To Urania

Iosif Aleksandrovich Brodsky 1940 ( Leningrad, RSFSR) – 1996 (New York City, New York)



To I.K.
        Everything has its limit, including sorrow.
        A windowpane stalls a stare. Nor does a grill abandon
        a leaf. One may rattle the keys, gurgle down a swallow.
        Loneless cubes a man at random.
        A camel sniffs at the rail with a resentful nostril;
        a perspective cuts emptiness deep and even.
        And what is space anyway if not the
        body's absence at every given
        point? That's why Urania's older sister Clio!
        in daylight or with the soot-rich lantern,
        you see the globe's pate free of any bio,
        you see she hides nothing, unlike the latter.
        There they are, blueberry-laden forests,
        rivers where the folk with bare hands catch sturgeon
        or the towns in whose soggy phone books
        you are starring no longer; father eastward surge on
        brown mountain ranges; wild mares carousing
        in tall sedge; the cheeckbones get yellower
        as they turn numerous. And still farther east, steam dreadnoughts
                                                        or cruisers,
        and the expanse grows blue like lace underwear.
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Submitted on June 22, 2016

Modified on March 23, 2023

49 sec read
81

Quick analysis:

Scheme ABCBDEFGCBHBIJCKLAIJMN
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 1,150
Words 161
Stanzas 1
Stanza Lengths 22

Iosif Aleksandrovich Brodsky

Iosif Aleksandrovich Brodsky (; Russian: Ио́сиф Алекса́ндрович Бро́дский [ɪˈosʲɪf ɐlʲɪˈksandrəvʲɪtɕ ˈbrotskʲɪj] (listen); 24 May 1940 – 28 January 1996) was a Russian-American poet and essayist. Born in Leningrad in 1940, Brodsky ran afoul of Soviet authorities and was expelled ("strongly advised" to emigrate) from the Soviet Union in 1972, settling in the United States with the help of W. H. Auden and other supporters. He taught thereafter at Mount Holyoke College, and at universities including Yale, Columbia, Cambridge, and Michigan. Brodsky was awarded the 1987 Nobel Prize in Literature "for an all-embracing authorship, imbued with clarity of thought and poetic intensity". He was appointed United States Poet Laureate in 1991. According to Professor Andrey Ranchin of Moscow State University: “Brodsky is the only modern Russian poet whose body of work has already been awarded the honorary title of a canonized classic... Brodsky's literary canonization is an exceptional phenomenon. No other contemporary Russian writer has been honored as the hero of such a number of memoir texts; no other has had so many conferences devoted to them”.  more…

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