Monday, May 13, 2024

1151. Writing A Resume - Wislawa Szymborska


Translated from the Polish by Stanislaw Baranczak and Clare Cavanagh


What’s needs to be done?

Fill out the application

and enclose the resume


Regardless of the length of life

a resume is best kept short.


Concise, well-chosen facts are de rigueur.

Landscapes are replaced by addresses, 

shaky memories give way to unshakable dates.


Of all your loves, mention only marriage:

of all your children, only those who were born.


Who knows you matters more than whom you know.

Trips only if taken abroad.

Memberships in what but without why.

Honors, but not how they were earned. 


Write as if you’d never talked to yourself

and always kept yourself at arm’s length.


Pass over in silence your dogs, cats, birds,

dusty keepsakes, friends, and dreams.


Price, not worth,

and title, not what’s inside.

His shoe size, not where he’s off to,

that one you pass off as yourself.

In addition, a photograph with one ear showing

What matters is its shape, not what it hears.

What is there to hear, anyway?

The clatter of paper shredders.



Friday, May 03, 2024

1150. On Living (Part 1) - Nazim Hikmet

Translated from the Turkish by Randy Blasing and Mutlu Konuk


Living is no laughing matter:

  you must live with great seriousness

like a squirrel, for example—

   I mean without looking for something beyond

and above living,

I mean living must be your

whole occupation.

Living is no laughing matter:

you must take it seriously,

so much so and to such a

degree

that, for example, your hands tied behind

your back,

your back to the wall,

or else in a laboratory

in your white coat and safety glasses,

you can die for people—

even for people whose faces you’ve never seen,

even though you know living

is the most real, the most

beautiful thing.

I mean, you must take living so seriously

that even at seventy, for example, you’ll plant

olive trees—

and  not for your children, either,

but because although you fear death you don’t

believe it,

because living, I mean, weighs heavier.