The
End and The Beginning
After
every war
someone
has to tidy up.
Things
won't pick
themselves
up, after all.
Someone
has to shove
the
rubble to the roadsides
so
the carts loaded with corpses
can
get by.
Someone has to trudge
through
sludge and ashes,
through
the sofa springs,
the
shards of glass,
the
bloody rags.
Someone
has to lug the post
to
prop the wall,
someone
has to glaze the window,
set
the door in its frames.
No
sound bits, no photo opportunities
and
it takes years.
All
the cameras have gone
to
other wars.
The
bridges need to be rebuilt,
the
railroad stations, too.
Shirtsleeves
will be rolled
to
shreds.
Someone,
broom in hand,
still
remembers how it was.
Someone
else listens, nodding
his
unshattered head.
But
others are bound to be bustling nearby
who'll
find all that
a
little boring.
From
time to time someone still must
dig
up a rusted argument
from
underneath a bush
and
haul it off to the dump.
Those
who knew
what
this was all about
must
make way for those
who
know little.
And
less than that.
And
at last nothing less than nothing.
Someone
has to lie there
in
the grass that covers up
the
causes and effects
with
a cornstalk in his teeth,
gawking
at clouds.
From
Wisława Szymborska, MAP:
Collected and Last Poems,
2015.
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