The Sleepers Poem by Jean Sénac

The Sleepers



Here silence is called for
where the night rumbles and the sea wears it away
where only children's hoops cry out
death heavy on their backs.
Clear-headed men walk quickly
their ideas speed round
the sun and love,
but freedom's flower grows slow
Patient land. Land worthy of love.
Beneath their eyelids, the humiliated tend
their hives, branding irons
and looks that frighten away the hyena and lion
Yes, here silence is called for
where only the child's pain cuts deep
the sleepers drunk on the temperate wind
Beware of the green morning.
Greet this springtime of intensive care
Greet it your hands are free
though your heart is hardly pure
what tumor isolates you from other men
what thirst has robbed you as you kneel at the well
what night has disqualified you from the race.
Greet
but already
fear
leadens your face
And yet
the sea is blue
the rock firm
the earth revolves
to the rhythm of your sandals
the reconciled child lingers over the flower
Greet the spring
winter had its mildness
but the summer, oh sleeper
will be fraught with risk
You will speak then
through clenched teeth clutching your happiness
You will speak of the poverty all around you
you will open your heart to the shared homeland
Or you will flee
For this land has no room for cowards
and the sun is as blunt as a fist.

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