Category Archives: Poetry

Pre-Islamic poetry, identity, and conflict

This paper published in the Arab Journal for the Arts looks interesting:

“Tribal belonging in Pre-Islamic poetry (Between kinship and the awareness of kinship)” by Ali Asha, Department of Arabic, Faculty of Science and Arts, Al Hashimia University, Zarqa, Jordan.

The study looks at tribal belonging in Pre-Islamic poetry through studying some selected models of this poetry. In addition, considering poetry as the prominent factor for the cultural identity for Pre-Islamic community, the study investigates the social structure of the Arabic Pre-Islamic community and its integration in Pre-Islamic poem.

[…]

This kinship awareness made the poetic self try to create balance between power and truth, seeking “compliment� and “praise� and at the same time to resist the crumbling situation of the community that was exhausted by tribal conflict and dispute.

Na stolu kru (bread on the table)

by Dragutin Tadijanovic

Stajati pred bijelim papirom,
Jos neispisanim, i znati:
Dosad su sastavljeni milijuni pjesama
Na svim jezicima Svijeta
I za milijune ljudi na Zemlji
Spremljeno je vec oruzje da ih unisti —
A ti hoces da se cuje i tvoj krik:
Mir Svijetu! Sloboda Svijetu!
I svakome na stolu kruh!
Standing before a blank sheet of paper
Not a single word on it, I realize;
Men have written millions of poems
In every language of the World
For the millions of people on Earth
There is a weapon ready to destroy them —
But you also want your cry to be heard:
Peace to the World! Freedom to the World!
Bread on the table for everyone!

For Nives

Slaboca (Frailty)

by Tin Ujević (1891 – 1955)

Po ovoj magli, ovoj kii –
o pjano srce, ne uzdii.

Ti ljubilo si uzaludu,
a sada ite rodnu grudu,

i tvoja enja, vapaj roba,
trai odnekud pokoj groba.

– Tu u skoro da izdahnem,
tu u skoro da usahnem,

na naem plavom, plavom valu,
na naem bijelom, bijelom alu;

i sve u nai to sam trebo
pod tvojim svodom, Sveto Nebo,

plaveti sunca i vedrine
nad zemljom stare domovine.

I found a translation here, along with several of the Kolajna poems.

In this mist, in this rain –
Oh drunken heart, don’t drown in pain…

Books of Croatian poetry that have been translated into English are listed here (see section G).

I like the title of a book by Slavko Mihalić: Orchard of Black Apples, but I have not had much luck finding a copy. I also wonder if it could also be interpreted as Bad Apples? Then again, it seems there is a Black Twig Apple in the US that offers a very tart flavor and “gets better the longer you keep it”.

Hmmm, a very poetic-sounding apple indeed, not to mention it was widely known in the Eastern US during the early 19th Century and has even been called President Andrew Jackson’s favorite variety.

A list of other “black” varieties are listed here, including the “Black Spy”.

I know I’m taking this all to literally, but can you imagine an Orchard of Black Spies?

Jama (The Pit)

by Ivan Goran Kovacic (1913-1943)

His most famous work is Jama (The Pit), which ranks among the greatest Croatian poems ever written. He penned it during the war, while in service near the city of Livno. The poem was written out of intellectual and ethical responsibility that condemns fascist atrocities done by the Ustase [put in power by the Nazis in 1941] and Chetnik forces [that opposed Ottoman rule]. Ivan Goran Kovacic was killed by Chetnik forces in an east-bosnian village of Vrbica near Foa (On July 13, 1943).

I

Krv je moje svjetlo i moja tama.
     Blaženu noć su meni iskopali
Sa sretnim vidom iz oÄ?injih jama;
     Od kaplja dana bijesni oganj pali
Krvavu zjenu u mozgu, ko ranu.
Moje su oÄ?i zgasle na mome dlanu.

Sigurno još su treperile ptice
     U njima, nebo blago se okrenu;
I ćutio sam, krvavo mi lice
     Utonulo je s modrinom u zjenu;
Na dlanu oÄ?i zrakama se smiju
I moje suze ne mogu da liju.

Samo kroz prste kapale su kapi
     Tople i guste koje krvnik nađe
JoÅ¡ gorÄ?om mukom duplja koje zjapi
     Da bodež u vrat zabode mi slađe:
A mene dragost ove krvi uze,
I ćutio sam kaplje kao suze.

Posljednje svjetlo prije strašne noći
     Bio je bljesak munjevita noža,
I vrisak, bijel još i sad u sljepoći,
     I bijela, bijela krvnikova koža;
Jer do pojasa svi su bili goli
I tako nagi oÄ?i su nam boli.

O bolno svjetlo, nikad tako jako
     I oštro nikad nisi sinulo u zori,
U strijeli, ognju; i ko da sam plako
     Vatrene suze s kojih duplje gori;
A kroz taj pako bljeskovi su pekli,
Vriskovi drugih muÄ?enika sjekli.

Ne znam koliko žar je bijesni trajo,
     Kad grozne kvrge s duplja rasti stanu,
Ko kugle tvrde, i jedva sam stajo.
     Tad spoznah skliske oÄ?i na svom dlanu
I rekoh: “Slijep sam, mila moja mati,
kako ću tebe sada oplakati...�

A silno svjetlo, ko stotine zvona
     Sa zvonika bijelih, u pameti
Ludoj sijevne: svjetlost sa Siona,
     Divna svjetlost, svjetlost koja svijeti!
Svijetla ptico, Svijetlo drvo! Rijeko!
MjeseÄ?e! Svjetlo ko majÄ?ino mlijeko!

Al ovu straÅ¡nu bol već nisam Ä?eko:
     Krvnik mi reÄ?e: “ZgnjeÄ?i svoje oÄ?i!â€?
Obezumljen sam skoro preda nj kleko,
     Kad grÄ? mi Å¡aku gustom sluzi smoći;
I viÅ¡e nisam niÅ¡ta Ä?uo, znao:
U bezdan kao u raku sam pao.

II

Mokraćom hladnom svijestili me Ćuške
     Dijelili, vatrom podigli me silom;
I svima redom probadali uške
     Krvnici tupim i debelim Å¡ilom
“Smijte se!� — ubod zapovijedi prati —
Oboce svima pred krst ćemo dati!�

I grozan smijeh, cerekanje, grohot
     Zamnije ko da grohoću mrtvaci;
I same klaÄ?e smete ludi hohot
     Pa svaki biÄ?em na žrtve se baci.
A mi smo dalje u smijanju dugu
Plakali, praznih duplja, mrtvu tugu.

Kada smo naglo, ko mrtvi, umukli
     (Od straha valjda što smo ipak živi),
U red za uške otekle nas vukli,
     I nijemi bol na stranu sve nas privi;
(U muku Ä?uli iz Å¡ume smo pticu):
provlaÄ?ili su kroz uÅ¡ke nam žicu

I svaki tako, kada bi se mako,
     Od bola strašna muklo bi zarežo.
“Šutite!� — rikne krvnik — “nije lako,
     Al potrebno je da tko ne bi bježo.�
I nitko od nas glavom da potrese
I drugom slijepcu ljuti bol nanese.

Krvožednike smiri žiÄ?an lokot
     I umorni su u hlad bliski sjeli;
I zaÄ?uo se vode mrzli klokot
     U žarku grlu, i glasno su jeli,
Ko poslije teška posla; zatim stali
Jedan sa drugim da se grubo Å¡ali.

Zaboravili kao da su nas:
     Zijevali, vjetre puštali su glasne.
“Eh, jednu malu vidio sam danas...�
     Dobaci netko, uz primjedbe masne.
I opet klokot hladna vina ili vode
Trgne slijepce — žica me probode.

III

U mome redu poÄ?ela da ludi
     Neka žena. Vikala je: “Gori!
Ljudi, gori! Kuća gori! Ljudi!�
     A žica ljuto poÄ?ela da pori
Nabreknute, grozne naše uši.
Na tla se žena ugušena sruši.

“DupljaÅ¡i! Ćore! Lubanje mrtvaÄ?keâ€?
     Sove! U duplja dat ćemo vam žere
Da progledate! Vi, ćorave maÄ?ke!â€?
     Zareži pijan koljaÄ? kao zvjere
I slijepcu nožem odcijepi lice
Od uha što se zaljulja vrh žice.

Urlik i teški topot slijepe žrtve
     (Što bježeć kroz mrak uvis noge diže),
I brz trk za njom, sred tišine mrtve,
     I tupi pad, kad lovca nož je stiže
O, taj je spašen! — rekoh svojoj tami
Ne opazivši da nas vode k jami.

Srce je muklo Å¡upljom grudi tuklo;
     Tad druga srce preko žice zaÄ?uh.
Lupanje ludo naprijed nas je vuklo.
     (Å to srce skaÄ?u kad u mraku plaÄ?u!)
I od te lupe progledah kroz rupe:
U jasnom sjaju misli mi se skupe.

I vidjeh opet, ko još ovog jutra,
     Duboku jamu, juÄ?e iskopanu.
Napregnuh sluh da Ä?ujem kad unutra
     Uz tupi udar prve žrtve panu.
OÅ¡trom svijesti odluÄ?uh da brojim:
Ja, pedeseti Å¡to u redu stojim.

I Ä?ekao sam. Skupljao sam toÄ?ne
     Podatke: tko je već nestao straga,
Tko sprijeda — zbrajo, odbijao, dok poÄ?ne
     Udaranje, padovi. Sva snaga
mozga u jasnoj svijesti se napregnu
Da promjene mi pažnji ne izbjegnu.

Negdje je cvrÄ?ak pjevo; oblak pokri
     ZaÄ?as u letu sjenom cijelo polje.
ÄŒuo sam kako jedan krvnik mokri,
     A drugi stao Å¡iroko da kolje.
Sve mi to zasja u sluhu ko u vidu.
Sa bljeskom sunca na nožnome brdu.

IV

Kad prva žrtva poÄ?ela da krklja,
     Čuh meki udar, i mesnata vreća
Padaše dugo. Znao sam: u grkljan
     Dolazi prvi ubod, među pleća
Drugi, a ruka naglo žrtvu grune
U jamu gdje će s drugima da trune.

Netko se mrtvo ispred mene složi
     Il iza mene, riknuvši od straha,
A ja udarce silnom svijesti množih,
     Odbijajući pale istog maha,
Mada sam svakog — što kriknu, zagrca —
Ćutio kao ugriz u dno srca.

ÄŒovjek iz jame jeco je ko dijete,
     Tek priklan; cikto jezivo mu glasak.
Streptih da raÄ?un moj se ne pomete.
     Tad buknu u dnu bezdna bombe prasak.
Tlo se zaljulja. Klonuće me svlada.
Nestala u spas posljednja mi nada.

Al silna svijest pažnjom me opsjednu:
     U sluh se živci, krv, meso i koža
Napregli. Zbrojih trideset i jednu
     žrtvu; šezdeset i dva boda noža.
Slušo sam udar kojom snagom pada,
I meni opet vratila se nada.

Na jauk iz bezdna sada nova prasne
     Bomba uz tutanj. I mrtva tjelesa
Padahu sad uz pljuske manje glasne,
     Kao u vodu, povrh kaše mesa.
Uto oćutjeh da po krvi kližem.
Protrnuh: evo, i ja k jami stižem!

V

O vidio sam, vidio sve bolje,
     Ko da su natrag stavljene mi oÄ?i:
I bijelu kožu, i nož koji kolje,
     I žrtve (kao jagnjad Å¡to se koÄ?i
Časkom pred klanje, al u redu bliže
Korak po korak mirno k nožu stiže).

Bez prekidanja red se dalje mico
     — Ko da na Ä?elu netko neÅ¡to dijeli —
Nit je tko viko, trzo se, narico;
     Na žezi strašnoj tih su nas želi
Ko mrtvo klasje koje jedva šušti.
(To se Ä?ula krv Å¡to iz grla pljuÅ¡ti.)

Korak po korak pošli smo; stali opet:
     Krkljanje, udar, pad i opet korak.
ZaÄ?uh zvuk jaÄ?e. UkoÄ?en, ko propet,
     Stadoh. Na usni tuđe krvi gorak
Okus oćutjeh. Sad sam bio treći
Å to jamu Ä?eka u redu stojeći.

Strašna mi tama, od sljepoće gora,
     Sav um pomuti i na Ä?ula leže,
I za njom svjetlost ko stotine zora:
     Iskro! Strijelo! Plamene! Sniježe!
Silno svjetlo bez ijedne sjene,
Ko oštar ubod igle usred zjene.

Drug se preda mnom natrag k meni nago,
     Kao od grÄ?a; onda je zastenjo,
Naprijed posrno, uzdahnuo blago —
     I tihi uzdaj s krkljanjem mu jenjo.
Surva se, pljusnu kao riba Zine
Preda mnom prostor bezdane praznine.

Sve pamtim: naprijed zaljuljah se, natrag,
     Bez ravnovjesja — kao da sam stao
Jezive neke provalije na prag,
     A iza mene drugi ponor zjao.
Bijela strijela u prsi mi sinu,
Crna me šinu s pleći. U dubinu.

VI

U bezdanu uma jeza me okrijepi.
     Osjetih hladno truplo gdje me tišti,
Hladnost smrti da mi tijelo lijepi.
     Strah sviješću sinu: Neka žena vrišti!
U jami sam — tom ždrijelu našeg mesa;
Ko mrtve ribe studena tjelesa.

Ležim na lešu: kupu hladetine,
     Mlohave, sluzne, Å¡to u krvi kisne,
I spas sa jezom iz leda me vine:
     Svijest munjom blisne kada žena vrisne.
Okrenuh se, u groznici tad k vrisku
Pružih ruku: napipah ranu sklisku.

I prvi puta sva životna snaga
     Nad leševima stala da se skuplja;
Na vrisak skrenuh ruku, i u duplja
     Lubanje zaboh prste; tijela naga
Ko da su sva zavrištala u jami —
Sav pako jeknu jezivo u tami.

Bomba će pasti! Užasnuh se prvo;
     U grÄ?u straÅ¡nu zgrabih rukom niže.
Zakoljak nađoh grozan. Leš se rvo
     Sa mnom i na me poÄ?eo da kliže.
Krkljo mu grkljan u krvavoj rani;
Korake zaÄ?uh i glasove vani.

O bože moj, zagrlila me žena
     Sad zagrljajem druge svoje smrti:
Kako joj koža lica nagrbljena...
     Starice! Bako! I uzeh joj trti
KoÅ¡Ä?ate ruke, i žarko ih ljubih.
ÄŒinilo mi se: mrtvu majku ubih.

Čuo sam kako umirući stenje,
     I poželio ludo da oživi.
Sve leševe tad molih oproštenje.
     Oćutjeh tvrdu usnu gdje se krvi —
Obeznanih se. Kad sam opet skido
Mrak nesvijesti, još sam gorko rido.

VII

Ušutjeh. Sam sam međ truplima lednim,
     A studen smrti na leđa mi sjela,
Na udove. U ledu mrtvih žednim
     Vatrama nepca, jezika i ždrijela.
Led smrti Å¡uti. U njem pako gori.
A nigdje vriska da samoća ori.

Taj grozni teret što na meni leži,
     Ni smrtnim ledom neće da priušti
Hladnoću grla; a biva sve teži:
     Odjednom skoro viknuh: voda pljušti!
ÄŒujem gdje s vrha po truplima teÄ?e;
Ah, studen mlat! — al peÄ?e, peÄ?e, peÄ?e!

Po goloj koži, po leđnome jarku,
     Niz trbuh, prsa, slabine i bute
PotoÄ?ić studen pali vatru žarku,
     Dube u mesu kanaliće ljute.
I kad na usnu mlazić žarki kapno,
Opaljen jezik kusnu živo vapno!

Puna je jama: Na lešine liju
     Vapno da živim strvine ne smrde.
O hvala im, nas mrtve sada griju
Plamenom svoje samilosti... Tvrde
Leševe ćutim: trzaju se goli,
Ko mrtve ribe kad ih kuhar soli.

Taj zadnji trzaj umirućeg živca,
     Taj Ä?udni drhtaj na kojem sam plivo
UÄ?ini da sam blagosiljo krivca:
     O gle! još truplo kraj mene je živo —
To starica me hladnom rukom gladi,
Jer zna da moji ne prestaše jadi!

VIII

Kada se mrtvi val života stišo,
     Korake zaÄ?uh ko daleku jeku:
Netko je jamu par puta obišo;
     I nasta mir ko mir u mrtvu vijeku.
pomakoh nogu, stegnuh lakta oba —
Ko grobar kad se izvlaÄ?i iz groba.

Zaprepastih se: leÅ¡evi se miÄ?u,
     Kližu nada me, polako se ruše —
Smiju se, plaÄ?u, hropoću i viÄ?u,
     Pružaju ruke i bijesno me guše...
Osjećah nokte, stražnjice, bokove,
Trbuhe, usta što me živa love.

Prestavljen stadoh. Stadoše i oni.
     Sad je težina manja. Mrtva noga
Pala mi preko ramena. Ne goni
     Nitko me više! — rekoh sebi; — To se
O vratu tvome splele ženske kose.

Prostrujo hladan zrak na moja usta
     Kroz sloj leševa: izlazu sam blizu!
I srknuh utopljeniÄ?ki: krv gusta
     kroz nosnice u grlo oštro briznu.
Smijo sam se — al da me netko tako
Nakreveljena vidje, taj bi plako

Il bi od straha sledio se, nijem
     Pred tom rugobom. Jer, što da se tješim:
Odsad će ljudi mislit da se smijem
     Kad plaÄ?em, i da plaÄ?em kad se smijeÅ¡im.
Ta prazna duplja, gnijezda grozne tame,
Sjećat će svijet na crno ždrijelo jame.

I sama sebe osjećo sam krivim
     Å to ostavljam u bezdnu te mrtvace,
Jer zrak je ovaj živ... a ja ne živim...
     I Ä?ekah da me opet natrag bace.
Al rana živim bolom: živ si! reÄ?e.
Sabrah se. Vlaga! S njom se spuÅ¡ta veÄ?e.

IX

O, nikad nisam oÄ?ekivo tamu
     S tolikom Ä?ežnjom. Pazi! rosa kliže
Niz trupla dođe do mene, u jamu!
     Užaren jezik poÄ?eo da liže
Kaplje sa ruku, nogu mrtvih tijela
Što su se na me ko žlijeb nadnijela.

Pomamno sam i divlje se penjo,
     Gazio prsa i trbuhe grubo —
I kad bi mrtav zrak iz trbuha stenjo,
     Nisam već trno. Vuko sam i skubo
DugaÄ?ke kose, uspinjo se mesom,
Podjaren žeđom kao ludim bijesom.

Nisam osjećo bola, straha, stida;
     Obarah leš za lešom, grabih plazih
Po njima ko po zemlji Å¡to se kida.
     A možda svoju mrtvu sestru gazih,
Susjeda vukoh, lomih nježnu dragu.
Žeđ mi je dala bezumlje i snagu.

Kad sam se divlje iz jame izvuko,
     Zaboravih svijest, oprez, da l je mrko:
Tlom krvavim sam puzo, tijelo vuko
     Do trave: zvjerski, živinski je srko;
Uranjo u nju, jeo je i guto
I ko po rijeci livadom sam pluto.

Dozvah se: usta, punih trave, ležim,
     Gorim, ledenim: u teškoj sam mori.
Spasen! O, kamo, kamo sad da bježim?
     Zadrhtah: pjesma krvnikova ori.
Daleko. Našim mukama se ruga.
I mržnja planu. Ostavi me tuga.

X

Odjednom k meni miris paljevine
     Vjetar donese s garišta mog sela;
Miris iz kog se sve sjećanje vine:
     Sve svadbe, berbe, kola i sijela,
Svi pogrebi, naricaljke, opijela;
Sve što je život sijo i smrt žela.

Gdje je mala sreća, bljesak stakla,
LastaviÄ?je gnijezdo, iz vrtića dah;
Gdje je kucaj zipke Å¡to se makla,
I na traku sunca zlatni kućni prah?

Gdje je vretena zuj, misir hljeba
Što s domaćim šturkom slavi život blag;
Gdje su okna s komadićkom neba,
Tiha škripa vrata, sveti kućni prag?

Gdje je zvonce goveda iz Å¡tale
Å to, ko s daljine, zvuk mu kroz star pod
U san kapne; dok zvijezde pale
Stoljeća mira nad sela nam i rod.

Nigdje plaÄ?a. Smijeha. Kletve. Pjesme.
Mjesec, putujući, na garišta sja:
Ugasnuo s dola dalek jecaj Ä?esme,
Crni se na putu lešina od psa...

Zar ima mjesto bolesti i muka
Gdje trpi, pati, strada Ä?ovjek živ?
Zar ima mjesto gdje udara ruka
I živiš s onim koji ti je kriv?

Zar ima mjesto gdje još vrište djeca,
Gdje ima otac kćerku, majku sin?
Zar ima mjesto gdje ti sestra jeca
I brat joj stavlja mrtvoj na grud krin?

Zar ima mjesto gdje prozorsko cvijeće
Rubi još radost i taži još bol?
Zar ima većeg bogatstva i sreće
Nego Å¡to su Å¡krinja i klupa i stol?

Iz Å¡ume, s rikom gora, prasak muko
     Zatutnji. Za njim tanad raspršeno
Ciknu, ko djeca njegova. Pijuko
     Nada mnom zvuk visoko, izgubljeno.
Bitka se bije. Osvetnik se javlja!
Osvijetli me radost snažna poput zdravlja.

Planu u srcu sva ognjišta rodna,
     Osvetom buknu krvi prolivene
Svaka mi žila, i ko usred podna
     Sunce Slobode razbi sve mi sjene.
Držeć se smjera garišnoga dima,
Jurnuh, poletjeh k vašim pucnjevima.

Tu ste me našli ležati na strani,
     Braćo rođena, neznani junaci,
Pjevali ste, i ko kad se dani
     Široka svjetlost, kao božji znaci,
Okupala me. Rekoh: zar su snovi?
Tko je to pjevo? Tko mi rane povi?

Oćutjeh na Ä?elu meku ruku žene;
     Sladak glas zaÄ?uh: “Partizani, druže!
PoÄ?ivaj! Muke su ti osvećene!â€?
     Ruke se moje prema glasu pruže,
Bez rijeÄ?i, i dosegnuh nježno lice,
Kosu i pušku, bombu vidarice.

Zajecao sam i joÅ¡ i sad plaÄ?em
     Jedino grlom, jer oÄ?iju nemam,
Jedino srcem, jer su suze maÄ?em
     KrvniÄ?kim tekle zadnji puta. Nemam
Zjenice da vas vidim i nemam moći,
A htio bih, tugo! — s vama u boj poći.

Tko ste? Odakle? Ne znam, al se grijem
     Na vašem svjetlu. Pjevajte. Jer ćutim
Da sad tek živim, makar možda mrijem.
     Svetu Slobodu i Osvetu slutim...
Vaša mi pjesma vraća svjetlo oka,
Ko narod silna, ko sunce visoka.
I

Blood is my daylight and darkness too.               
Blessing of night has been gouged from my cheeks                    
Bearing with it my more lucky sight.                
Within those holes, for tears, fierce fire inflamed                     
The bleeding socket as if for brain a balm –                
While my bright eyes died on my own palm

While played, I never doubt, God's feathered creatures,
Reflected still in them, and clouds' procession;    
But all I felt were my blood–spattered features,
Bruised gulfs in that once brillant profusion.    
How radiant lay my eyeballs in my hand,
Yet from those eyes no tear could more descend!

Then ever other fingers ran the warm
Coagulating blood my slaughterer found    
By the profounder agony of holes he formed
For better grip, more sensuously to wound;    
But me the softness of my blood enthralled,
And I rejoiced as blood were red tears falling

The final light before the frightful night
The lightning swooping of the polished knife,   
The cry too white still in my blinded sight,
The bleach-white bodies of the murderers,   
Who stripped their torsos for their sweaty task –
Was dazzling even to my blinded mask.

O painful daylight, never so hard yet
Or penetrating did you break the East   
With fiery arrow; I might have thought I shed
Teardrops with leaping flames that seared my cheeks   
Through all that hell so many lightnings brent,
So many cries of other victims rent.

What time that furious conflagration fanned,
All that I knew of time were callouses for eyes,    
Hard-grown and aching; and could hardly stand.
And only then my slippery eyeballs fingered   
And knew – and cried: My sight, O Mother mine, is gone.
Then dazzling daylight like a myriad carillons

From endless gleaming bell-towers in my crazy   
Brain illumined like the lights of Zion,
A lovely light – a light which sanctified –   
Bright birds, bright river, trees and, brilliant
Boon pure as mother's milk, still brighter moon.

Now came a torture I had never guessed –
My murderer commanded "Break your own eyes!"    
I nearly prayed for mercy to the beast,
But slimy-fingered spasmic hands obeyed –   
And then no more I heard, no more could tell,
To empty nothyng faltered, and I feel.

II 

With chilly urine woke me, and with blows
Belaboured fire back to my head, and then   
These executioners pierced our ear lobes
With blunted, clumsy spikes, each one in turn –   
"Laugh, laugh!" they ordered, as they thrust their tools,
"Ear–rings are fire for force-converted fools!"

Then horrid laughter, sobbing, loud and wild
Reverberated as if dead men laughed;    
But crazy humour hindered those defiled –
To silence us our wilted flesh they flayed;   
But endless now in our long choking wit,
With gaping sockets our dead sorrow wept.

Then suddenly like corpses we were still
(No doubt from fear lest we were still alive) –   
Tugged by our swollen ears they dressed us, till
The silent torture turned us all awry   
(But birds that sang to us, not one did tire)
While through our tattered lobes was drawn a wire.

So each man of us if the least he starts
Howls dully when he feels the frightful pain.   
"Silence" - the executioner – "we know it smarts,
But we're not going to let you go again!"   
Not one of us could even shake his head
But give another blinding pain instead.

That warder wire appeased our cruel captors,
And, tired, nearby they sat down in the shade;    
Refreshing water gurgle then was heard
Down parching throats, laud pleasure as they ate,   
As if they'd laboured hard, till they began
To pass foul, slimy jokes from man to man.

Then even seemed our presence was forgotten;
We heard them yawn and break their wind at leisure.   
"Oh boy, I saw a skirt today" – a rotter
Spued dirty observations from his tongue.   
Thus passed their noon, in wine or cooling water -
Ours passed on burning wire, strung for the slaughter.

III

Now in my rank a girl went mad and shrieked
Her warning – "Men! Fire! the house is burning,   
Fire!" And now the wire strung through us wreaked
New agony and rent distorted gaps   
In all our monster ears until she fell
And choking lay, oblivious to hell.

"Blind sockets, deaths-head skulls, you purblind rats,
We'll doctor you with hot coals in those holes    
To make you see again, blind blinking cats!"
And, as he spoke, a drunken murderer lent   
Leering forward, and slashed down through a face,
To leave its ear still dangling, wired in place.

We heard the victim's cry, his frenzied pace
As, thus released, down maddened dark he ran;   
Through mortal silence then we heard the chase,
And, as the knife struck twice, his heavy fall.   
So one is saved, I told my night of it,
No knew they led our steps towards the pit.

I heard the heart dull in my hollow breast
And through the wire to others' beating harked;   
To that dumb drum we pressed our steps ahead
(Haw loud it rumbled through the weeping dark!)   
By that tattoo I saw through holes for eyes
My thoughts assemble as in bright sunrise.

And saw again, as I had seen at dawn,
The hollow pit which yesterday we dug;    
I strained my hearing and at last it came –
That sudden flat sound as each victim fell –    
Knife-edged, my thought itself began to tell
The forty-nine before me, known so well.

And, waiting fingered memory's index,
Ticked whom they took before, behind, all round –   
So add, subtract, until the following blows
Descend and new men die; till all my strength   
Of mind to dazzling clarity was grown.
To let no change take place, and pass unknown.

Somewhere cicadas sang; a single cloud
Brushed fleeting shadow over everything.    
I heard one murderer nature easing loudly,
The while another, heated, wildly slew –    
All this engraved like sight, and glittered clear
As sun upon the knife-edge, in my ear. 

IV

When the first sacrifice began to choke
I heard a silken sound, a fleshy sack   
Which settled slow. I knew that first the throat
They stuck, then in between the shoulder-blades   
A second thrust, then swiftly pushed away
To fill the pit, together to decay.

Before my blindness, limp and dead, one fell,
Then with a yell of fear, behind my back,   
While my keen senses noted down each blow
And every person dead, struck from my list –    
No man nor girl who cried or sudden wept
But in my heart – my wound – their agony leapt.

A comrade in the pit now whimpered like a child,
Throat but half stuck – that asound so ominous    
Alarmed me lest I lost the list compliled –
Then down below a hand–grenade they tossed –    
The firm earth rocked. A weakness bend my shape;
What hope now had I that I might escape?

Yet consciousness triumphant still possessed me;
Now nerves and blood and flesh and skin became    
A straining ear; I counted thirty–one –
Sixty and two more strikings with the knife –   
I heard a blow which fell with savage force,
And once again my folly took its course.

When now another cry for intermission
Brought yet another hand-grenade, new dead    
Began to fall with thuds of less precision,
As if on water, o'er a slush of flesh;    
And so in blood I feel my foot-soles sink –
A spasm shook me – I had reached the brink.

V

Oh, then I saw, with suddenly better sight,
As if my eyes returned – but to my back -   
That whitened skin, that knife prepared to strike,
The victims too who while last seconds tick   
Stand stiff and still, yet automatic steal
By inches toward the knife their nerves can feel.

Uninterruptedly the ranks moved slowly on
- As if some distribution was ahead -   
Not one that shouted, started back or groaned,
While steadily in sultry air death mowed    
the deadripe corn, which fell with only sound
The fluent blood which spurted to the ground.

Thus step by step, with briefest pause between -
The croak, the knife, the thud; the queue pace    
Nearer, nearer still. Strained on a rack,
I backed, felt on my lips the bitter taste,   
Another's blood, and thus became the third
Who waited at the pit till it – occurred.

The darkness more disgusting through my blindness
Blasted my mind and cluttereb every sense -   
And sense bevond a thausand daybreaks cried
Intense – O arrow! O flame! O bewildering snow!   
Light, come at last devoid of any shade,
With needles in my aching eyeballs played.

The comrade next bent suddenly towards me,
As if a cramp had gripped him, then he groaned,   
And, stumbling forward, set a soft sigh free,
That lonely sigh, consumed in his death–rattle -    
Swung downward, flopping like a fish. With this,
Before me gaped the bottomless abyss.

Each detail fresh today – my body swayed
In space – as if upon the final rung    
Of endless nothing balanced there before me,
And at my back another nothing hung.    
A whitened arrow was my own throat slit,
Black death the stab behind; before – the pit.

VI
ut in the pit, by quivering heart made keen,
I felt the chilling corpse that pressed me down,    
And my own clamour too, that webbed me in.
Fear flared my senses when a woman shrieked!    
I am in the pit, cold maw that took our flesh,
That took our corpes clammier than fish.

I lay upon a corpse – a mould of brawn,
A flabby slimy thing in bloody steep;   
Yet thought was rescued by that human cold,
And flashed new lightning when a woman screamed.    
I turned in fever quick towards the sound
And stretched my hand – to touch a soft, wet wound.

For the first time my every ounce of strength
Knotted together over all the dead;   
To hide that shriek I held my breath and pressed
Deep fingers in my sockets - bodies naked   
Shrieked together in the darkened pit,
And hell re-echoed with the din of it.

Then my new fear awoke – grenades would fall!
With awful spasm at first I thrust and gripped    
A woefully butchered limb – the body crawled
To writhe with me, and, writhing, slipped,    
The blood-lapped gurking gullet gaping wide -
When footsteps came and voices spoke outside.

O heavens above, a woman's tense embrace
Of second death contained me and I felt   
My fingers ridging in her wrinkled cheeks -
O whitened hairs! O Granny! and I held    
Her bony hands and warmed them with my breath,
Felt I had caused my own dear mother's death.

I heard how she lamented as she died,
How passionately still che longed to live.    
I begged all those now dead for absolution.
I felt a twisted lip grown swiftly stiff -    
And fainted then. When once again I stripped
The darkness from my mind, my flesh still wept.

VII

Stopped – alone – of all cold corpses, first!
But chill of death subtly up my spine;    
My limbs – congealed in choirs of dead men - thirsting
With gums and tongue and gullet throbbing fire.   
The ice of death is still. Inside, hell flamed,
Though not a cry, to give that silence shame.

Yet that lewd burden pressing on my body
Not even with the ice of death can slake    
My burning throat; that ever deader sod
Confines me – till I nearly shriek for water -    
Then water sprinkles, near and far by turns,
On, cooling shower! that burns, burns, burns!

Over the naked skin, the vale of ice,
Down belly, breast and flanks and thighs at once    
That cooling rivulet sets teasing fire,
And hollows angry furrows in the flesh.   
A burning droplet on my stiff lips traced,
My tongue revealed to me the quicklime taste.

The pit chockful, on carcases they poured
That fire, to spare the world our stealing stench:    
I thanked them that, now dead, they tried to warm
Us with that charity ... I felt wrench    
Of naked corpses as their sinews turned,
Like long dead fishes by crude saline burned.

That final spasm of nerves yet not quite still,
That wondrous shudder on which I now floated    
Compelled me bless the guilty one for this:
When look! a corpse beside me was alive -   
Grey-haired old granny's icy hand caressed
Me, now she knew I still had not found rest.

VIII

When tat dead wave of life again subsided,
I caught the sound of steps as from afair -   
Somebody twice walked slowly round the site,
Then peace shone steady, like the evening star.   
I bent, to rise, hitched feet up, one by one,
Like digger when his graveyard job is done.

Then what surprise! The corpses moved about,
Slid over me and slowly settled in;   
They laughed and wept, groaned and sighed and shouted,
Reached for me – gripped me – furiously throttled -   
I felt their nails, their buttocks, and their thighs,
Their mouths and bellies corner me alive.

From terror I was still – then they still too -
Their weight decreased, a dead leg on my shoulder   
Dangled limp. They had pursued, but now
Pursed no more! – my climbing had undone    
The dead – I told myself. – That mangled nosse
About your neck, a dead girl's locks have tangled!

Soft air now brushed its coolness on my mouth
Between the dead – then I was near escape!    
And as if drowning, gulped; and thickened blood
Through nostrils spurted down my parching throat.   
I laughed aloud – yet who saw me with gob
Of comrade's blood bedecked, would sorely sob.

Or fear would petrify him, smite his speech
Before monstrosity like me – for why    
Deceive myself when mast think I grin
If i am weeping, or, if smiling, cry?   
Yet, in these empty sockets none may now forget
Like their tenebrous depths, the deadly pit.

For I could not relieve myself of guilt
Were I to leave my dead in that dark hole.    
The air's alive – but do I also live?
I half expected they would clutch me to them -    
But then my mortal wounds "You live!" declared.
Be brave! Day's done – the evening damp is here!

IX

Oh. never did I wait for darkness' coming
With such desire. For now the dew was seeping   
Over the upper bodies down to me!
My inflamed tongue set greedily to lick   
Drops from the arms and legs of those now dead,
And down contorted gutters nectar bled.

Like a wind creature, maddened then, I tried
To clamber out, on bosom or on belly    
Treading, non when those things like bellows sighed
Did I pay heed, but clutshed and cramped my fringers    
In the still hair, wherever dead flesh held,
Like maddened dog by burning thirst compelled.

Now was I free from pain and fear and shame,
Free to betray and spurn the dead, and crawl    
On bodies as on sodden ground that crumbled.
Was it my sister that I trod – I cared not;   
Some friend I mauled, girl's fragile bones I shattered -
My maddened thirst was master – what else mattered?

When like a beast I'd clambered from the pit,
All wisdom, caution, fled, I cared not any more   
Who saw, but in blood crawled about and dragged
Myself to pasture, quadrupedal snorted,   
Rooted burning lips, and gaped, and sank
My oblivious body as I crept and drank.

At last twast done; with grass–filled mouth I lay
Twixt fire and ice, exhausted beyond sense,   
But saved! though beffled – whither could I flee?
A shudder broke me. Far aff the tyrants sang -    
With dirty catch their dismal triumph they shared.
When my soft mood was gone, and hatred flared!

X

My nostrils suddenly had caught the scent,
The wind–borne echo of our burning homes!   
From ashes rose my youthful years' content -
The weddings, harvests, dances, and long hours    
Beside the hearth – the funerals with bells and wakes,
All that life's sower sows and death's scythe takes.

That simple happiness, the window's glint;
Swallow and young; or windborne garden sweet -
Where? – The unhurried cradle's drowsy tilt?
Or, by the threshold, sunshine at my feet?

The spindle's whirring, or the sweetish scent
Or bread – the chairs, the nook, that all require
But pease – that squere of sky the window bent -
Door hinges' gentle creak, the cosy fire –

The cowbell clanging stately from the byre? -
Afair, it seemed, through the floor boards seeped in
Drip drip in sleep, while one by one the stars
The ages lit, o'er villages and kin.

No weeping – only oaths and bawdy yells.
The moon above a ruined village stands.
no more below the house the well–hoist spelling
Peace. Death's odour only fills our land.

Is there a place where suffering and pain
Men suffer, and endure, but yet alive?
Is there a place where men forget again
And live with those who wronged them by their side?

Is there a place, where children cry delight,
A father has a daughter – son, a mother?
Where even dreaded death is calm, and white,
With lilies for farewell, placed by brother?

Is there a place, where flowers on the sill
Enhance a pleasure or a grief diminish?
Could there be happiness or wealth more full
Than oaken table, chest, and humble bench?

The forest suddenly rattled, magnified
From hill to hill, and bullet scattering squeaked   
Like thunder children near me; high and wide,
Their errand missed, they sighed, and disappeared.    
Comrades were come, the avenging battle started!
Light as strong as health lit up my heart!

All the hearths of home blazed up in me,
And every sinew swelled with vengeance for    
Our bodies they had pillaged – I could see
The midday sun shrink gloom to liberty.   
The smoking village as my nostrils' guide,
I strove to take my stand my men beside.

Then it was you found me, still by the path
Oh my own kin, my unknown warriors!   
Singing you came, like the first quickening swath
Of fruitful light, which, heralding the day,    
Boathed me. I tried to ask – for had I swoonned,
To dream of singing hands? o bowhund my wounds?

Upon my forehead moved a girl's cool fingera,
Upon my ears sweet music "Comrade partisan,    
Rest now in peace, your agonies are requited!"
I reached my hands in dark towards her voice,   
Without a word I touched the tender face,
The hair, grenades, and rifle af my grace.

Began to sob and never have ceased yet,
With throat alone, for now I have no eyes;    
With heart alone, for now my tears the knife
Of murderers gourged away. I am deprived    
Of eyes to see you, and that strength is gone
Which I so need, to fight too, till we've won.

But who are you, and whence? I only know
That your light warms me. All – Sing! for I can feel    
At last I live; even though I'm dying now,
'This in sweet Liberty, with Vengeance stolen   
From death. Your singing gives my eyses back light,
Strong as our People, and our sun as bright