Some Advice to Those Who Will Serve Time in Prison

by NAZIM HIKMET (1902-1963)

Nâz?m Hikmet in Berlin, Germany, 1956 IMAGE/Wikipedia

Some Advice to Those Who Will Serve Time in Prison

If instead of being hanged by the neck

    you’re thrown inside

    for not giving up hope

in the world, your country, and people,

    if you do ten or fifteen years

    apart from the time you have left,

you won’t say,

        “Better I had swung from the end of a rope

                        like a flag”—

you’ll put your foot down and live.

It may not be a pleasure exactly,

but it’s your solemn duty

    to live one more day

            to spite the enemy.

Part of you may live alone inside,

        like a stone at the bottom of a well.

But the other part

    must be so caught up

    in the flurry of the world

             that you shiver there inside

     when outside, at forty days’ distance, a leaf moves.

To wait for letters inside,

to sing sad songs,

or to lie awake all night staring at the ceiling

                              is sweet but dangerous.

Look at your face from shave to shave,

forget your age,

watch out for lice

                       and for spring nights,

       and always remember

              to eat every last piece of bread—

also, don’t forget to laugh heartily.

And who knows,

the woman you love may stop loving you.

Don’t say it’s no big thing:

it’s like the snapping of a green branch

                                             to the man inside.

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