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Available Now! Down Fell the Statue of Goliath - Hungarian Poets and Writers on the Revolution of 1956
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17 May 2017
In the Morning the Hangman
In the morning the hangman took your measurements
then cursed ‘cause he got it wrong,
and hanged the kid from the neighbouring cell
the one they brought in last night,
who screamed all night, pounded on the door
that he wanted to live, threw up on his bunk,
passed out in the end, they dumped
a bucket of water on him to help him come to,
dragged him out to the gallows,
half-conscious, his legs couldn’t carry him,
silence, just the thuds of boots kicking.
The fat’s crackling in the guardroom,
the warder’s cooking his breakfast: meat
with garlic. You hear the hearse, they
open the iron gate. You peek out.
It’s left. In the evening they slap you in irons.
Half-portion tomorrow. Day after tomorrow dark.
You’ll endure. You don’t have a choice:
Betrayal, or the promised rope.
The sun shines in through the wire screen.
A quiet rustle. The guard watches you long and hard.
They knew for certain that they will break you,
You know for certain that never.
The peal of a kettle. They bring in breakfast.
You bite voraciously into the freshly baked bread.
And you recall your hearing is today,
by the Chain Bridge. And you don’t care.
Translated by Thomas Cooper
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