Showing posts with label Anna Akhmatova. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anna Akhmatova. Show all posts

Thursday, April 14, 2016

we don’t know how to say goodbye





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We don’t know how to say goodbye:
we wander on, shoulder to shoulder.
Already the sun is going down;
you’re moody, I am your shadow.

Let’s step inside a church and watch
baptisms, marriages, masses for the dead.
Why are we different from the rest?
Outdoors again, each of us turns his head.

Or else let’s sit in the graveyard
on the trampled snow, sighing to each other.
That stick in your hand is tracing mansions
in which we shall always be together.

–Anna Akhmatova, from Poems,
Max Hayward translation




Tuesday, September 9, 2014

why do we not despair?








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Everything is plundered, betrayed, sold,
Death's great black wing scrapes the air,
Misery gnaws to the bone.
Why then do we not despair?

By day, from the surrounding woods,
cherries blow summer into town;
at night the deep transparent skies
glitter with new galaxies.

And the miraculous comes so close
to the ruined, dirty houses --
something not known to anyone at all,
but wild in our breast for centuries.


–Anna Akhmatova
Poems of Akhmatova,
edited and translated by Stanley Kunitz
with Max Hayward







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