Letter to My Wife, By MIKLOS RADNOTI (1909-1944)
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(written in Lager Heidenau, above Zagubica in the mountains, August-September, 1944)
Down in the deep, dumb worlds are waiting,
silent;
I shout; the silence in my ears is strident,
but no one can reply to it from far
Serbia, fallen into a swoon of war,
and you are far. My dream, your voice, entwine,
by day I find it in my heart again;
knowing this I keep still while, standing proudly,
rustling, cool to the touch, many great ferns
surround me.
When may I see you? I hardly know any longer,
you, who were solid, were weighty as the psalter,
beautiful as a shadow and beautiful as light,
to whom I would find my way, whether
deafmute or blind;
now hiding in the landscape, from within,
on my eyes, you flash--the mind projects its
film.
You were reality, returned to dream
and, fallen back into the well of my teen years,
jealously question you: whether you love me,
whether, on my youth’s summit, you will yet be
my wife--I am now hoping once again,
and, back on life’s alert road, where I have
fallen,
I know you are all this. My wife, my friend and
peer--
only, far! Beyond three wild frontiers.
It is turning fall. Will fall forget me here?
The memory of our kisses is all the clearer;
I believed in miracles, forgot their days;
above me I see a bomber squadron cruise.
I was just admiring, up there, your eyes’ blue
sheen,
when it clouded over, and up in that machine
the bombs were aching to dive. Despite them, I
am alive,
a prisoner; and all that I had hoped for, I have
sized up, in breadth. I will find my way to you;
for you I have walked the spirit’s full length as
it grew,
and highways of the land. If need be, I will
render
myself, a conjurer, past cardinal embers,
amid nose-diving flames, but I will come back,
if I must be, I shall be as resilient as the bark
on trees. I am soothed by the peace of savage
men
in constant danger: worth the whole wild
regimen
of arms and power; and, as from a cooling wave
of the sea,
sobriety’s 2x2 comes raining down on me.
From “Against Forgetting: Twentieth Century Poetry of Witness” edited and with an introduction by Carolyn Forche. (Norton: $35.; 812 pp.) “Against Forgetting” is an anthology that encompasses more than 140 poets from five continents, over the span of this century from the Armenian genocide to Tian An Men Square. To be included, the poet must have had the personal experience of extremity, war, torture, exile or repression. 1993 by Carolyn Forche. Reprinted by permission.
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