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It has come to this: I'm
sitting under a tree
beside a river
on a sunny morning.
It's an
insignificant event
and won't go down in history.
It's not battles and
pacts,
where motives are scrutinized,
or noteworthy
tyrannicides.
And yet I'm sitting by this
river, that's a fact.
And since I'm here
I must have come from
somewhere,
and before that
I must have turned up in many other
places,
exactly like the conquerors of nations
before setting
sail.
Even a passing moment has
its fertile past,
its Friday before Saturday,
its May before June.
Its
horizons are no less real
than those that a marshal's field glasses might
scan.
This tree is a poplar that's
been rooted here for years.
The river is the Raba; it didn't spring up
yesterday.
The path leading through the bushes
wasn't beaten last
week.
The wind had to blow the clouds here
before it could blow them
away.
And though nothing much is
going on nearby,
the world is no poorer in details for that.
It's just as
grounded, just as definite
as when migrating races held it
captive.
Conspiracies aren't the only
things shrouded in silence.
Retinues of reasons don't trail coronations
alone.
Anniversaries of revolutions may roll around,
but so do oval
pebbles encircling the bay.
The tapestry of circumstance
is intricate and dense.
Ants stitching in the grass.
The grass sewn into
the ground.
The pattern of a wave being needled by a twig.
So it happens that I am and
look.
Above me a white butterfly is fluttering through the air
on wings
that are its alone,
and a shadow skims through my hands
that is none other
than itself, no one else's but its own.
When I see such things, I'm
no longer sure
that what's important
is more important than what's
not.
~ Wislawa Szymborska
~
(Poems New and Collected
1957-1997,
trans. S. Baranczak and C. Cavanagh)
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