Read The Collected Poems Online
Authors: Zbigniew Herbert
âdedicate a treatise
to Louis Quatorze
he won't read it anyway
âtemper
the rational fury
it will topple thrones
and blacken the stars
âthink of
a woman
who will give you a child
âyou see Baruch
we speak of Great Things
âI want to be loved
by the unlearned and fierce
for they are the only ones
who truly hunger after me
now the veil falls
Spinoza is alone
he sees no golden cloud
nor a light in the heights
he sees darkness
he hears a stair creak
footsteps going down
Â
If it is true
that image precedes thought
one might imagine
that Heym's ideas
arose while he was skating
âthe ease of moving
across an icy surface
he went here and there
circling a mobile center
he wasn't a planet
or a bell
or a farmer bound to a plow
âthe relativity of motion
mirrored systems merging
the nearer left bank
(the red roofs of Gatow)
lurched backward
like a yanked tablecloth
the right bank however
(apparently) stood still
âthe toppling of determinism
a wondrous coexistence of possibilities
âmy greatnessâ
Heym said to himself
(pushing out with
his raised left leg)
lies in the discovery
that the modern world
knows no direct results
no tyranny of consequences
no dictatorship of causation
all thoughts
actions
objects
phenomena
lie beside each other
like a skater's tracks
on a white surface
an important claim
for theoretical physics
an ominous claim
for a theory of poetry
those standing on the right bank
did not notice Heym vanishing
a gymnasium student passing by
saw everything in reverse order
the white sweater
trousers fastened at the knee
with two ivory buttons
calves in orange socks
the skates misfortune's cause
two policemen
made their way through a crowd
gaping at the opening in the ice
(it looked as if it led to a dungeon
or like the cold mouth of a mask)
licking their pencils
they tried to report on the event
to introduce order into it
in accordance with the outdated
logic of Aristotle
with the dull-witted indifference
characteristic of power
toward the discoverer
and his thoughts
now drifting helplessly
under the ice
Â
Miss Amelia of Darmstadt
asks for help
finding her great-great-grandfather
Ludwig I
he perished
like so many others
in the tumult of war
he was last seen
on a family estate
near Jelenia Góra
Mr Cogito
remembers well
the hard winter of 1944
filled with fires
at that time
this great-great-grandfather
gross herzog
by profession
lived in a frame
he stood
in a uniform
in white trousers
in front of a summer house
on his right
a broken column
in the background
a dark stormy sky
with a bright mark on the horizon
Mr Cogito
thinks
of his great-great-grandfather's death
without a shade of irony
did he lose
his sangfroid
when flames
mounted the window-sill
did he cry out
when he was dragged across the courtyard
did he fall
to his knees pleading
when they aimed
at the great star on his chest
Mr Cogito's
imagination
is small
like an orderly
lost in the fog
he doesn't see
the face
the uniform
the white trousers
he sees only
the dark stormy sky
with the bright mark on the horizon
Â
He should not send his son
too many have seen
His son's pierced hands
his everyday skin
it was written
to atone for us
by the worst atonement
too many nostrils
inhaled with relish
the smell of his fear
one must not descend
low
fraternize with blood
He should not send his son
it was better to reign
in a baroque palace of marble clouds
on the throne of terror
with a scepter of death
Â
So many books dictionaries
bloated encyclopedias
but no one to give advice
they studied the sun
the moon the stars
they lost me
my soul
refuses the solace
of knowledge
so I wander at night
on our fathers' roads
and here
is the town of Braclaw
amid black sunflowers
the place we abandoned
the place which shrieks
it is Shabbas
as always on Shabbas
a New Heaven appears
âI'm looking for you Rebbe
âhe's not hereâ
say the Hasidim
âhe is in the world of Sheol
âhe had a beautiful death
say the Hasidim
âvery beautiful
as if he crossed
from one side
to the other side
he was all black
held in his hand
a flaming Torah
âI'm looking for you Rebbe
âbeyond what firmament
did you hide your wise ear
âmy heart aches Rebbe
âI have troubles
Rabbi Nachman
might give me advice
but how do I find him
among so many ashes
Â
Mr Cogito's
favorite entertainment
is the Kropotkin game
it has many virtues
the Kropotkin game
it frees the historical imagination
and the sense of solidarity
it's played in the open air
abounds in thrilling episodes
its rules are noble
despotism always loses
on the great board of the imagination
Mr Cogito marshals the pieces
the king represents
Piotr Kropotkin in the Peter and Paul Fortress
the bishops three soldiers and a sentry
the castle the getaway carriage
Mr Cogito has many parts
from which he may choose
he can play
gorgeous Zofia Nikolaevna
she smuggles the escape plan
inside a watch case
he can also be the fiddler
in the little gray house
rented for the purpose
across from the prison
who plays
Abduction from the Seraglio
which means the coast is clear
but most of all
Mr Cogito likes
the role of Doctor Orestes Weimar
he engages the soldier at the gates
in conversation at a crucial moment
âever seen a microbe Vanya
ânever did
âbut the sucker's all over you
âdon't say that your honor
âall over and it's got a tail
âa long one?
âit'll be two or three furlongs
now the fur cap falls
over the sheep's eyes
and already
the Kropotkin game
is going full throttle
the prisoner-king moves with great bounds
grapples briefly with a flannel dressing gown
the fiddler in the little gray house
plays
Abduction from the Seraglio
you hear voices cry get him
Doctor Orestes raps on about microbes
a heartbeat
hobnailed boots on cobblestones
and finally the getaway carriage
the bishops are frozen on the spot
Mr Cogito
is happy as a child
again he has won the Kropotkin game
so many years
so many years now
Mr Cogito has been playing
but never has he
been tempted
by the role of the fugitive hero
not because of any dislike
for the blue blood
of the prince of anarchists
nor distaste for the theory
of mutual aid
it isn't due to cowardice either
Zofia Nikolaevna
the fiddler in the little gray house
Doctor Orestes
all put their heads on the line
but with them
Mr Cogito
identifies almost completely
if the need arose
he would even be a horse
for the fugitive's carriage
Mr Cogito
would like to be freedom's intermediary
hold the escape rope
smuggle the message
give the sign
trust the heart
the pure impulse of sympathy
but he doesn't want to answer for what
is written in the monthly
Freedom
by bearded men
of feeble imagination
he accepts a supporting role
he will not dwell in history
Â
The lowest circle of hell. Contrary to popular opinion it is not populated by despots, matricides, or those who lust after the flesh of others. It is a retreat for artists, full of mirrors, instruments, and paintings. At first glance it is the most comfortable infernal department, free of tar, fire, and physical torture.
All year round competitions, festivals, and concerts are held. There is no peak season. The peak is permanent and virtually absolute. Every two or three months new movements are formed and nothing, it seems, will halt the triumphant march of the avant-garde.
Beelzebub is a lover of the arts. He boasts that his choirs, poets, and painters almost outdo those in heaven. Where there's better art, there's better governmentâthat much is clear. Shortly they will be able to measure their strength at the Festival of Two Worlds. And then we'll see what remains of Dante, Fra Angelico, and Bach.
Beelzebub supports the arts. He guarantees his artists tranquillity, a healthy diet, and complete isolation from infernal life.
Â
In Utica
the citizens
don't want to put up a defense
in the city an epidemic broke out
of an instinct of self-preservation
the temple of freedom
has been turned into a flea market
the senate deliberates on how
not to be a senate
the citizens
don't want to put up a defense
they enroll in accelerated courses
in falling to their knees
passively they wait for the enemy
write servile speeches
bury their gold
they sew new flags
innocent and white
teach children to lie
they've opened the gates
through which a column
of sand is now passing
apart from that as usual
commerce and copulation
Mr Cogito
would like to rise
to the occasion
that is
look fate
straight in the eye
like Cato the Younger
see Plutarch's
Lives
he does not have a sword
however
or an opportunity
to send his family overseas
so he waits with the others
pacing an insomniac room
despite the Stoics' advice
he'd like to have a body
of diamond and wings
he watches from the window
as the sun of the Republic
sinks toward the West
not much is left to him
really only
the choice of the attitude
in which he wishes to die
the choice of a gesture
the choice of a last word
so he does not go to bed
to avoid
being throttled in his sleep
he would like to rise
to the occasion fully
fate looks him in the eye
in a place where he once
had a head
Â
Go where the others went before to the dark boundary
for the golden fleece of nothingness your last reward
go upright among those who are down on their knees
those with their backs turned those toppled in the dust
you have survived not so that you might live
you have little time you must give testimony
be courageous when reason fails you be courageous
in the final reckoning it is the only thing that counts
and your helpless Angerâmay it be like the sea
whenever you hear the voice of the insulted and beaten
may you never be abandoned by your sister Scorn
for informers executioners cowardsâthey will win
go to your funeral with relief throw a lump of earth
a woodworm will write you a smooth-shaven life
and do not forgive in truth it is not in your power
to forgive in the name of those betrayed at dawn
beware however of overweening pride
examine your fool's face in the mirror
repeat: I was calledâwas there no one better than I
beware of dryness of heart love the morning spring
the bird with an unknown name the winter oak
the light on a wall the splendor of the sky
they do not need your warm breath
they are there to say: no one will console you
Keep watchâwhen a light on a hill gives a signârise and go
as long as the blood is still turning the dark star in your breast
repeat humanity's old incantations fairy tales and legends
for that is how you will attain the good you will not attain
repeat great words repeat them stubbornly
like those who crossed a desert and perished in the sand
for this they will reward you with what they have at hand
with the whip of laughter with murder on a garbage heap
go for only thus will you be admitted to the company of cold skulls
to the company of your forefathers: Gilgamesh Hector Roland
the defenders of the kingdom without bounds and the city of ashes
Be faithful Go
FOR KASIA
Â
In memory of Kazimierz Moczarski
I saw prophets tearing their false beards
I saw frauds joining sects of flagellants
executioners in sheep's clothing
who fled the people's wrath
playing shepherd's pipes
I saw it I saw it
I saw a man subjected to torture
he sat safely now with his family
telling jokes eating soup
I looked at his parted lips
his gumsâtwo blackthorn twigs stripped of bark
it was shameless beyond all words
I saw the whole nakedness
the whole humiliation
then
the academy
a lot of people flowers
a stuffy room
a man went on about distortions
I thought of his distorted mouth
is this the final act
of a play by Anonymous
spread out flat as a shroud
filled with muffled sobs
and the giggles of those
who heaving a sigh of relief
that they pulled it off again
after dead props are cleared
slowly
lift