1219: from "Elegy for the Times" by Adonis, translated by Robyn Creswell

1219: from "Elegy for the Times" by Adonis, translated by Robyn Creswell
Transcript
I’m Major Jackson and this is The Slowdown.
This summer, at an artist retreat in Italy, I took morning walks with new friends. We hailed from all parts of the globe. One does large scale photographs, another does sound installation, another a painter, a filmmaker, a composer, and, like me, a poet – some of us Americans, one of us from Ukraine, another from Palestine, another from the Philippines. Through fields of bright red poppies, our talk mostly covered our projects, the joys of making art, the fine balance of caring for elders and children while tending to our practices. Eventually, a few began to testify to political realities as the backdrop to their artmaking.
An Iranian friend shared her story about how she and her family fled war in the 80s. My father decided to stay through the first wave of attacks, she said; life went on but with fighting around us. Fear was in abundance; food was not, she said. Her father made a different choice when a neighboring country invaded again. They were able to escape through cunning and influence. Her work powerfully addresses displacement and complicates notions of home.
For stateless people, writing poems, taking pictures, composing songs is precarious, but making art happens, nonetheless. Often, it is a counter insistence of one’s presence on earth. Today’s poem is a humanizing statement of profound sorrow borne of conflict and exile.
from “Elegy for the Times”
by Adonis, translated by Robyn Creswell
Trucks of exile
cross the borders
through songs of exile
and sighing flames.
The wind is against us and the ash of war covers the earth. We see our spirit flash
on a razor blade, a helmet’s curve. The brackish springs of autumn salt our wounds.
Doom drags at history’s face—our history needled with terror, a meadow of wild
thorns.
In what salt rivers will we wash this story, stale with the smell of old maids and
widows back from the hajj, our history stained with the sweat of dervishes’ loins, its
springtime a feast for locusts?
Night thickens and a new day crawls forth over dead sparrows. The door rattles
but doesn’t open. We cry out and dream of weeping and the eyes have no tears.
My country is a woman in heat, a bridge of lusts. Mercenaries cross her, applauded
by the massing sands. From distant balconies we see what there is to see: animals
slaughtered on the graves of children; smoking censers for holy saints; the black rock of
tombstones. The fields are full of bones and vultures. The heroic statues soft cadavers.
So we go, chests bared to the sea. Old laments sleep under our tongues and our
words have no heirs.
We reach out for alien islands, scenting a virgin strangeness in the sea’s abyss. We
hear the sorrowful moan of our ships at port. Sorrow: a new moon rising, evil in its
infancy. Rivers issue into the dead sea, where the night births weddings of sea scum and
sand, locusts and sand.
So we go and fear scythes us down, crying out on muddy slopes. The earth bleeds
all around us. The sea is a green wall. "from 'Elegy for the Times'" by Adonis, translated by Robyn Creswell. Used by permission of the translator.


