The Art of Marxism: poetry

Letter to My Wife

by Nāzım Hikmet Ran


          11-11-19933

          Bursa Prison

My one and only!

Your last letter says:

"My head is throbbing,

  my heart is stunned!"

You say:

"If they hang you,

  if I lose you,

    I'll die!"

You'll live, my dear-

my memory will vanish like black smoke in the wind.

Of course you'll live, red-haired lady of my heart:

in the twentieth century

    grief lasts

      at most a year.

Death-

a body swinging from a rope.

My heart

  can't accept such a death.

But

you can bet

if some poor gypsy's hairy black

  spidery hand

    slips a noose

    around my neck,

they'll look in vain for fear

    in Nazim's

      blue eyes!

In the twilight of my last morning

I

will see my friends and you,

and I'll go

to my grave

  regretting nothing but an unfinished song...

My wife!

Good-hearted,

golden,

eyes sweeter than honey-my bee!

Why did I write you

    they want to hang me?

The trial has hardly begun,

and they don't just pluck a man's head

      like a turnip.

Look, forget all this.

If you have any money,

  buy me some flannel underwear:

my sciatica is acting up again.

And don't forget,

a prisoner's wife

  must always think good thoughts.