Aleksandr Sergeyevich
Pushkin (1799-1837) By V.I. Shukhayev
June 6th is the birth anniversary of Aleksandr Pushkin, the man
considered to be the father of modern Russian literature as well as being the
greatest Russian poet. I like his narrative poems and the beguiling nature of
his introspective style. “Thoughts” is a favourite of mine. This is the first
of two versions written in 1829.
If I walk the
noisy streets,
Or enter a
many thronged church,
Or sit among
the wild young generation,
I give way to
my thoughts.
I say to
myself: the years are fleeting,
And however
many there seem to be,
We must all
go under the eternal vault,
And someone’s
hour is already at hand.
When I look
at a solitary oak
I think: the
patriarch of the woods.
It will
outlive my forgotten age
As it
outlived that of my grandfathers’.
If I caress a
young child,
Immediately I
think: farewell!
I will yield
my place to you.
For I must
fade while your flower blooms.
Each day,
every hour
I habitually
follow my thoughts,
Trying to
guess from their number
The year
which brings my death.
And where
will fate send death to me?
In battle, in
my travels, or on the seas?
Or will the
neighbouring valley
Receive my
chilled ashes?
And although
to the senseless body
It is
indifferent wherever it rots,
Yet close to
my beloved countryside
I still would
prefer to rest.
And let it
be, beside the grave’s vault
That young
life forever will be playing,
And
impartial, indifferent nature
Eternally be
shining in beauty.
Adeyinka
Makinde is a writer based in London, England.
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