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There has not been for a long time a spring as beautiful as this one; the grass, just before mowing, is thick and wet with dew. At night bird cries come up from the edge of the marsh, a crimson shoal lies in the east till the morning hours. In such a season, every voice becomes for us a shout of triumph. Glory, pain and glory to the grass, to the clouds, to the green oak wood. The gates of the earth torn open, the key to the earth revealed. A star is greeting the day. Then why do your eyes hold an impure gleam like the eyes of those who have not tasted evil and long only for crime? Why does this heat and depth of hatred radiate from your narrowed eyes? To you the rule, for you clouds in golden rings play a music, maples by the road exalt you. The invisible rein on every living thing leads to your hand--pull, and they all turn a half-circle under the canopy called cirrus. And your tasks? A wooden mountain awaits you, the place for cities in the air, a valley where wheat should grow, a table, a white page on which, maybe, a long poem could be started, joy and toil. And the road bolts like an animal, it falls away so quickly, leaving a trail of dust, that there is scarcely a sight to prepare a nod for, the hand's grip already weakened, a sigh, and the storm is over. And then they carry the malefactor through the fields, rocking his grey head, and above the seashore on a tree-lined avenue, they put him down where the wind from the bay furls banner and schoolchildren run on the gravel paths, singing their songs. --"So that neighing in the gardens, drinking on the green so that, not knowing whether they are happy or just weary, they take bread from the hands of their pregnant wives. They bow their heads to nothing in their lives. My brothers, avid for pleasure, smiling, beery, have the world for a granary, a house of joy?" --"Ah, dark rabble at their vernal feasts and creamatoria rising like white cliffs and smoke seeping from the dead wasps' nests. In a stammer of mandolins, a dust-cloud of scythes, on heaps of food and mosses stomped ash-grey, the new sun rises on another day." For a long time there has not been a spring as beautiful as this one to the voyager. The expanse of water seems to him dense as the blood of a hemlock. And a fleet of sails speeding in the dark, like the last vibration of a pure note. He saw human figures scattered on the sands under the light of the planets, falling from the vault of heaven, and when a wave grew silent, it was silent, the foam smelled of ioding? heliotrope? They sang on the dunes, Maria, Maria, resting a spattered hand on the saddle and he didn't know if this was the new sign that promises salvation, but kills first. Three times must the wheel of blindness turn, before I took without fear at the power sleeping in my own hand, and recognize spring, the sky, the seas, and the dark, massed land. Three times will the liars have conquered before the great truth appears alive and in the splendor of one moment stand spring and the sky, the seas, the lands. Wilmo, 1936
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Oct 6, 2014
Oct 6, 2014 at 7:26 AM UTC
Slow River by Czeslaw Milosz
There has not been for a long time a spring as beautiful as this one; the grass, just before mowing, is thick and wet with dew. At night bird cries come up from the edge of the marsh, a crimson shoal lies in the east till the morning hours. In such a season, every voice becomes for us a shout of triumph. Glory, pain and glory to the grass, to the clouds, to the green oak wood. The gates of the earth torn open, the key to the earth revealed. A star is greeting the day. Then why do your eyes hold an impure gleam like the eyes of those who have not tasted evil and long only for crime? Why does this heat and depth of hatred radiate from your narrowed eyes? To you the rule, for you clouds in golden rings play a music, maples by the road exalt you. The invisible rein on every living thing leads to your hand--pull, and they all turn a half-circle under the canopy called cirrus. And your tasks? A wooden mountain awaits you, the place for cities in the air, a valley where wheat should grow, a table, a white page on which, maybe, a long poem could be started, joy and toil. And the road bolts like an animal, it falls away so quickly, leaving a trail of dust, that there is scarcely a sight to prepare a nod for, the hand's grip already weakened, a sigh, and the storm is over. And then they carry the malefactor through the fields, rocking his grey head, and above the seashore on a tree-lined avenue, they put him down where the wind from the bay furls banner and schoolchildren run on the gravel paths, singing their songs. --"So that neighing in the gardens, drinking on the green so that, not knowing whether they are happy or just weary, they take bread from the hands of their pregnant wives. They bow their heads to nothing in their lives. My brothers, avid for pleasure, smiling, beery, have the world for a granary, a house of joy?" --"Ah, dark rabble at their vernal feasts and creamatoria rising like white cliffs and smoke seeping from the dead wasps' nests. In a stammer of mandolins, a dust-cloud of scythes, on heaps of food and mosses stomped ash-grey, the new sun rises on another day." For a long time there has not been a spring as beautiful as this one to the voyager. The expanse of water seems to him dense as the blood of a hemlock. And a fleet of sails speeding in the dark, like the last vibration of a pure note. He saw human figures scattered on the sands under the light of the planets, falling from the vault of heaven, and when a wave grew silent, it was silent, the foam smelled of ioding? heliotrope? They sang on the dunes, Maria, Maria, resting a spattered hand on the saddle and he didn't know if this was the new sign that promises salvation, but kills first. Three times must the wheel of blindness turn, before I took without fear at the power sleeping in my own hand, and recognize spring, the sky, the seas, and the dark, massed land. Three times will the liars have conquered before the great truth appears alive and in the splendor of one moment stand spring and the sky, the seas, the lands. Wilmo, 1936
Winner of the 1980 Nobel Prize for Literature
aaronmullin-fb
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Oct 6, 2014
Oct 6, 2014 at 7:26 AM UTC
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