| Zbigniew Herbert | |
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by Michael Weiss, March 21, 2007
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The Collected Poems: 1956-1998: Zbigniew HerbertFor those unfamiliar with Zbiginew Herbert, his collected poems have just come out in masterful translation by Alissa Valles. Herbert (1924-1998) was one of those battered sons of Poland who saw his country and people repeatedly swapped as the spoils of Hitler and Stalin. Unlike his most obvious analogue, Czeslaw Milosz, whose favorite lyric plaything was irony ("Learn to predict a fire with unerring precision / Then burn the house down to fulfill the prediction"), Herbert took refuge in the safety of objects. Philosophically, classicially minded, he cultivated his own modernist metaphysics in a world of flowers, diamonds, forests, even stools. Cities took on human characteristics, ancient wise men like Marcus Aurelius were apostrophized for their radiant humanity just as Europe, outside Herbert's window, ticked-away its most inhumane hour. He also created a funny, peremptory alter ego, Mr. Cogito, who had opinions and thoughts on everything. Cogito was Herbert's Zelig through the ages of philosophy, art and history.
Well, now I'm rather mad at myself. I came across this poem of Herbert's late last night just as I was publishing the final installment of my exchange with Rebecca Goldstein. I wish I'd seen it before then.
"Mr Cogito Tells of the Temptation of Spinoza"
Baruch Spinoza of Amsterdam
was seized by a desire to reach God
in his attic while polishing
lenses
he suddenly pierced a veil
and stood face to face
he spoke at length
(and when he spoke
his mind expanded
and his soul also)
he put questions
on human nature
--God stroked his beard absently
he inquired into the first cause
--God looked off into infinity
he asked after the final cause
--God cracked his knuckles
cleared his throat
when Spinoza fell silent
God spake
--you're a good talker Baruch
I like your geometrical Latin
and the clarity of your syntax
the symmetry of your proofs
but let us speak
of Things Truly
Great
--look at your hands
scarred and shaking
--you ruin your eyes
by sitting in the dark
--you eat poorly
you dress badly
--buy a new house
forgive Venetian mirrors
for relfecing surfaces
--forgive flowers in the hiar
the song sun by drunkards
--manage your income well
like your friend Descartes
--be cunning
like Erasmus
--dedicate a treatise
to Louis Quatorze
he won't read it anyway
--temper
the rational fury
it will topple thrones
and blacken the stars
--think of
a woman
who will give you a child
--you see Baruch
we speak of Great Things
--I want to be loved
by the unlearned and fierce
for they are the only ones
who truly hunger after me
now the veil falls
Spinoza is alone
he sees no golden cloud
nor a light in the heights
he sees darkness
he hears a stair creak
footsteps going down
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Michael is a contributing editor of Jewcy. His work has appeared in Slate, Gawker, New York, Democratiya, The New Criterion and The Weekly Standard. His blog is Snarksmith. More... |
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