Yehuda Amichai - Selected Poetry
Yehuda Amichai - Selected Poetry
Yehuda Amichai - Selected Poetry
1924-2000
Yehuda Amichai was one of the leading contemporary Hebrew poets. His
contribution extends beyond his own literary achievements to an influence that
helped create a modern Israeli poetry.
I
Amichai's poetry spans a range of emotions, from laughter to sadness to self-
mockery. His work emphasizes the individual who, although conscious and
integrally part of the collective experience, ultimately views the world through his
personal lens. This individual perspective evinces a candid, honest approach to
the outside world.
Amichai's canon is also impressive for the volume of work it encompasses, and
many individual books of poetry appeared in rapid succession, as well as
Collected Poems (1963) and Selected Works of 1981. Shirei Yerushalayim
(“Poems of Jerusalem,” 1987) is a bilingual edition accompanied by photographs
of the city, a model Amichai used again in 1992 for other poems, scenes, and
photos. In addition to his numerous volumes of poetry, he has written short
stories, two novels, radio sketches, and children's literature. Much of his work has
been translated into other languages.
II
God Full of Mercy
III
Archaelogists throw and arch hooligans throw,
Kidneys throw stones and gall bladders throw,
Head stones and forehead stones and the heart of a stone,
Stones shaped like a screaming mouth
And stones fitting your eyes
Like a pair of glasses,
The past throws stones at the future,
And all of them fall on the present.
Weeping stones and laughing gravel stones,
Even God in the Bible threw stones,
Even the Urim and Tumim were thrown
And got stuck in the breastplate of justice,
And Herod threw stones and what came out was a Temple.
IV
The First Rain
V
I'm not a car, I'm a person,
A man-god, a god-man
Whose days are numbered. Hallelujah.
Ein Yahav
Yad Mordechai
VI
And I said to myself: Everyone is attached to his own lament
as to a parachute. Slowly he descends and slowly hovers
until he touches the hard place.
VII
he begins to forget.
And his soul is seasoned, his soul
is very professional.
Only his body remains forever
an amateur. It tries and it misses,
gets muddled, doesn't learn a thing,
drunk and blind in its pleasures
and its pains.
He will die as figs die in autumn,
Shriveled and full of himself and sweet,
the leaves growing dry on the ground,
the bare branches pointing to the place
where there's time for everything.
They amputated
Your thighs off my hips.
As far as I'm concerned
They are all surgeons. All of them.
They dismantled us
Each from the other.
As far as I'm concerned
They are all engineers. All of them.
VIII
A Precise Woman
IX
And We Shall Not Get Excited
Before
X
Do Not Accept
XI
the last words and without ever understandig,
and put flagpoles on top of my house and a bob shelter
underneath. And go out on rads made only for
returning and go through all the apalling
stations—cat,stick,fire,water,butcher,
between the kid and the angel of death?
Half the people love,
half the people hate.
And where is my place between such well-matched halves,
and through what crack will I see the white housing
projects of my dreams and the bare foot runners
on the sands or, at least, the waving of a girl's
kerchief, beside the mound?
XII
My multicolored shirt has no meaning of love --
it looks like an air photo of a railway station.
Yet I wanted to be calm, like a mound with all its cities destroyed,
and tranquil, like a full cemetery.
I Know a Man
I know a man
who photographed the view he saw
from the window of the room where he made love
and not the face of the woman he loved there.
XIII
Perforce, and taught me to charge ahead.
I want to die in My own bed.
XIV
Jerusalem
Love of Jerusalem
XV
Memorial Day for the War Dead
The flautist's mouth will stay like that for many days.
A dead soldier swims above little heads
with the swimming movements of the dead,
with the ancient error the dead have
about the place of the living water.
XVI
A man whose son died in the war walks in the street
like a woman with a dead embryo in her womb.
"Behind all this some great happiness is hiding."
* The traditional burial place in Hebron of Abraham and the other Patriarchs and
patriarchs of Israel.
My Father
XVII
Near the Wall of the House
XVIII
On Rabbi Kook’s Street
XIX
And I'm like someone standing in the Judean desert, looking at a sign:
"Sea Level"
He cannot see the sea, but he knows.
XX
The trees bend in the wind,
And stones fly from all four winds,
Into all four winds. They throw stones,
Throw this land, one at the other,
But the land always falls back to the land.
They throw the land, want to get rid of it.
Its stones, its soil, but you can't get rid of it.
They throw stones, throw stones at me
In 1936, 1938, 1948, 1988,
Semites throw at Semites and anti-Semites at anti-Semites,
Evil men throw and just men throw,
Sinners throw and tempters throw,
Geologists throw and theologists throw,
Archaelogists throw and archhooligans throw,
Kidneys throw stones and gall bladders throw,
Head stones and forehead stones and the heart of a stone,
Stones shaped like a screaming mouth
And stones fitting your eyes
Like a pair of glasses,
The past throws stones at the future,
And all of them fall on the present.
Weeping stones and laughing gravel stones,
Even God in the Bible threw stones,
Even the Urim and Tumim were thrown
And got stuck in the beastplate of justice,
And Herod threw stones and what came out was a Temple.
XXI
Please do not throw any more stones,
You are moving the land,
The holy, whole, open land,
You are moving it to the sea
And the sea doesn't want it
The sea says, not in me.
XXII
to resemble him
as he was twenty eight years ago.
Year by year they look more alike.
His old parents come almost daily
to sit on a bench
and look at him.
Tourists
Once I sat on the steps by agate at David's Tower, I placed my two heavy baskets
at my side. A group of tourists was standing around their guide and I became
their target marker. "You see that man with the baskets? Just right of his head
there's an arch from the Roman period. Just right of his head." "But he's moving,
he's moving!" I said to myself: redemption will come only if their guide tells
them, "You see that arch from the Roman period? It's not important: but next to
it, left and down a bit, there sits a man who's bought fruit and vegetables for his
family."
XXIII
Try to Remember Some Details
XXIV
I'm a person for the surface of the earth.
Low places, caves and wells
Frighten me. Mountain peaks
And tall buildings scare me.
I'm not like an inserted fork,
Not a cutting knife, not a stuck spoon.
Wildpeace
XXV
without the big noise of beating swords into ploughshares,
without words, without
the thud of the heavy rubber stamp: let it be
light, floating, like lazy white foam.
A little rest for the wounds - who speaks of healing?
(And the howl of the orphans is passed from one generation
to the next, as in a relay race:
the baton never falls.)
Let it come
like wildflowers,
suddenly, because the field
must have it: wildpeace.
XXVI
Sometimes I come crashing down inside myself
without anyone noticing. I'm like an ambulance
on two legs, hauling the patient
inside me to Last Aid
with the wailing of cry of a siren,
and people think it's ordinary speech.
XXVII