Where Could a Poet Run? by Miklós Radnóti

(November 2015)


Budapest 1945

1.

The First Eclogue

 

Quippe ubi fas versum atque nefas: tot bella per orbem,

 

Shepherd:

I have not seen you for long, did the call of the thrushes bring you?

 

Poet:

The woods resound with their clatter, spring must be on its way!

 

Shepherd:

It’s not spring yet, the sky only teasing, look at that puddle,

it will snarl! this is April, never be taken in by the fool –

just look, over there: the little tulips are bitten by frost.

 

 

Poet:

No, I’m not even sad, I have grown so used to this horrible world

that sometimes it can’t even hurt me – I’m only disgusted.

 

Shepherd:

Likewise. I’ve heard that on the wild ridges of the Pyrenees,

among corpses stiffened in blood, the red-hot cannon hold forth

that flocks of old people and women and children run with their bundles

and fling themselves to the ground when murder swoops from the skies

 

I trust you know Frederico. Tell me, did he escape?

 

Poet:

He did not escape. Two years ago now he was killed in Granada.

 

Shepherd:

Garcia Lorca is dead! he is dead and no-one has mentioned!

News of the war can travel so fast – and, just like that,

a poet can just disappear! But was he not mourned by Europe?

 

Poet:

Mourned? Why, no-one has noticed. At best the wind, perhaps

when it gropes through the pyre’s embers, remembers the odd broken

line of a poem that may be preserved for a frustrated future.

 

Shepherd:

He did not escape. Indeed, where could a poet run?

Even dear Attila* has perished – he only gestured

 

And how do you live these days? Does your poetry win a response?

 

Poet:

In the roar of the guns? Among smoking ruins, abandoned hamlets?

Still, I go on with my writing and live in this war-crazed world

like that oak over there: it knows it must fall, and although it bears

a white cross that marks it out for the woodcutter’s axe tomorrow,

But you are fortunate. This place is calm, the wolves keep their distance

and you can forget that the flock that you tend belongs to another:

it must have been months since your master last came to call.

God bless you – must go – the night will be old before I reach home.

The moth of the evening is fluttering, shedding its silver of dusk.

============================================

* Attila József (1905-1937), Hungarian poet.

 

2.

Upon a Jabbering Palm

 

Upon a jabbering palm-tree

crouching, I should be rather,

a free soul in earthly matter,

 

where sage scholastic apes

would keep me company,

their calls, like a sharp and shiny

 

and I would chant with the team

in a merry cacophony,

and cheer the harmony

of their rumps and noses whose shades

 

Above my enchanted tree

a giant sun would pace,

and I would be ashamed

for the human race:

 

the apes would grasp my pain,

for still, the apes are sane –

and, Oh! in their company

if I might share their merciful

 


Miklós Radnóti and his wife, Fifi

 

3.

In Your Arms

 

In your arms I lie, you rock me

quietly.

In my arms you lie, I rock you

quietly.

In your arms I lie, an infant,

silently.

In my arms you are a child, I’m

hearkening, watching, sensing you.

In your arms, I’m locked embraced

when I’m alarmed.

In my arms, when I embrace you,

I’m not alarmed.

In your arms, the great, the final

stream of silence

will not frighten me.

In your arms, death will arrive –

light and graceful

like a dream.

 

MIKLÓS RADNÓTI was murdered just 70 years ago, aged 35, by retreating Nazi forces at the close of WW2. He has emerged as a giant of recent European literature and the greatest poet of the Holocaust. His surviving work, describing the chaos and brutality of that tragedy in magnificent classical metre, has become hugely popular in his native Hungary despite the current resurgence of antisemitism there.

 

THOMAS ORSZÁG-LAND (b. 1938) is a poet and award-winning foreign correspondent. His last book was Survivors: Hungarian Jewish Poets of the Holocaust (Smokestack, England, 2014). More Holocaust verse in Thomas Land’s English translation appears in Translating the Poetry of the Holocaust (Bloomsbury, England, 2015).

 

To comment on this poem, please click here.

To help New English Review continue to publish translations of original poetry such as this, please click here.

If you enjoyed these poems and want to read more by Thomas Ország-Land, please click here.