Loss by Yevgeny Yevtushenko
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Russia has lost Russia in Russia.
Russia searches for itself
like a cut finger in snow,
a needle in a haystack,
like an old blind woman madly stretching her
hand in fog,
searching with hopeless incantation for her lost
milk cow.
We buried our icons.
We didn’t believe in our own great books.
We fight only with alien grievances.
Is it true that we didn’t survive under our own
yoke,
becoming for ourselves worse than foreign
enemies?
Is it true that we are doomed to live only in the silk
nightgown of dreams, eaten by moths? --
Or in numbered prison robes?
Is it true that epilepsy is our national character?
Or convulsions of pride?
Or convulsions of self-humiliation?
Ancient rebellions against new copper kopecks,
against such foreign fruits as potatoes are
now only a harmless dream.
Today’s rebellion swamps the entire Kremlin
like a mortal tide--
Is it true that we Russians have only one
unhappy choice?
The ghost of Tsar Ivan the Terrible?
Or the Ghost of Tsar Chaos?
So many imposters. Such “imposterity.”
Everyone is a leader, but no one leads.
We are confused as to which banners and
slogans to carry.
And such a fog in our heads
that everyone is wrong
and everyone is guilty in everything.
We already have walked enough in such fog,
in blood up to our knees.
Lord, you’ve already punished us enough.
Forgive us, pity us.
Is it true that we no longer exist?
Or are we not yet born?
We are birthing now,
But it’s so painful to be born again.
[1991]
--TRANSLATED FROM THE RUSSIAN BY JAMES RAGAN AND YEVGENY YEVTUSHENKO
From “20th Century Russian Poetry: Silver and Steel: An Anthology,” edited by Albert C. Todd and Max Hayward (Anchor Books: 1,078 pp., $19.95 paper)
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