Poems Written While In Prison
Translated by Kenneth Rexroth
New books,
old books,
the leaves
all piled together.
A paper
blanket
is better
than no blanket.
You who
sleep like princes,
sheltered
from the cold,
Do you know
how many men in prison
cannot
sleep all night?
AUTUMN NIGHT
Before the
gate, a guard
with a
rifle on his shoulder.
In the sky,
the moon flees
through
clouds.
Swarming
bed bugs,
like black
army tanks in the night.
Squadrons
of mosquitoes,
like waves
of attacking places.
I think
of my homeland.
I dream
I can fly far away.
I dream
I wonder trapped
in webs
of sorrow.
A year has
come to an end here.
What crime
did I commit?
In tears
I write
another
prison poem.
CLEAR MORNING
The morning
sun
shines
over
the prison wall,
And drives
away the shadows
and miasma
of hopelessness.
A life-giving
breeze
blows across
the earth.
A hundred
imprisoned faces
smile once
more.
COLD NIGHT
Autumn night.
No mattress.
No covers.
No sleep.
Body and legs
huddle
up and cramp.
The moon
shines
on the
frost-covered banana leaves.
Beyond my
bars
the Great
Bear swings on the Pole.
GOOD DAYS COMING
Everything
changes, the wheel
of the
law turns without pause.
After the rain, good weather.
In the wink of an eye
The universe
throws off
its muddy
cloths.
For ten
thousand miles
the landscape
Spreads
out like
a beautiful
brocade.
Gentle sunshine.
Light breezes.
Smiling flowers,
Hang in
the trees, amongst the
sparkling
leaves,
All the birds sing at once.
Men and animals rise up reborn.
What could be more natural?
After sorrow
comes happiness.
FREE, I
WALK ON THE MOUNTAIN
AND ENJOY
THE VIEW
Mountains.
Clouds.
More mountains.
More clouds.
Far below
a river gleams,
bright
and unspotted.
Alone, with
beating heart,
I walk
on the Western Range,
And gaze
far off towards the South
and think
of my comrades.