Century in a Hurry

Friends, hurry up and wonder that snow is still white. - Mircea Dinescu

It's morning
And my umbrella
Is on another trolley-bus.
One person forgets his umbrella,
Another his gloves. The one,
The inviting open door. The other,
The biting north wind.
On one, from the floor above,
Boiling hot water is poured over his head.
On the other, refuse.
In the department store
A young woman loses her fortune
Wrapped in foil.
A surgeon leaves his scissors
In my abdomen.
A construction crew
Leaves the road unfinished.
A sales clerk
Forgets to give me my change.
The echo forgets how to reply,
Repeating 'bowwow!' instead of 'boohoo!'
A lie forgets where it came from
And says that it came from heaven.
The riddle forgets its answer,
The fool his question.
Someone forgets the piece of meat in his mouth,
Someone else the mouth of his piece of meat.
Someone can be very smart
But forget to heed his heart.
A poet forgets to beget himself,
A hangman forgets to die.
It's raining
And my umbrella is on another trolley-bus.
A young heart forgets to beat,
A boot
Forgets to remove its spurs
From the palms of the fallen leaf.
One person sleeps
With his chest a void,
Forgetting the heavens above,
Another grasps his broadsword's edge
With his bare hand,
Forgetting that it's unsheathed.
One forgets the beginning of the song.
Another the rest of the words. Still another
Forgets his mother.
It's raining
And my umbrella
Is on another trolley-bus.
One loses his eyes to the other.
The other - his ear under the door.
Someone forgets where he's going. Someone else
Where he comes from.
The mouth forgets the light.
The idea - whoever conceived it.
One person forgets at the heart of Hiroshima
The atom bomb.
Another forgets how to get out of the cave.
A promise is forgotten,
An oath.
Flowers
Forget to sprout,
Springs forget to flow.

Grigore Vieru was born in 1935 and is a graduate of 'Ion Creanga' State Pedagogical University in Chisinau. He has published thirteen books of poetry since 1957. The translation published here is reproduced with permission from Singular Destinies, Contemporary Poets of Bessarabia (The Cartier Press, Chisinau, Moldova, 2003), edited and translated by Cristina Cirstea, Adam J. Sorkin and Sean Cotter..

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