Untitled By Joseph Brodsky
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Snow is falling, leaving the whole world out-manned
and out-maneuvered. Now your private detective
agency comes into its own and
you catch up with yourself because your prints are
so recognizably defective.
Not that you’re about to collect a reward
for turning yourself in. A noiseless, nothing-of-note
precinct. With the onset of night, all the light’s
packed into one star-shard
like refugees packed into one boat.
Mind you don’t go blind. And don’t lose sight of
your being on the street,
an illegal alien, a social pariah, an outcast
who, for all your soul-searching, have come up with
sweet
damn all. From your mouth there issues only a
dragon-blast
of hot air. Maybe the time has come for you, another
Nazarene, to offer
up a prayer for all those hot-shot
wise men, from both sides of the planet, schlepping
along with their groaning coffers,
for all those little children in their carry-cots.
[1986]
Translated from the Russian by Paul Muldoon
Joseph Brodsky was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1987. He died in 1996. “Untitled” is a previously untranslated and unpublished poem.
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