Read The Selected Poetry of Yehuda Amichai Online
Authors: Chana Bloch and Stephen Mitchell
for the souls that leave no footprints.
Like people who live in the high country:
when they speak, their voices grow more songful
up to the singing of the heavenly angels.
Two disappeared into a house
turn on a light.
Then turn it off.
The stairs go out from the roof into
the space of night
as in a building that was never finished.
I Know a Man
I know a man
who photographed the view he saw
from the window of the room where he made love
and not the face of the woman he loved there.
Between
Where will we be when these flowers turn into fruit
in the narrow between, when the flower is no longer a flower
and the fruit not yet a fruit.
And what a wonderful between we made
for each other between body and body.
A between of eyes, between waking and sleep.
A twilight betweenlight, not day and not night.
How your spring dress so quickly became a flag of summer
that flutters already in the first wind of fall.
How my voice was no longer my voice
but like a prophecy, almost.
What a wonderful between we were, like earth
in the clefts of the wall, a small stubborn earth
for the valiant moss, for the thorny caper bush
whose bitter fruit
sweetened what we ate together.
These are the last days of books.
Next come the last days of words.
Some day
you will understand.
Summer Evening in the Jerusalem Mountains
An empty soda can on a rock
lit by the last rays of the sun.
The child throws stones at it,
the can falls, the stone falls,
the sun goes down.
Among things that go down
and fall, I look like one that rises,
a latter-day Newton who cancels the laws of nature.
My penis like a pine cone
closed on many cells of seed.
I hear the children playing.
Wild grapes too
are children and children’s children.
The voices too are sons and great-grandsons
of voices forever lost in their joy.
Here in these mountains, hope belongs to the landscape
like the water holes.
Even the ones with no water
still belong to the landscape like hope.
So I open my mouth and sing into the world.
I have a mouth, the world doesn’t.
It has to use mine if it wants
to sing into me.
I am equal to the world,
more than equal.
At the Beach
Footprints that met in the sand were erased.
The people who left them were erased as well
by the wind of their being no more.
The few became many and the many will be without end
like the sand on the seashore.
I found an envelope
with an address on the front and the back.
But inside it was empty and silent.
The letter
was read somewhere else, like a soul that left the body.
That happy melody in the big white house last night
is now full of longing and full of sand
like the bathing suits hanging on a line between the wooden poles.
Water birds shriek when they see land
and people when they see tranquillity.
Oh my children, children of my mind
that I made with all my body and all my soul,
now they are only the children of my mind
and I am alone on this beach
with the low shivering grasses of the dunes.
That shiver is their language.
That shiver
is my language.
We have a common language.
The Sea and the Shore
The sea and the shore are always next to each other.
Both want to learn to speak, to learn to say
one word only.
The sea wants to say “shore”
and the shore “sea.”
They draw closer,
millions of years, to speech, to saying
that single word.
When the sea says “shore”
and the shore “sea,”
redemption will come to the world,
the world will return to chaos.
Autumn Is Near and the Memory of My Parents
Soon it will be autumn.
The last fruits ripen
and people walk on roads they haven’t taken before.
The old house begins to forgive those who live in it.
Trees darken with age and people grow white.
Soon the rains will come.
The smell of rust will be fresh
and delight the heart
like the scent of blossoms in spring.
In the northern countries they say, Most of the leaves
are still on the trees.
But here we say,
Most of the words are still on the people.
Our fall season makes other things fall.
Soon it will be autumn.
The time has come
to remember my parents.
I remember them like the simple toys of my childhood,
turning in little circles,
humming softly, raising a leg,
waving an arm, moving their heads
from side to side slowly, in the same rhythm,
the spring in their belly and the key in their back.
Then suddenly they stop moving and remain
forever in their last position.
And that is how I remember my parents
and that is how I remember
their words.
Yom Kippur
Yom Kippur without my father and mother
is no Yom Kippur.
All that’s left of their blessing hands on my head
is the tremor, like the tremor of an engine
that kept going even after they died.
My mother died only five years ago,
her ease is still pending
between the offices up there and the paperwork down here.
My father, who died long ago, has already risen
in some other place,
not in mine.
Yom Kippur without my father and mother
is no Yom Kippur.
Therefore I eat
in order to remember
and drink so I won’t forget,
and I sort out the vows
and classify the oaths by time and size.
During the day we used to shout,
Forgive us,
and in the evening,
Open the gate to us.
But I say, Forget us, forgo us, leave us alone
when your gate closes and clay is gone.
The last sunlight broke
in the stained glass window of the synagogue.
The sunlight didn’t break, we are broken,
the word “broken” is broken.
Beginning of Autumn in the Hills of Ephraim
At the side of the road that is being paved
a group of workers, huddled together
in the cool of twilight.
The last rays of the sun light up the men
who did what they had to do
with the bulldozer and steamroller that did
what they had to do.
Men and machines together in their faith
that they won’t fall off the planet.
Already the squill has come up in the field
and there are still almonds on the almond tree.
The earth is still warm, like the head of a child
under its hair.
A first wind of autumn
passes through Jews and Arabs.
Migratory birds call out to one another:
Look, human beings who stay where they are!
And in the great silence before dark
an airplane crosses the sky
and descends at the edge of the West with a gurgle
like good wine in the throat.
Ruhama
Here in this wadi we lived during the war.
Many years have passed since then, many victories
and many defeats.
I have gathered many consolations in my life
and squandered them, many sorrows
that I spilled in vain.
I’ve said many things, like the waves
of the sea at Ashkelon in the West
that always keep saying the same thing.
But as long as I live, my soul remembers
and my body slowly ripens in the fires of its life story.
The evening sky lowers like a bugle call over us,
and our lips move like the lips of men in prayer
before there was a god in the world.
Here we would lie by day, and at night
we would go to battle.
The smell of the sand is as it was, and the smell
of the eucalyptus leaves
and the smell of the wind.
And I do now what any memory dog does:
I howl quietly
and piss a boundary of remembrance around me
so no one else can enter.
Huleikat—The Third Poem about Dicky
In these hills even the oil rigs
are already a memory.
Here Dicky fell
who was four years older than I and like a father to me
in times of anguish.
Now that I’m older than him
by forty years, I remember him like a young son,
and I an old grieving father.
And you who remember only a face,
don’t forget the outstretched hands
and the legs that run so easily
and the words.
Remember that even the road to terrible battles
always passes by gardens and windows
and children playing and a barking dog.
Remember the fruit that fell and remind it
of the leaves and the branch,
remind the hard thorns
that they were soft and green in springtime,
and don’t forget that the fist, too,
was once the palm of an open hand, and fingers.
The Shore of Ashkelon
Here at the shore of Ashkelon we arrived at
the end of memory
like rivers that reach the sea.
The near past sinks into the far past
and the far past rises from the depths
and overflows the near.
Peace, peace to the near and the far.
Here among the broken idols and pillars,
I wonder how Samson brought down the temple
where he stood blind and said: “Let me die
with the Philistines!”
Did he embrace the pillars as in a last love
or with both arms push them away
to be alone in his death.
Fields of Sunflowers
Fields of sunflowers, ripe and withering,
don’t need the warmth of the sun anymore,
they’re brown and wise already.
They need
sweet shadow, the inwardness
of death, the interior of a drawer, a sack
deep as the sky.
Their world to come
the innermost dark of a dark house,
the inside of a man.
First Rain on a Burned Car
The closeness of life to death
near the corpse of a car at the roadside.
You hear the raindrops on the rusty metal
before you feel them on the skin of your face.
The rains have come, redemption after death.
Rust is more eternal than blood, more beautiful