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  • #1
    Vladimir Mayakovsky
    “Я знаю силу слов я знаю слов набат
    Они не те которым рукоплещут ложи
    От слов таких срываются гроба
    шагать четверкою своих дубовых ножек.

    I know the sway of words, I know their warnings
    They’re not those applauded from the boxes
    From words such as these coffins break free
    Striding forth on their four oaken legs.”
    Vladimir Mayakovsky

  • #2
    Vladimir Mayakovsky
    “To his Own Beloved Self
    The Author Dedicates
    These Lines"

    Six.
    Ponderous. The chimes of a clock.
    “Render unto Caesar ... render unto God...”
    But where’s
    someone like me to dock?
    Where’11 I find a lair?

    Were I
    like the ocean of oceans little,
    on the tiptoes of waves I’d rise,
    I’d strain, a tide, to caress the moon.
    Where to find someone to love
    of my size,
    the sky too small for her to fit in?

    Were I poor
    as a multimillionaire,
    it’d still be tough.
    What’s money for the soul? –
    thief insatiable.
    The gold
    of all the Californias isn’t enough
    for my desires’ riotous horde.

    I wish I were tongue-tied,
    like Dante or Petrarch,
    able to fire a woman’s heart,
    reduce it to ashes with verse-filled pages!
    My words
    and my love
    form a triumphal arch:
    through it, in all their splendour,
    leaving no trace, will pass
    the inamoratas of all the ages!

    Were I
    as quiet as thunder,
    how I’d wail and whine!
    One groan of mine
    would start the world’s crumbling cloister shivering.
    And if
    I’d end up by roaring
    with all of its power of lungs and more –
    the comets, distressed, would wring their hands
    and from the sky’s roof
    leap in a fever.

    If I were dim as the sun,
    night I’d drill
    with the rays of my eyes,
    and also
    all by my lonesome,
    radiant self
    build up the earth’s shriveled bosom.

    On I’ll pass,
    dragging my huge love behind me.
    On what
    feverish night, deliria-ridden,
    by what Goliaths was I begot –
    I, so big
    and by no one needed?”
    Vladimir Mayakovsky

  • #3
    Joseph Brodsky
    “Mandelstam was, one is tempted to say, a modern Orpheus: sent to hell, he never returned, while his widow dodged across one-sixth of the earth's surface, clutching the saucepan with his songs rolled up inside, memorizing them by night in the event they were found by Furies with a search warrant. These are our metamorphoses, our myths.”
    Joseph Brodsky, Less Than One: Selected Essays

  • #4
    Osip Mandelstam
    “Destroy your manuscript, but save whatever you have inscribed in the margin out of boredom, out of helplessness, and, as it were, in a dream. (The Egyptian Stamp)”
    Osip Mandelstam, The Noise of Time: Selected Prose



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