Five Soldiers
1946
(War Diary )
How did I find myself suddenly so distant?
(I could never understand
how much the moment when you sit
between two fires can be annihilated).
I had to defend myself so as to live.
It had slipped so mysteriously from my body
and scattered around me
so that I was inseparably tied
to reality and to my companions.
We went on together
bound tight by necessity
with hearts changed
from breast to breast.
We weren’t permitted to speak
to ourselves.
We turned our eyes almost as one:
on the far horizon
a thousand birds were lost in disarray.
We had already covered
a great distance on foot.
At that point where we found ourselves
we could make out
a red signpost.
We wondered if it could mark
the border that separates
the past from the future.
At that point we tightened the straps of our helmets
at the cheek, trying to breathe
with the frigid air
some thought that might hold up
in this sad landscape.
The roofs of the houses
echo the sounds
of our footsteps in fear.
We see our tired shadows
mirrored in the cloudy eyes of the sky
as we move carefully ahead
holding each other by the hand
across the line that etches
the brow of war.
Behind the dark apartment building
waits the hairy hand
of Polyphemus.
We are five companions
holding each other by the hand,
our hearts leached
in the snow of night
and the painted fields
of spring.
Soon it began to grow light.
At first my eyes watered
then I got used to it and I could make out
my mother’s hand
as it came to moisten my eyelashes.
Sunk in the mud
I hold my rifle tight in my hand.
For a moment I felt my head
detach itself from my body
and go to another body
and then to another and another.
The landscape was full of headless bodies
and only my head moved around
from body to body.
What had happened, then,
to the heads of my companions?
Someone pulled the screen of rain across
and I felt as if I were alone
so I tried to take advantage
of this moment to look at myself.
(The clouds are not far above the earth.
They have moved down.
I believe that by morning
there won’t be anything left.
They’ll begin with the tall apartment buildings
and the smokestacks of Piraeus.
The walls will buckle and break bit by bit.
Then it will be the turn of the houses.
Finally they’ll demolish the slums
and the wooden hovels at Dourgouti).
Then, on the opposite corner
five men appeared.
They were five men of ancient Athens
in heavy winter tunics.
It was high time because the earth
had become liquid and stormy.
We crawled towards them
and we all saw
our City
tossing about,
rudderless and drunken.
Slowly, completely unexpectedly
beside these men
we discovered we were human
and we had a heart in our breast.
The German helmets
pulled low on the forehead
no longer prevented us from seeing our eyes.
My Beloved
greeted me at the entrance to the park
with her blue scarf.
But it was futile.
A noise began to rise
from one side of the city to the other.
All five of us immediately dived
into the stormy sea.
As we swam
we felt our hearts bending
for the first time like a cypress.
We reached the avenue and could see
the endless row of those who’d been hanged
My Mother and my Beloved
My Mother and my Beloved
My Mother and my Beloved
A thousand times.
My Mother and my Beloved.
And the shells passing overhead
from the boats at Phaleron
formed a multicolored
festive arbor.
The five companions were anxious when we were late
but they held on strongly to our position.
In the momentary flashes of the rifles
one could make out
the thin red thread that linked our hearts.
The sky and the clouds
descended towards the city.
Around us the sea swelled
and the waves
burned the eyes in our faces.
From the hill of Ardittos
a loudspeaker could be heard cutting out:
“Athens never dies. It is victorious.”
But the dawn seemed as if it would never come.
As they descended, the sky
and the clouds rested on some high buildings
and the smokestacks of Piraeus.
And the sea rose up from below and caught us.
Suddenly in the storm a light appeared
and your voice echoed loudly
before the wave could snatch it.
It was strong enough to bear us up
for quite some time on the surface.
But it was already too late.
Now, just as our hearts
opened their doors wide
to the love of the earth
the vast sea suddenly dried up
and the waves became black birds.
Your voice was useless now
that we found ourselves lying stretched out
among the ruins
with the others passing by and trampling on us.
We struggled with the waves and on the sea
day and night
but we didn’t learn any more
than what a crumb of earth knows.
Ask the smallest leaf on the tree in our courtyard
that plays lightly in the wind
and it will tell you why
we five beardless soldiers of December
straddled the border of death
with so much love.
Five Soldiers
(War Diary )
How did I find myself suddenly so distant?
(I could never understand
how much the moment when you sit
between two fires can be annihilated).
I had to defend myself so as to live.
It had slipped so mysteriously from my body
and scattered around me
so that I was inseparably tied
to reality and to my companions.
We went on together
bound tight by necessity
with hearts changed
from breast to breast.
We weren’t permitted to speak
to ourselves.
We turned our eyes almost as one:
on the far horizon
a thousand birds were lost in disarray.
We had already covered
a great distance on foot.
At that point where we found ourselves
we could make out
a red signpost.
We wondered if it could mark
the border that separates
the past from the future.
At that point we tightened the straps of our helmets
at the cheek, trying to breathe
with the frigid air
some thought that might hold up
in this sad landscape.
The roofs of the houses
echo the sounds
of our footsteps in fear.
We see our tired shadows
mirrored in the cloudy eyes of the sky
as we move carefully ahead
holding each other by the hand
across the line that etches
the brow of war.
Behind the dark apartment building
waits the hairy hand
of Polyphemus.
We are five companions
holding each other by the hand,
our hearts leached
in the snow of night
and the painted fields
of spring.
Soon it began to grow light.
At first my eyes watered
then I got used to it and I could make out
my mother’s hand
as it came to moisten my eyelashes.
Sunk in the mud
I hold my rifle tight in my hand.
For a moment I felt my head
detach itself from my body
and go to another body
and then to another and another.
The landscape was full of headless bodies
and only my head moved around
from body to body.
What had happened, then,
to the heads of my companions?
Someone pulled the screen of rain across
and I felt as if I were alone
so I tried to take advantage
of this moment to look at myself.
(The clouds are not far above the earth.
They have moved down.
I believe that by morning
there won’t be anything left.
They’ll begin with the tall apartment buildings
and the smokestacks of Piraeus.
The walls will buckle and break bit by bit.
Then it will be the turn of the houses.
Finally they’ll demolish the slums
and the wooden hovels at Dourgouti).
Then, on the opposite corner
five men appeared.
They were five men of ancient Athens
in heavy winter tunics.
It was high time because the earth
had become liquid and stormy.
We crawled towards them
and we all saw
our City
tossing about,
rudderless and drunken.
Slowly, completely unexpectedly
beside these men
we discovered we were human
and we had a heart in our breast.
The German helmets
pulled low on the forehead
no longer prevented us from seeing our eyes.
My Beloved
greeted me at the entrance to the park
with her blue scarf.
But it was futile.
A noise began to rise
from one side of the city to the other.
All five of us immediately dived
into the stormy sea.
As we swam
we felt our hearts bending
for the first time like a cypress.
We reached the avenue and could see
the endless row of those who’d been hanged
My Mother and my Beloved
My Mother and my Beloved
My Mother and my Beloved
A thousand times.
My Mother and my Beloved.
And the shells passing overhead
from the boats at Phaleron
formed a multicolored
festive arbor.
The five companions were anxious when we were late
but they held on strongly to our position.
In the momentary flashes of the rifles
one could make out
the thin red thread that linked our hearts.
The sky and the clouds
descended towards the city.
Around us the sea swelled
and the waves
burned the eyes in our faces.
From the hill of Ardittos
a loudspeaker could be heard cutting out:
“Athens never dies. It is victorious.”
But the dawn seemed as if it would never come.
As they descended, the sky
and the clouds rested on some high buildings
and the smokestacks of Piraeus.
And the sea rose up from below and caught us.
Suddenly in the storm a light appeared
and your voice echoed loudly
before the wave could snatch it.
It was strong enough to bear us up
for quite some time on the surface.
But it was already too late.
Now, just as our hearts
opened their doors wide
to the love of the earth
the vast sea suddenly dried up
and the waves became black birds.
Your voice was useless now
that we found ourselves lying stretched out
among the ruins
with the others passing by and trampling on us.
We struggled with the waves and on the sea
day and night
but we didn’t learn any more
than what a crumb of earth knows.
Ask the smallest leaf on the tree in our courtyard
that plays lightly in the wind
and it will tell you why
we five beardless soldiers of December
straddled the border of death
with so much love.