The Epic Of Sadness

By Nizar Qabbani

Your love taught me to grieve

and I have been in need, for centuries

a woman to make me grieve

for a woman, to cry upon her arms

like a sparrow

for a woman to gather my pieces

like shards of broken crystal

Your love has taught me, my lady, the worst habits

it has taught me to read my coffee cups

thousands of times a night

to experiment with alchemy,

to visit fortune tellers

It has taught me to leave my house

to comb the sidewalks

and search your face in raindrops

and in car lights

and to peruse your clothes

in the clothes of unknowns

and to search for  your image

even…..even…..

even in the posters of advertisements

your love has taught me

to wander around, for hours

searching for a gypsies hair

that all gypsies women will envy

searching for a face, for a voice

which is all the faces and all the voices…

Your love entered me…my lady

into the cities of sadness

and I before you, never entered

the cities of sadness

I did not know…

that tears are the person

that a person without sadness

is only a shadow of a person…

Your love taught me

to behave like a boy

to draw your face with chalk

upon the wall

upon the sails of fishermen's boats

on the Church bells, on the crucifixes,

your love taught me, how love,

changes the map of time…

Your love taught me, that when I love

the earth stops revolving,

Your love taught me things

that were never accounted for

So I read children's fairytales

I entered the castles of Jennies

and I dreamt that she would marry me

the Sultan's daughter

those eyes..

clearer than the water of a lagoon

those lips…

more desirable than the flower of pomegranates

and I dreamt that I would kidnap her like a knight                                                      and I dreamt that I would give

her necklaces of pearl and coral

Your love taught me, my lady,

what is insanity

it taught me…how life may pass

without the Sultan's daughter arriving

Your love taught me

How to love you in all things

in a bare winter tree,

in dry yellow leaves

in the rain, in a tempest,

in the smallest cafe, we drank in,

in the evenings…our black coffee

Your love taught me…to seek refuge

to seek refuge in hotels without names

in churches without names…

in cafes without names…

Your love taught me…how the night

swells the sadness of strangers

It taught me…how to see Beirut

as a  woman…a tyrant of temptation

as a woman, wearing every evening

the most beautiful clothing she possesses

and sprinkling upon her breasts perfume

for the fisherman, and the princes

Your love taught me  how to cry without crying

It taught me how sadness sleeps

Like a boy with his feet cut off

in the streets of the Rouche and the Hamra

Your love taught me to grieve

and I have been needing, for centuries

a woman to make me grieve

for a woman, to cry upon her arms

like a sparrow

for a woman to gather my pieces

like shards of broken crystal