The Trial

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During his great speech the prosecutor
kept piercing me with his yellow index finger
I'm afraid I didn't appear self-assured  
unintentionally I put on a mask of fear and depravity  
like a rat caught in a trap an informer a fratricide  
the reporters were dancing a war dance  
slowly I burned at a stake of magnesia

all of this took place in a small stifling room
the floor creaked plaster fell from the ceiling
I counted knots in the boards holes in the wall faces  
the faces were alike almost identical  
policemen the tribunal witnesses the audience  
they belonged to the party of those without any pity  
and even my defender smiling pleasantly  
was an honorary member of the firing squad

in the first row sat an old fat woman
dressed up as my mother with a theatrical gesture she raised
a handkerchief to her dirty eyes but didn't cry
it must have lasted a long time I don't know even how long  
the red blood of the sunset was rising in the gowns of the judges

the real trial went on in my cells
they certainly knew the verdict earlier
after a short rebellion they capitulated and started to die one after the other
I looked in amazement at my wax fingers

I didn't speak the last word and yet
for so many years I was composing the final speech  
to God to the court of the world to the conscience  
to the dead rather than the living  
roused to my feet by the guards
I managed only to blink and then
the room burst out in healthy laughter
my adoptive mother laughed also
the gavel banged and this really was the end

but what happened after that – death by a noose
or perhaps a punishment generously chained to a dungeon
I’m afraid there is a third dark solution
beyond the limits of time the senses and reason

therefore when I wake I don't open my eyes  
I clench my fingers don't lift my head  
breathe lightly because truly I don't know  
how many minutes of air I still have left

© Zbigniew Herbert