Conversation with a Stone by Wislawa Szymborska
by Steven McCabe
I knock at the stone’s front door.
“It’s only me, let me come in.
I want to enter your insides,
have a look round,
breathe my fill of you.”
“Go away,” says the stone.
“I’m shut tight.
Even if you break me to pieces,
we’ll all still be closed.
You can grind us to sand,
we still won’t let you in.”
I knock at the stone’s front door.
“It’s only me, let me come in.
I’ve come out of pure curiosity.
Only life can quench it.
I mean to stroll through your palace,
then go calling on a leaf, a drop of water.
I don’t have much time.
My mortality should touch you.”
“I’m made of stone,” says the stone,
“and must therefore keep a straight face.
Go away.
I don’t have the muscles to laugh.”
I knock at the stone’s front door.
“It’s only me, let me come in.
I hear you have great empty halls inside you,
unseen, their beauty in vain,
soundless, not echoing anyone’s steps.
Admit you don’t know them well yourself.”
“Great and empty, true enough,” says the stone,
“but there isn’t any room.
Beautiful, perhaps, but not to the taste
of your poor senses.
You may get to know me, but you’ll never know me through.
My whole surface is turned toward you,
all my insides turned away.”
I knock at the stone’s front door.
“It’s only me, let me come in.
I don’t seek refuge for eternity.
I’m not unhappy.
I’m not homeless.
My world is worth returning to.
I’ll enter and exit empty-handed.
And my proof I was there
will be only words,
which no one will believe.”
“You shall not enter,” says the stone.
“You lack the sense of taking part.
No other sense can make up for your missing sense of taking part.
Even sight heightened to become all-seeing
will do you no good without a sense of taking part.
You shall not enter, you have only a sense of what that sense should be,
only its seed, imagination.”
I knock at the stone’s front door.
“It’s only me, let me come in.
I haven’t got two thousand centuries,
so let me come under your roof.”
“If you don’t believe me,” says the stone,
“just ask the leaf, it will tell you the same.
Ask a drop of water, it will say what the leaf has said.
And, finally, ask a hair from your own head.
I am bursting with laughter, yes, laughter, vast laughter,
although I don’t know how to laugh.”
I knock at the stone’s front door.
“It’s only me, let me come in.”
“I don’t have a door,” says the stone.
Translated from the Polish by Stanislaw Baranczak and Clare Cavenagh
Steve, I particularly liked the images following “we still won’t let you in” and “only its seed, imagination” which have a wonderful drifting into depth feel. Pierre
Hi Pierre. The poem has such a feeling of wandering, somehow, into ‘no space’ that I wanted to create a sense of ‘entry’ within the images. Thank you for your thoughts.
Questions for you Steve: I am following your blog but don’t receive email notifications of your new posts – Is this because you don’t have a ‘Follow by Email’ button (I joined by the upper ‘Follow’ button)? Is your process to make your drawings based on a particular poem? Are some of the drawing’s details above out of focus on purpose? How do you get the lighter after- images in your drawing?
I really like the large drawing at the beginning from which, I think, all of the smaller drawings are taken…
Hi John, I’m not too sure about how to handle the settings. But I did hear from someone who received an email notification of this most recent posting… Generally I’ve been using drawings already done. I created so many the last few years it’s easy to find specific work that contains elements sympathetic to the text. Yes, anything out of focus or ‘shuddering’ (vibrating?) is done on purpose. I fool around with Photoshop to alter the drawings… Yes you’re right. The larger drawing was the source of the other images. Thank you for writing.
You are welcome Steve and thank you for the info on your work. I will watch out for email notifications of your posts but so far – none. If you want to include the ‘Notify Me By Email’ widget it’s available under Dashboard – Appearance – Widgets, or at least it is on my theme…
Thanks John, I found it.
Oh, this is so great! I’m hooked.
Thank you so much!
This is fantastic. I’ve always loved her poetry and was sad to learn of her passing. Your artwork compliments her words beautifully. You’ve brought her back to life!
Thank you soonie. Yes I agree, her work is worth reading and rereading many times. I’m glad you feel the images dovetail with her words.