Read Wheel With a Single Spoke Online
Authors: Nichita Stanescu
that I and my lions,
that we, we who came to greet him,
had nothing womanly in us . . .
He told me deafly:
â All my family was choked with fear
when I departed
toward the beyond.
He leaned closer and said:
â So, to tell you the whole story, absolutely everything;
I will try to describe what I saw through the porthole.
â No, I told him.
Suddenly, all my translucent lions turned to him and let their
muzzles gape,
starving,
with translucent, starving
teeth.
â Okay, he said, if you don't want to know, I won't tell you.
â I don't want to know, I said.
â Should I go? he asked.
â How can you go, I responded, can't you see my sister is in love
with you?
â Call your relatives, then, he said, I'm staying.
â We're not calling anyone, I said, but stay.
My translucent lions
adhered to one another.
My translucent lions
adhered fast together.
They turned into a shield.
I grew tired and stretched out across it.
â Let me pick you up and carry you on the shield.
â Pick me up, I shouted, carry me.
An angel came to me and said:
â You are a pig of a dog,
a rabid, mangy pig-snout.
Grass rots beneath your shadow,
swamp gas fills your breath.
â Why? I shouted. Why?
â No reason!
An angel came to me and said:
â Glass is more transparent
than the oldest of your opaque thoughts.
Soon you will die, and worms
will storm your nostrils, your muzzle, your trunk, your snout.
â Why? I shouted. Why?
â No reason, the angel said . . .
Then the angel, ah, the angel, ah, the angel, ah, the angel
left on wings of gold, and flew
through air of gold.
Butterflies of gold
fluttered in the halo of the angel of gold.
It flew golden,
it was utterly, utterly of gold.
It left toward a distance of gold,
where set a sun of gold.
It left toward a distance of gold,
where set a sun of gold.
â Why are you leaving me, I shouted,
why are you leaving, why?
â No reason, it said, no reason . . .
Unable to die
inapt to be
I run
through unknowing.
It's hard to accept
that I am as I am.
The place of heaven
is under the earth.
But the starving earth
devours heaven.
An angel came to me and said:
â Wouldn't you like to buy a dog?
I was in no shape to answer.
The words I would have shouted back
were growls and barks.
â Wouldn't you like to buy a dog?
the angel asked, holding in his arms
my heart
barking,
letting blood like a tail.
â Wouldn't you like to buy a dog?
the angel asked me
while my heart
let blood like a tail.
It has begun to see through you.
Look, eye, look,
you are much harder than before
and more speechless.
I see an animal of great size
lay an egg of great size.
Look, eye, and be afraid.
The souls have tired.
Let's kiss the bird's egg
and bid it
farewell.
I see an animal of great size.
Its breath is green
its eyes are verdant
its teeth are green
and its claws, teeth.
Look, eye, look
and bid it farewell.
It began to see through us
some time ago.
I feel it began to see through us
some time ago,
as though someone peered
through us
And toward what, we do not know.
I could kill her
with a single blow.
She giggles at me,
she grins.
She meets my eyes
with her glistening eyes.
She holds her hand out toward me,
she shakes, grinning, giggling,
her dark hair.
But I â I could kill her
with a single blow.
Now, she starts to speak
soft words, naïve, playful.
She looks at me, curiously,
she frowns for a moment
then
she grins, giggles.
She looks in my eyes
with her glistening eyes.
While I watch her
and could kill her
with a single blow.
The approaching wave has turned to stone midair
O, even you, my love, have stopped
in total non-movement
And time has a fever
O, it burns me
The moment is set like a pearl
and the wave-drops hang in the air
You, all I can shout, you
and the word becomes visible
slowly, slowly, as one sees the dusk settle,
a word of three letters: you.
The monstrous animal, â understanding â
has stopped, and become visible . . .
Ah, how happy were the two of us,
no, we were never happy,
but here, dance across my hands,
dance across my palms held
out to you.
Shoed horse, won't you crush my fingers . . .
you crush the bones in my fingers,
horse with iron shoes.
But who else is thrown into the air
like the water of a fountain?
You're blushing, oh, you're blushing . . .
You could strike from flight
an eagle . . .
and still be not full, not full,
your mouth red with feathers
with bloody feathers.
And no, you are not full.
Better to sleep on my right shoulder,
tender child, tired child.
Ah, your starving rat teeth
work through this moment's collar bone.
Get out, wipe them off, put them out!
Or come here, then, let me
lick your tears . . .
A poison of abject, deceitful tears,
so sincere . . .
Ah, how happy were the two of us,
no, we were never happy.
Slow! Go slow!
Don't you see? The stones are tired.
They're sleeping, Lord, they're sleeping.
The stones are very tired.
Keep the horses away!
And you, what are you doing over there, you . . .
I'm talking to you! Pay attention!
It's too noisy, this sunrise.
The stones are tired.
The rising moon needs to shut up!
Take care, keep quiet. Quiet!
The stones are tired.
A poet, like a soldier,
has no life of his own.
His own life is wrecks
and ruins.
With the forceps of his cerebrum he lifts
the emotions of ants,
brings them closer and closer to his eye
until they and his eye become one.
He puts his ear to the belly of a starving dog.
His nose smells the half-open muzzle
until his nose and the dog's muzzle
are the same.
During waves of heat
he fans himself with flocks of birds
he startles into flight.
None of you should believe a poet when he cries.
His tear is never his own.
He has wiped tears from things
and cries things' tears.
A poet is like time.
Faster or slower,
more deceitful or more truthful.
Be careful not to say anything to a poet.
Be especially careful not to say something true.
Really, be careful not to say something heartfelt.
Just then, he will claim he said it,
and he will make the claim such that
all of you will say, It's true,
he said it.
I beg you, above all
never touch a poet!
Do not put your hand on a poet!
. . . except when your hand
is thin as a ray.
Only then your hand might
pass straight through him.
Otherwise, it will not pass,
your fingers will stick to him,
and he will be the one to brag
he has more fingers than you do.
And all of you will have to say, Yes,
it's true, he has more fingers . . .
Better, if you can believe me,
it would be better if you never
touched a poet.
. . . And he's not even worth a touch . . .
A poet, like a soldier,
has no life of his own.
And yet, I have seen a bird
lay eggs while it flew â
And yet, I have seen someone cry
while he laughed â
And yet, I have seen a stone
while it was â
I cry before the number five â
the last supper, minus six.
Where are you, you who are,
and you who are no more,
where are you?
Break this word, it is my body.
Blood may flow from a syllable.
For you will I make wine from V and I
and gentleness from a barbarous body.
Whoever kisses me, kisses me.
I will stay with you eleven.
Five of us are here, six have left;
the last supper cries before the number five.
Today we have founded loss,
pain, departure.
More stone, said the stones,
we are more stone than stones,
said the stones.
With each word we speak
we are more stone than we are.
Shoe yourself, O horse,
who stands in place of heaven.
Strike us with your horseshoe
so we will spark
and sparks will stand for words.
I can only growl at my long-necked ancestors,
that is, ex-stones
chipped by horseshoes.
Maybe in the end a few sparks will come
from the stones
and be the speech of stones.
Horse, O horse,
who stands in place of heaven,
shoe yourself in iron.
We do not have axles strong enough
for the wheel of our body's meat.
â Where are you going, butterfly carriage?