Glorify me! 
For me the great are no match. 
Upon every achievement 
I stamp nihil 
I never want 
to read anything. 
Books? 
What are books! 
Formerly I believed 
books were made like this: 
a poet came, 
lightly opened his lips, 
and the inspired fool burst into song 
if you please! 
But it seems, 
before they can launch into a song, 
poets must tramp for days with callused feet, 
and the sluggish fish of the imagination 
flounders softly in the slush of the heart. 
And while, with twittering rhymes, they boil a broth 
of loves and nightingales, 
the tongueless street merely writhes 
for lack of something to shout or say. 
In our pride, we raise up again 
the cities' towers of Babel, 
but god, 
confusing tongues, 
grinds 
cities to pasture. 
In silence the street pushed torment. 
A shout stood erect in the gullet. 
Wedged in the throat, 
bulging taxis and bony cabs bristled. 
Pedestrians have trodden my chest 
flatter than consumption. 
The city has locked the road in gloom.
But when 
nevertheless!  
the street coughed up the crush on the square, 
pushing away the portico that was treading on its throat, 
it looked as if: 
in choirs of an archangel's chorale, 
god, who has been plundered, was advancing in 
wrath! 
But the street, squatting down, bawled: 
"Let's go and guzzle!" 
Krupps and Krupplets1 paint 
a bristling of menacing brows on the city, 
but in the mouth 
corpselets of dead words putrefy; 
and only two thrive and grow fat: 
"swine," 
and another besides, 
apparently - "borsch." 
Poets, 
soaked in plaints and sobs, 
break from the street, rumpling their matted hair 
over: "How with two such words celebrate 
a young lady 
and love 
and a floweret under the dew?" 
In the poets' wake 
thousands of street folk: 
students, 
prostitutes, 
salesmen. 
Gentlemen! 
Stop! 
thousands of street folk: 
students, 
prostitutes, 
salesmen. 
Gentlemen! 
Stop! 
You are no beggars; 
how dare you beg for alms! 
We in our vigour, 
whose stride measures yards, 
must not listen, but tear them apart 
them, 
glued like a special supplement 
to each double bed! 
Are we to ask them humbly: 
"Assist me!" 
Implore for a hymn 
or an oratorio! 
We ourselves are creators within a burning hymn  
the hum of mills and laboratories. 
What is Faust to me, 
in a fairy splash of rockets 
gliding with Mephistopheles on the celestial parquet! 
I know  
a nail in my boot 
is more nightmarish than Goethe's fantasy! 
I, 
the most golden-mouthed, 
whose every word 
gives a new birthday to the soul, 
gives a name-day to the body, 
I adjure you: 
the minutest living speck 
is worth more than what I'll do or did! 
Listen! 
It is today's brazen-lipped Zarathustra 
who preaches, 
dashing about and groaning! 
We, 
our face like a crumpled sheet, 
our lips pendulant like a chandelier; 
we, 
the convicts of the City Leprous, 
where gold and filth spawned leper's sores, 
we are purer than the azure of Venice, 
washed by both the sea and the sun! 
I spit on the fact 
that neither Homer nor Ovid 
invented characters like us, 
pock-marked with soot. 
I know 
the sun would dim, on seeing 
the gold fields of our souls! 
Sinews and muscles are surer than prayers. 
Must we implore the charity of the times! 
We 
each one of us  
hold in our fists 
the driving belts of the worlds! 
This led to my Golgothas in the halls 
of Petrograd, Moscow, Odessa, and Kiev, 
where not a man 
but 
shouted: 
"Crucify, 
crucify him!" 
But for me  
all of you people, 
even those that harmed me  
you are dearer, more precious than anything. 
Have you seen 
a dog lick the hand that thrashed it?! 
I, 
mocked by my contemporaries 
like a prolonged 
dirty joke, 
I perceive whom no one sees, 
crossing the mountains of time. 
Where men's eyes stop short, 
there, at the head of hungry hordes, 
the year 1916 cometh 
in the thorny crown of revolutions. 
In your midst, his precursor, 
I am where pain is everywhere; 
on each drop of the tear-flow 
I have nailed myself on the cross. 
Nothing is left to forgive. 
I've cauterised the souls where tenderness was bred. 
It was harder than taking 
a thousand thousand Bastilles! 
And when, 
the rebellion 
his advent announcing, 
you step to meet the saviour 
then I 
shall root up my soul; 
I'll trample it hard 
till it spread 
in blood; and I offer you this as a banner.


 



