Citizen, enemy, mama's boy, sucker, utter
garbage, panhandler, swine, refujew, verrucht;
a scalp so often scalded with boiling water
that the puny brain feels completely cooked.
Yes, we have dwelt here: in this concrete, brick, wooden
rubble which you now arrive to sift.
All our wires were crossed, barbed, tangled, or interwoven.
Also: we didn't love our women, but they conceived.
Sharp is the sound of pickax that hurts dead iron;
still, it's gentler than what we've been told or have said ourselves.
Stranger! move carefully through our carrion:
what seems carrion to you is freedom to our cells.
Leave our names alone. Don't reconstruct those vowels,
consonants, and so forth: they won't resemble larks
but a demented bloodhound whose maw devours
its own traces, feces, and barks, and barks.
Letter To An Archaeologist
Joseph Brodsky
(1)
Poem topics: I love you, alone, concrete, freedom, water, women, garbage, brain, enemy, stranger, sharp, iron, sound, citizen, love, I miss you, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
Submit Spanish Translation
Submit German Translation
Submit French Translation
About Letter To An Archaeologist
Letter To An Archaeologist is a poem by Joseph Brodsky. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
Write your comment about Letter To An Archaeologist poem by Joseph Brodsky
Best Poems of Joseph Brodsky