Imagine striking a match that night in the cave:
use the cracks in the floor
to feel the cold.
Use crockery in order to feel the hunger.
And to feel
the desert - but the desert is everywhere.
Imagine striking a match in that
midnight cave,
the fire, the farm beasts in outline, the farm tools and
stuff;
and imagine, as you towel your face in the towel's folds,
the
bundled up Infant. And Mary and Joseph.
Imagine the kings, the caravans'
stilted procession
as they make for the cave, or rather three beams closing
in
and in on the star; the creaking of loads, the clink of a cowbell;
(but
in the cerulean thickening over the Infant
no bell and no echo of bell: He
hasn't earned it yet.)
Imagine the Lord, for the first time, from darkness,
and stranded
immensely in distance, recognising Himself in the Son,
of
Man: homeless, going out to Himself in a homeless one.
De Nativity Poems por Joseph Brodsky, publicado por by Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2001, traduzido por Seamus Heaney
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