Praise for the Invaded, Mutilated, and Beautiful World: Two Poems by Adam Zagajewski

Let’s face it: without hope and continual, sometimes rewarded longing for the world of love and beauty reflected in the faces of our mothers and her joyful cohorts from our first moments in the birth room, life would be a hard, hard slog. So much darkness, so much beauty.

It’s as if two exhausted boxers in the 35th round of a fight to the death keep probing and hoping for the merest, minuscule suggestion of acquiescence in the other so the question can be settled once and for all.

Polish poet Adam Zagajewski knew that slugfest well, beginning from his own birth in the city of Lwów, Poland, in June 1945. When he was barely four months old, Joseph Stalin’s Soviet Union annexed Lwów in the carve-up by the Allied powers as World War II ended, placing Lwów into the newly founded Soviet Republic of Ukraine.

Stalin sent Zagajewski’s engineer father and family of four packing along with countless other professionals whom Stalin did not want spouting any ideas about human freedom and dignity.

The family endured a two-week trek by cattle car to resettle in the Polish city of Gliwice, where Zagajewski spent his boyhood before going on to study psychology and philosophy at a Polish university in Krakow. He made his poetic debut at age 22 and wrote verse while also teaching philosophy for the rest of his career. He died in 2021 at age 75.

Ironically, given the first of the two Zagajewski poems we will read below, Lwów became Lviv upon its 1945 annexation, and Lviv it remained when the Stalin imitator Vladimir Putin began to decimate it with repeated missile strikes after he ordered the wanton invasion of Ukraine last February.

Were he alive, Zagajewski would likely be crestfallen but not surprised how history has repeated itself. His poem, “Russia Comes Into Poland,” first appeared in “The Paris Review” in 1987, 35 years before Russia once again sent an army rumbling across his birthplace and cast its people into a living hell.

Zagajewski cooks that raw stew of personal and national history into a piercing chronicle of what all invasions do to a people, how exhaustively they invade every aspect of daily life and set every life on edge.

Nothing will ever be quite as it was before the invaders came, not even the poetry of the poet who puts pen to paper in a desperate, blessed rage for an order that will be no more.

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                      RUSSIA COMES INTO POLAND

                           (for Joseph Brodsky)

Through meadow and hedgerow, village and forest,
cavalries on the march, infantries on the march,
horses and cannons, old soldiers, young soldiers, children,
wiry wolfhounds at full gallop, a blizzard of feathers,
sleds, Black Marias, carriages, taxis,
even the old cars called Moskwitch come roaring in
and warships and rafts and pontoon bridges roar in
and barges, steamships, canoes, (some of which sink),
barrage balloons, missiles, bombers,
howitzer shells whistling arias from an opera,
the shriek of flagellants and the growl of commands,
songs slashing the air with notes made of steel,
yurts and tents break camp, ropes tightened,
the banners of dyed linen tremble overhead.
Messengers, panting, die as they run,
cables rush out, candles burning with quick crimson flames,
colonels dozing in carriages faster than light,
popes piously murmuring blessings,
even the moon is along on that hard iron march.
Tanks, sabres, ropes,
Katyuasha big-bertha’s whirring like comets,
fifes and drums exploding the air,
clubs crunching, the heaving decks of ferries
and of invasions sigh, sway, the sons of the Steppes
on the march, Moslems, condemned prisoners, lovers
of Byron, gamblers, the whole progeny
of Asia with Souvorov in the lead
limps in with a train of fawning courtiers who dance;
the yellow Volga runs in, Siberian rivers chanting,
camels plod pensively, bringing
the sands of the desert and humid mirages,
the folded-eyed Kirgises marching in step,
the black pupils of the God of the Urals
and behind them school teachers and languages straggle,
and behind them old manor houses skate in like gliders,
and German doctors with dressings and plasters;
the wounded with their faces of albaster,
regiments and divisions, cavalries, infantries, on the march,
Russia comes into Poland,
tearing cobwebs, leaves, silk ribbons,
ligaments and frontiers,
breaking
treaties, bridges, alliances,
threads, ties, clothes lines with wet washing still waving,
gates, arteries, bandages and conjunctions,
future and hope;
Russia comes in, marching
into a hamlet on the Pilica,
into the deep Mazovia forests,
rending posters and parliaments,
trampling roads, footbridges, paths, streams.
Russia comes into the eighteenth century,
into October, September, laughter and tears,
into conscience, into the concentration
of the student, the calm silence of the warm bricks of a wall,
comes into the fragrance
of meadows, herbs, the tangled path of the forest,
trampling
the pansy, the wild rose,
hoof-prints in the moss, tractor and tank prints
in the soft moss,
it overturns
chimneys, tree trunks, palaces,
turns off lights, makes great bonfires
out in the formal garden,
darkens the clear spring,
razes the library, church, town hall,
flooding its scarlet banners through the sky,
Russia comes into my life,
Russia comes into my thought,
Russia comes into my poetry.

—Translated from the Polish by C. K. Williams and Renata Gorczynski

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The images rush along here in a feverish quest to keep up with the rolling, roiling chaos of an invasion’s early days. No stanzas, because there is no time for breath, the poem a dogged attempt to catalog the rapid-fire imagery of an alien force on the march, crossing into and setting up camp in a country’s and each of its inhabitants’ consciousness.

People climb mountains and risk death for the kind of Be Here Now, totally enveloping awareness that invasion brings. Except climbers choose to do so, while those invaded are flung helter skelter onto a knife-edge they never, in their darkest dreams, considered.

Zagabrewski masterfully alternates concrete imagery with rich metaphor from line to line and even within lines as the invasion’s ripples spread out to flood every far corner of a country under siege.

Howitzer shells come in “whistling arias from an opera” and songs are “slashing the air with notes made of steel.”

We see “fifes and drums exploding the air,” along with this grim sight: “Messengers, panting, die as they run.” 

And behind them, what will facilitate the appalling aftermath of the invasion’s success: “school teachers and languages straggle,” bringing with them indoctrination, suppression, the attempted destruction of the history and language that form the very core of a nation’s identity.

It is ugly and heartbreaking beyond measure, and Zagabrewski puts us right in the middle of it, right there amidst the “bonfires out in the formal garden,” the invader who “razes the library, church, town hall,” Lwów-in-1945-become-Lviv 2022.

And he does so only because he, too, succumbs, is breached, his own poetic vocation and vision forever altered as “Russia comes into my life,/Russia comes into my thought,/Russia comes into my poetry.”

Quite a poem, redemption coming in no small measure with the telling. And also setting the stage for images of endurance, redirection and ever-nascent beauty the poet weaves from his early life experience and reflects upon with the hard-fought wisdom of age, countless tragedies and triumphs later, the fighters still entangled, hope still abiding, presented here without further commentary to absorb and do with as you will.

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(The following appeared first on September 17, 2001, in “The New Yorker” magazine, six days after the fall of the twin towers.)

 

TRY TO PRAISE THE MUTILATED WORLD

Try to praise the mutilated world.
Remember June’s long days,
and wild strawberries, drops of wine, the dew.
The nettles that methodically overgrow
the abandoned homesteads of exiles.
You must praise the mutilated world.
You watched the stylish yachts and ships;
one of them had a long trip ahead of it,
while salty oblivion awaited others.
You’ve seen the refugees heading nowhere,
you’ve heard the executioners sing joyfully.
You should praise the mutilated world.
Remember the moments when we were together
in a white room and the curtain fluttered.
Return in thought to the concert where music flared.
You gathered acorns in the park in autumn
and leaves eddied over the earth’s scars.
Praise the mutilated world
and the gray feather a thrush lost,
and the gentle light that strays and vanishes
and returns.

—Translated from the Polish by Clare Cavanagh

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Flowers and scree by Alexander Grey  https://unsplash.com/@sharonmccutcheon

Wild strawberries by Nikki Son, Korea  https://unsplash.com/@areumdown

10 comments to Praise for the Invaded, Mutilated, and Beautiful World: Two Poems by Adam Zagajewski

  • Marilyn  says:

    Thanks for these, Andrew.

    • Andrew Hidas  says:

      You’re most welcome, Marilyn.

  • David Jolly  says:

    Magnificent, Andrew – both of them. The first quite literally breathtaking; the second sad, beautiful comfort. We can all remember moments when we were together in a white room and the curtains fluttered. We all hope the gentle light that strays and vanishes returns.

    • Andrew Hidas  says:

      David, you remind me how glad I was to have found these, and how reading them had noticeable physical effects, a whole bodymind experience, sensual, intellectual, all of it wrapped up in a bundle of happiness in the discovery, awe at its great power. All great art that one responds to for all the mysterious reasons we do has that effect, thank the gods!

  • Mary  says:

    It seems noteworthy that the first poem at any rate as it appears here is a translation, and seems to only gather more pathos and grace around it in that translation. Such imagery! Sometimes watching the images and photographs of the current day conflict induces a sort of numbness induced by visual overload. Reading these….suffice to say I do not feel numbed.

    • Andrew Hidas  says:

      So interesting you mention the translation, Mary. I was marveling at the intensity of his imagery and the narrative drive he achieved in especially the first poem, and thought it had to be not only a magnificent poem, but a magnificent translation as well. Had some musings to that effect in my first draft but wound up leaving it out, so I’m glad you mentioned it. FYI: the second poem also notes the translation, via a different translator. What would have been really interesting was to have the translators of the first poem also do the second, so we could compare what differences may have resulted.

  • Robert Spencer  says:

    The ravages of war so devastatingly graphic in Zagajewski’s “Russia Comes into Poland” are heart-breaking. For Eastern Europe, especially the Ukraine today, can only rekindle memories of the atrocities committed by Stalin and Hitler some 80 years ago. I wrote the following several years ago about the Nazis defeating France in the spring of ’41.

    One June morning, sunless, the blitzkrieg
    smashed into a deserted Paris,
    ripping it asunder with its vile knife.
    “Joie de vivre” wept that day,
    draining tears into left bank sewers.
    The manic rhythm of goose-stepping soldiers,
    crushed Paris’ streets into gravel then dust,
    eroded the Eiffel Tower’s sheen to rust,
    tarred the lights along the Champs-Élysées,
    “Die Fahne Hoch” shook the Arc de Triomphe.
    The goose-steppers dripped and spewed anger,
    poisoned the Seine’s flow to the Channel,
    orphaned the boats in la Havre’s harbor.
    Water lilies wilted beneath the Japanese bridge.
    Cobblestones cracked in Caen and Saint-Lô.
    Mont-Saint-Michel’s chants drowned in the sea.
    Swastikas blackened Rouen’s stained-glass.
    The bocage wove itself into thorny webs.
    Tank footprints marred the roads to the beach.
    The Atlantic Wall coiled along the coast,
    like a viper waiting to strike.
    Barbed wire, mines, tripods and wooden sticks
    littered the shore from the bluffs to the sea.
    Bunkers beckoned death,
    within them callow eyes combed the sands,
    staring past the foamy gray breakers,
    voracious vultures scanning the horizon.

    Has much changed? Then, he pens “Try to Praise the Mutilated World”. While presenting a darkness (refugees with nowhere to go while their executioners sing), nevertheless he leaves us with hope (the vanished light can return). The two poems fit so well together. Well done, Drew.

    • Andrew Hidas  says:

      Such a dark period in history, Robert, and such an endless source of art, poetry, drama, documentary, etc. To which you have contributed here. Nice use of place, allowing anyone who has been to or encountered Paris in books or film to feel immersed as you chronicle the dark events of the time. “Has much changed?” is the million dollar/million lives question. For a while there after the fall of the Soviet Union & Berlin Wall, Gorbachev’s perestroika and all the increased trade and cultural exchange, it felt like Great Powers war might forever be a thing of the past, so intertwined were the ties that now bound the world’s economies and nations together. Putin’s invasion of Ukraine pretty much blew that thesis out of the water, and now we are in such a strange and perilous period. And though we can’t let it derail our own daily lives, we shouldn’t fool ourselves, either, that we aren’t all in one form of peril or another, most especially if Putin manages to prevail and emerge triumphant, even as damaged as he and his economy and international reputation will be. He and his ilk may well be more dangerous then than ever.

  • Jay Helman  says:

    I read each of the two poems twice before listening to Beethoven’s 6th accompanying this blog. Somehow the symphonic piece transported me to a metaphorical musing on Zagajewski’s reflections. Without doubt there are few more dramatic life disruptions than the invasion of one’s homeland and subsequent dislocation. Zagajewski’s cadence and imagery is transfixing in capturing the horrors of the unfolding disasters. Much like Mary, I thought of the media coverage of Putin’s invasion with nightly images of bombings and devastation coming at us in rapid fire and seemingly ceaseless. The metaphorical turn I took was from the literal invasion of the homeland, to the invasion of a person or family’s private life by a series of unexpected misfortune and tragedy. The pastoral, soothing sounds of Beethoven’s 6th took me back to a time with very close family friends with whom we raised our children. We were young and healthy and on our way to developing professionally and personally as our daughters grew up together. There were choir concerts, dance performances, games and track meets to keep us melodically moving through normal everyday lives in a peaceful haven in the Rocky Mountains. The invasion began recently in rapid succession as my friend was seriously hobbled by a crippling back problem that defied diagnosis and, hence, effective treatment. The family medical practice was extorted for hundreds of thousands of dollars by a trusted employee, and then cancer struck an aging parent forcing her to relocate into their home while undergoing chemotherapy. Stalin didn’t do it. Nor did Putin. But they were invaded suddenly and dramatically and things will never again be the same. The pastoral, melodic background of their lives (and ours) has changed to a more intense and foreboding tone. Thank you for inspiring this reflection, my friend.

    • Andrew Hidas  says:

      That’s a poetic take and extension of the Zagajewski poem that you have made your own, Jay, and I think he would be very pleased to read it if he were still with us. I know I am. It’s exactly how poets tend to think—stewing in words, images, songs, fantasies, then seeing what comes out of the mix. Nicely done!

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