The Line Poem by Bella Akhmadulina

The Line



The player's disk - a silly wonder -
The simple player - trifles at all!
It's heard as if were distant thunder
From the earth's deeps, from ‘under-under'
Of roots, of sweat, of grass and fall
Where humus just begins to boil,
Raising to heaven a gray steaming,
No, deeper than the fathomed deeps,
From Hell where a born ruby sleeps,
And has our nature its beginning -
Got out, nearing … At last,
We're reached by earth's and waters' bass
With which it was declared so slow
As if not knowing what to do,
So high-importantly and low:
"… The road, I'll not say where to…"
We do not speak in these strange ways.
The mankind doesn't have such ideas:
Neither in dreams nor by a guess,
One could name all that here appears,
That in our ignorance, so fine,
We call "the ever living line."

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
READ THIS POEM IN OTHER LANGUAGES
Close
Error Success