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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Adam Zagajewski
Adam Zagajewski
Poet, novelist, essayist Adam Zagajewski was born in Lwów in 1945. He spent his childhood in Silesia and then in Cracow, where he graduated from Jagiellonian University. Zagajewski first became...
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FURTHER READING
Poems About Aging
Affirmation
by Donald Hall
Age
by Robert Creeley
At Thirty
by Lynda Hull
Blues
by Elizabeth Alexander
Do not go gentle into that good night
by Dylan Thomas
El Dorado
by Edgar Allan Poe
First Gestures
by Julia Spicher Kasdorf
Forgetfulness
by Billy Collins
In View of the Fact
by A. R. Ammons
My Lost Youth
by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Poem at Thirty
by Michael Ryan
Since Nine—
by C. P. Cavafy
The Edges of Time
by Kay Ryan
The Human Seasons
by John Keats
The Young Man's Song
by W. B. Yeats
To Chloe: Who for his sake wished herself younger
by William Cartwright
When You are Old
by W. B. Yeats
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Self-Portrait  
by Adam Zagajewski
Translated by Clare Cavanagh

Between the computer, a pencil, and a typewriter
half my day passes. One day it will be half a century.
I live in strange cities and sometimes talk
with strangers about matters strange to me.
I listen to music a lot: Bach, Mahler, Chopin, Shostakovich.
I see three elements in music: weakness, power, and pain.
The fourth has no name.
I read poets, living and dead, who teach me
tenacity, faith, and pride. I try to understand
the great philosophers--but usually catch just
scraps of their precious thoughts.
I like to take long walks on Paris streets
and watch my fellow creatures, quickened by envy,
anger, desire; to trace a silver coin
passing from hand to hand as it slowly
loses its round shape (the emperor's profile is erased).
Beside me trees expressing nothing
but a green, indifferent perfection.
Black birds pace the fields,
waiting patiently like Spanish widows.
I'm no longer young, but someone else is always older.
I like deep sleep, when I cease to exist,
and fast bike rides on country roads when poplars and houses
dissolve like cumuli on sunny days.
Sometimes in museums the paintings speak to me
and irony suddenly vanishes.
I love gazing at my wife's face.
Every Sunday I call my father.
Every other week I meet with friends,
thus proving my fidelity.
My country freed itself from one evil. I wish
another liberation would follow. 
Could I help in this? I don't know.
I'm truly not a child of the ocean,
as Antonio Machado wrote about himself,
but a child of air, mint and cello
and not all the ways of the high world
cross paths with the life that--so far--
belongs to me.



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From Mysticism for Beginners by Adam Zagajewski, translated by Claire Cavanaugh. Translation copyright © 1997 by Farrar, Straus & Giroux, LLC. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

CAUTION: Users are warned that this work is protected under copyright laws and downloading is strictly prohibited. The right to reproduce or transfer the work via any medium must be secured with Farrar, Straus, & Giroux, LLC.

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