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Listen to the stories
 men tell of last year 
that sound of other places
 though they happened here Listen to a name
 so private it can burn
 hear it said aloud 
and learn and learn History is a needle 
for putting men asleep
 anointed with the poison 
of all they want to keep Now a name that saved you
 has a foreign taste
 claims a foreign body
 froze in last year’s waste And what is living lingers
 while monuments are built
 then yields its final whisper
 to letters raised in gilt But cries of stifled ripeness 
whip me to my knees 
I am with the falling snow
 falling in the seas I am with the hunters 
hungry and shrewd
 and I am with the hunted
 quick and soft and **** I am with the houses
 that wash away in rain
 and leave no teeth of pillars 
to rake them up again Let men numb names
 scratch winds that blow
 listen to the stories
 but what you know you know And knowing is enough
 for mountains such as these
 where nothing long remains 
houses walls or trees <~> “I would recommend On Hearing a Name Long Unspoken. This poem is from Cohen’s 1964 collection, Flowers for ****** which deals with the trauma of the Holocaust and its legacy in 1960s Canada. In this book Cohen describes himself as a ‘front-line writer’ trying to understand totalitarianism, and the poems aim to critique his readers’ complacency in the violence of the world wars, anti-Semitism and colonialism. In On Hearing a Name Long Unspoken, Cohen asks his readers to consider how atrocities ‘that sound of other places’ also ‘happened here.’ He wants us to remember the lives of real people, to remember where people have found solidarity and protection, as well as how they have been oppressed because he is concerned that the stories that are told about the past will make it feel distant and unreal.” KAIT PINDER, assistant professor of English at Acadia University
0
Apr 2, 2022
Apr 2, 2022 at 3:24 PM UTC
“On Hearing a Name Long Unspoken” by Leonard Cohen
Listen to the stories
 men tell of last year 
that sound of other places
 though they happened here Listen to a name
 so private it can burn
 hear it said aloud 
and learn and learn History is a needle 
for putting men asleep
 anointed with the poison 
of all they want to keep Now a name that saved you
 has a foreign taste
 claims a foreign body
 froze in last year’s waste And what is living lingers
 while monuments are built
 then yields its final whisper
 to letters raised in gilt But cries of stifled ripeness 
whip me to my knees 
I am with the falling snow
 falling in the seas I am with the hunters 
hungry and shrewd
 and I am with the hunted
 quick and soft and **** I am with the houses
 that wash away in rain
 and leave no teeth of pillars 
to rake them up again Let men numb names
 scratch winds that blow
 listen to the stories
 but what you know you know And knowing is enough
 for mountains such as these
 where nothing long remains 
houses walls or trees <~> “I would recommend On Hearing a Name Long Unspoken. This poem is from Cohen’s 1964 collection, Flowers for ****** which deals with the trauma of the Holocaust and its legacy in 1960s Canada. In this book Cohen describes himself as a ‘front-line writer’ trying to understand totalitarianism, and the poems aim to critique his readers’ complacency in the violence of the world wars, anti-Semitism and colonialism. In On Hearing a Name Long Unspoken, Cohen asks his readers to consider how atrocities ‘that sound of other places’ also ‘happened here.’ He wants us to remember the lives of real people, to remember where people have found solidarity and protection, as well as how they have been oppressed because he is concerned that the stories that are told about the past will make it feel distant and unreal.” KAIT PINDER, assistant professor of English at Acadia University
nat-lipstadt
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99/M/NYC/Lippstadt/Kraków
Apr 2, 2022
Apr 2, 2022 at 3:24 PM UTC
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