The Art of Marxism: poetry

Hymn to Life

by Nāzım Hikmet Ran


The hair falling on your forehead

      suddenly lifted.

Suddenly something stirred on the ground.

The trees are whispering

      in the dark.

Your bare arms will be cold.

Far off

where we can't see,

  the moon must be rising.

It hasn't reached us yet,

slipping through the leaves

  to light up your shoulder.

But I know

  a wind comes up with the moon.

The trees are whispering.

Your bare arms will be cold.

From above,

from the branches lost in the dark,

    something dropped at your feet.

You moved closer to me.

Under my hand your bare flesh is like the fuzzy skin of a fruit.

Neither a song of the heart nor "common sense"-

before the trees, birds, and insects,

my hand on my wife's flesh

    is thinking.

Tonight my hand

    can't read or write.

Neither loving nor unloving...

It's the tongue of a leopard at a spring,

        a grape leaf,

        a wolf's paw.

To move, breathe, eat, drink.

My hand is like a seed

    splitting open underground.

Neither a song of the heart nor "common sense,"

neither loving nor unloving.

My hand thinking on my wife's flesh

      is the hand of the first man.

Like a root that finds water underground,

it says to me:

"To eat, drink, cold, hot, struggle, smell, color-

not to live in order to die

but to die to live..."

And now

as red female hair blows across my face,

as something stirs on the ground,

as the trees whisper in the dark,

and as the moon rises far off

    where we can't see,

my hand on my wife's flesh

before the trees, birds, and insects,

I want the right of life,

of the leopard at the spring, of the seed splitting open-

      I want the right of the first man.

      1937