Authors: Wislawa Szymborska
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This one here, that one down there, those on the end:
before they grew to reach a doorknob,
break a watch,
smash their first windowpane.
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Malgorzata, four years old,
two of them spent staring at the ceiling.
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Rafalek: missed his fifth birthday by a month,
and Zuzia missed Christmas,
when misty breath turns to frost.
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And what can you say about one day of life,
a minute, a second:
darkness, a lightbulb's flash, then dark again?
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KOSMOS MAKROS
CHRONOS PARADOKSOS
The BallOnly stony Greek has words for that.
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As long as nothing can be known for sure,
(no signals have been picked up yet),
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as long as Earth is still unlike
the nearer and more distant planets,
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as long as there's neither hide nor hair
of other grasses graced by other winds,
of other treetops bearing other crowns,
other animals as well grounded as our own,
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as long as only the local echo
has been known to speak in syllables,
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as long as there's still no word
of better or worse mozarts,
platos, edisons out there,
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as long as our inhuman crimes
are still committed only among humans,
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as long as our kindness
is still incomparable,
peerless even in its imperfection,
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as long as our heads packed with illusions
still pass for the only heads so packed,
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as long as the roofs of our mouths alone
still raise voices to high heavensâ
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let's act like very special guests of honor
at the district fireman's ball,
dance to the beat of the local oompah band,
and pretend that it's the ball
to end all balls.
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I can't speak for othersâ
for me this is
misery and happiness enough:
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just this sleepy backwater
where even the stars have time to burn
while winking at us
A Noteunintentionally.
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Life is the only way
to get covered in leaves,
catch your breath on the sand,
rise on wings;
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to be a dog,
or stroke its warm fur;
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to tell pain
from everything it's not;
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to squeeze inside events,
dawdle in views,
to seek the least of all possible mistakes.
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An extraordinary chance
to remember for a moment
a conversation held
with the lamp switched off;
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and if only once
to stumble on a stone,
end up drenched in one downpour or another,
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mislay your keys in the grass;
and to follow a spark on the wind with your eyes;
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and to keep on not knowing
Listsomething important.
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I've made a list of questions
to which I no longer expect answers,
since it's either too early for them,
or I won't have time to understand.
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The list of questions is long,
and takes up matters great and small,
but I don't want to bore you,
and will just divulge a few:
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What was real
and what scarcely seemed to be
in this auditorium,
stellar and substellar,
requiring tickets for entrance
and exit alike;
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What about the whole live world,
which I won't manage
to compare with any other living world;
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What will the papers
write about tomorrow;
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When will wars cease,
and what will replace them;
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Whose third finger now wears
the ring
stolen from meâlost;
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What's the place of free will,
which manages to be and not to be
simultaneously;
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What about those scores of peopleâ
did we really know each other;
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What was M. trying to tell me
when she could no longer speak;
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Why did I take bad things
for good ones
and what would it take
to keep from doing it again?
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There are certain questions
I jotted down just before sleep.
On waking
I couldn't make them out.
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Sometimes I suspect
that it's a real code,
but that question, too,
Everythingwill take its leave one day.
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Everythingâ
a smug and bumptious word.
It should be written in quotes.
It pretends to miss nothing,
to gather, hold, contain, and have.
While all the while it's just
a shred of gale.
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COLON
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2005
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A few minor changes
and my mother might have married
Mr. Zbigniew B. from ZduÅska Wola.
And if they'd had a daughterâshe wouldn't have been me.
Maybe with a better memory for names and faces,
and any melody heard once.
Adept at telling one bird from another.
With perfect grades in chemistry and physics,
and worse in Polish,
but secretly writing poems
instantly more interesting than mine.
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A few minor changes
and my father might at that same time have married
Miss Jadwiga R. from Zakopane.
And if they'd had a daughterâshe wouldn't have been me.
Maybe standing her ground more stubbornly.
Plunging headfirst into deep water.
Susceptible to group emotions.
Always seen in several spots at once,
but rarely with a book, more often in the yard
playing kickball with the boys.
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They might even have met
in the same school, the same room.
But not kindred spirits,
no affinities,
at opposite ends of class photos.
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Stand here, girls
âthe photographer would callâ
shorter girls in front, tall girls behind.
And big smiles when I say cheese.
But one more head count,
that's everyone?
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ABCâYes sir, that's all.
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I'll never find out now
what A. thought of me.
If B. ever forgave me in the end.
Why C. pretended everything was fine.
What part D. played in E.'s silence.
What F. had been expecting, if anything.
Why G. forgot when she knew perfectly well.
What H. had to hide.
What I. wanted to add.
If my being nearby
meant anything
Highway Accidentfor J. and K. and the rest of the alphabet.
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They still don't know
what happened on the highway
half an hour ago.
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On their watches
it's just the same old time,
afternoonish, Thursdayish, September.
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Someone is draining macaroni.
Someone is raking leaves.
Squealing children race around the table.
Someone's cat deigns to be patted.
Someone is cryingâ
as always when bad Diego
betrays Juanita on TV.
Someone is knockingâ
nothing, the neighbor with a borrowed frying pan.
A phone rings deep in the apartmentâ
just telemarketing for now.
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If someone were to stand at the window
and look out at the sky,
he might catch sight of clouds
drifting over from the accident.
Torn and tattered, to be sure,
The Day AfterâWithout Usbut that's business as usual for them.
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The morning is expected to be cool and foggy.
Rainclouds
will move in from the west.
Poor visibility.
Slick highways.
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Gradually as the day progresses
high pressure fronts from the north
make local sunshine likely.
Due to winds, though, sometimes strong and gusty,
sun may give way to storms.
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At night
clearing across the country,
with a slight chance of precipitation
only in the southeast.
Temperatures will drop sharply,
while barometric readings rise.
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The next day
promises to be sunny,
although those still living
An Occurrenceshould bring umbrellas.