«To the foot, from its child»
The child’s foot doesn’t
yet know that it’s a foot — it
would like to be a
butterfly, or an
apple — But along come stones
and bits of glass, streets
and stairways, roads of
hard-packed earth to show the foot
that it can’t fly, can’t
be a rounded fruit
on the branch of a tree — which
is how the foot came
to be defeated,
a prisoner fallen in
battle, condemned to
live inside a shoe —
Slowly, slowly, it got to
know the world in its
own way, without light,
without ever meeting the
other foot, closed in,
exploring life like
someone blind — Those soft nails of
quartz, of clusters of
grapes, became hardened
and turned opaque, as tough as
horns, and the little
petals of the child’s
toes were crushed together and
thrown off balance, took
the shape of eyeless
reptiles, the three-sided heads
of worms, calloused and
covered over with
tiny volcanoes of death,
unacceptably
hard — But this blind one
kept on walking without rest,
hour by hour, one foot
then the other, now
a man’s foot, now a woman’s,
up and down, across
the fields, into mines
and markets and ministries,
backwards, forwards, in
and out, this foot worked
in its shoe, scarcely having
time to be naked
in love or sleep, it
walked, they walked, until the whole
person came to a
stop — It descended
then into the earth and knew
nothing about it,
because everything,
everything there was dark — stayed
unaware that it
had even ceased to
be a foot, or whether they
were burying it
so that it could fly
now, or so that it could turn
into an apple
© Pablo Neruda
© Translation Den Bellm