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    Turn of the Century

    by Wislawa Szymborska


    Read this poem. What do you think the "urgent", "naive" questions
    are at the end of the poem?


    The Turn of the Century
    It was supposed to be better than the others, our 20th century,
    But it won't have time to prove it.
    Its years are numbered,
    its step unsteady,
    its breath short.

    Already too much has happened
    that was not supposed to happen.
    What was to come about
    has not.

    Spring was to be on its way,
    and happiness, among other things.

    Fear was to leave the mountains and valleys.
    The truth was supposed to finish before the lie.

    Certain misfortunes
    were never to happen again
    such as war and hunger and so forth.

    These were to be respected:
    the defenselessness of the defenseless,
    trust and the like.
    Whoever wanted to enjoy the world
    faces an impossible task.

    Stupidity is not funny.
    Wisdom isn't jolly.

    Hope
    Is no longer the same young girl
    et cetera. Alas.

    God was at last to believe in man:
    good and strong,
    but good and strong
    are still two different people.

    How to live--someone asked me this in a letter,
    someone I had wanted
    to ask that very thing.

    Again and as always,
    and as seen above
    there are no questions more urgent
    than the naive ones.
© Ora Baumgarten 2008
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