UTC
The onion
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 sailing on. Wisława Szymborska, translated from the Polish by Stanisław Barańczak and Clare Cavanagh.
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Sep 15, 2014
Sep 15, 2014 at 4:35 PM UTC
Clouds
True love. Is it normal, is it serious, is it practical? What does the world get from two people who exist in a world of their own? Placed on the same pedestal for no good reason, drawn randomly from millions, but convinced it had to happen this way — in reward for what? For nothing. The light descends from nowhere. Why on these two and not on others? Doesn't this outrage justice? Yes it does. Doesn't it disrupt our painstakingly erected principles, and cast the moral from the peak? Yes on both accounts. Look at the happy couple. Couldn't they at least try to hide it, fake a little depression for their friends' sake! Listen to them laughing — it's an insult. The language they use — deceptively clear. And their little celebrations, rituals, the elaborate mutual routines — it's obviously a plot behind the human race's back! It's hard even to guess how far things might go if people start to follow their example. What could religion and poetry count on? What would be remembered? what renounced? Who'd want to stay within bounds? True love. Is it really necessary? Tact and common sense tell us to pass over it in silence, like a scandal in Life's highest circles. Perfectly good children are born without its help. It couldn't populate the planet in a million years, it comes along so rarely. Let the people who never find true love keep saying that there's no such thing. Their faith will make it easier for them to live and die. Wisława Szymborska, translated from the Polish by Stanisław Barańczak
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Mar 24, 2014
Mar 24, 2014 at 8:17 AM UTC
TRUE LOVE
True love. Is it normal, is it serious, is it practical? What does the world get from two people who exist in a world of their own? Placed on the same pedestal for no good reason, drawn randomly from millions, but convinced it had to happen this way — in reward for what? For nothing. The light descends from nowhere. Why on these two and not on others? Doesn't this outrage justice? Yes it does. Doesn't it disrupt our painstakingly erected principles, and cast the moral from the peak? Yes on both accounts. Look at the happy couple. Couldn't they at least try to hide it, fake a little depression for their friends' sake! Listen to them laughing — it's an insult. The language they use — deceptively clear. And their little celebrations, rituals, the elaborate mutual routines — it's obviously a plot behind the human race's back! It's hard even to guess how far things might go if people start to follow their example. What could religion and poetry count on? What would be remembered? what renounced? Who'd want to stay within bounds? True love. Is it really necessary? Tact and common sense tell us to pass over it in silence, like a scandal in Life's highest circles. Perfectly good children are born without its help. It couldn't populate the planet in a million years, it comes along so rarely. Let the people who never find true love keep saying that there's no such thing. Their faith will make it easier for them to live and die. Wisława Szymborska, translated from the Polish by Stanisław Barańczak
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Why after all this one and not the rest? Why this specific self, not in a nest, but a house? Sewn up not in scales, but skin? Not topped off by a leaf, but by a face? Why on earth now, on Tuesday of all days, and why on earth, pinned down by this star's pin? In spite of years of my not being here? In spite of seas of all these dates and fates, these cells, celestials, and coelenterates? What is it really that made me appear neither an inch nor half a globe too far, neither a minute nor aeons too early? What made me fill myself with me so squarely? Why am I staring now into the dark and muttering this unending monologue just like the growling thing we call a dog? Wisława Szymborska (translated from Polish by Stanisław Barańczak)
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Mar 24, 2014
Mar 24, 2014 at 8:13 AM UTC
ASTONISHMENT
It could have happened. It had to happen. It happened earlier. Later. Nearer. Farther off. It happened, but not to you. You were saved because you were the first. You were saved because you were the last. Alone. With others. On the right. The left. Because it was raining. Because of the shade. Because the day was sunny. You were in luck — there was a forest. You were in luck — there were no trees. You were in luck — a rake, a hook, a beam, a brake, a jamb, a turn, a quarter inch, an instant. You were in luck — just then a straw went floating by. As a result, because, although, despite. What would have happened if a hand, a foot, within an inch, a hairsbreadth from an unfortunate coincidence. So you're here? Still dizzy from another dodge, close shave, reprieve? One hole in the net and you slipped through? I couldn't be more shocked or speechless. Listen, how your heart pounds inside me. Wisława Szymborska (translated from the Polish by Stanisław Barańczak)
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Mar 24, 2014
Mar 24, 2014 at 8:09 AM UTC
COULD HAVE