"Tell me, as you would in the middle of the night When we face only night, the ticking of a watch, the whistle of an express train, tell me Whether you really think that this world Is your home? That your internal planet That revolves, red-hot, propelled by the current Of your warm blood, is really in harmony With what surrounds you? Probably you know very well The bitter protest, every day, every hour, The scream that wells up, stifled by a smile, The feeling of a prisoner who touches a wall And knows that beyond it valleys spread, Oaks stand in summer splendor, a jay flies And a kingfisher changes a river to a marvel."
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Nobel laureates in LiteratureEssayists from the United StatesPoets from the United StatesAntinatalistsDiplomats of Poland
Original Language: English
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"An Appeal" (1954), trans. Czesław Miłosz and Robert Hass
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Czes%C5%82aw_Mi%C5%82osz
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