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GIOCONDA AND SI-YA-U (##)
	   
		     to the memory of my friend SI-YA-U,
		     whose head was cut of in Shanghai.

A CLAIM

Renowned Leonardo's
world-famous
``La Gioconda''
has disappeared.
And in the space
vacated by the fugitive
a copy has been placed.

The poet inscribing
the present treatise
knows more than a little
about the fate
of the real Gioconda.
She fell in love
with a seductive
graceful youth;
a honey-tongued
almond-eyed Chinese
named Si-Ya-U.
Gioconda ran off
after her lover;
Gioconda was burned 
in a Chinese city.

I, Nazim Hikmet,
authority
on this matter,
thumbing my nose at friend and foe
five times a day,
undaunted
claim
I can prove it;
if I can't, 
I'll be ruined and banished
forever from the realm of poesy.
 
		      1928


Part One
Excerpts from Gioconda's Diary

``15 March 1924; Pairs, Louvre Museum''

At last I am bored with the Louvre Museum.
You can get fed up with boredom very fast.
I am fed up with my boredom.
And from the devastation inside me
      I drew this lesson;
	  to visit
	       a museum is fine,
          to be in a museum piece is terrible!
In this place that imprisons the past
I am placed under such a heavy sentence
that as the paint on my face cracks out of boredom
I'm forced to keep grinning without letting up.
Because
    I am the Gioconda from Florence
whose smile is more famous than Florence.
I am bored with the Louvre Museum.
And since you get sick soon enough 
	       of conversing with the past,
I decided 
      from now on
to keep a diary.
Writing of today may be of some help
	      in forgetting yesterday...
However, the Louvre is a strange place.
Here you might find
Alexander the Great's
     Longines watch complete  with chronometer,
but 
not a single sheet of clean notebook paper
or a pencil worth a piaster.
Damn your Louvre, your Paris.
I'll write these entries
	      on the back of my canvas.
And so
when I picked a pen from the pocket
of a nearsighted American
          sticking his red nose into my skirts
-his hair stinking of wine-
			  I started my memoirs.
I'm writing on my back
      the sorrow of having a famous smile...

``18 March: Night''

The Louvre has fallen asleep.
In the dark, the armless Venus
		looks like a veteran of the Great War.
The gold helmet of a knight gleams
as the light from the night watchman's lantern   
			       strikes a dark picture.
Here
    in the Louvre
	 my days are all the same
	     like the six sides of a wood cube.
My head is full of sharp smells
	like the shelf of a medicine cabinet.

``20 March''

I admire those Flemish painters:
is it easy to give the air of a naked goddess
				   to the plump ladies
of milk and sausage merchants?
But
    even if you wear silk panties,
cow + silk panties = cow.

Last night
       a window 
	   was left open.
The naked Flemish goddesses caught cold.
All day
today,
	turning their bare
mountain-like pink behinds to the public,
                             they coughed and sneezed...
I caught cold, too.
So as not to look silly smiling with a cold,
I tried to hide my sniffles
			    from the visitors.

``1 April''

Today I saw a Chinese:
    he was nothing like those Chinese with their topknots.
How long
     he gazed at me!
I'm well aware
     the favor of Chinese
		      who work ivory like silk
			   is not to be taken lightly...

``11 April''

I caught the name of the Chinese who comes every day:
					    SI-YA-U.

``16 April''

Today we spoke
in the language of eyes.
He works as a weaver days
and studies nights.
Now it's a long time since the night
came on like a pack of black-shirted Fascists.
The cry of a man out of work
who jumped into the Seine
rose from the dark water.
And ah! you on whose fist-size head
	     mountain-like winds descend,
at this very minute you're probably busy
building towers of thick, leather-bound books
to get answers to the questions you asked of the stars.
READ
SI-YA-U
     READ...
And when your eyes find in the lines what they desire
				 when your eyes tire,
rest your tired head
		 like a black-and-yellow Japanese chrysanthemum
					      on the books..
					      SLEEP
						   SI-YA-U
						       SLEEP...

``18 April''

I've begun to forget
the names of those Renaissance masters.
I want to see
      the black bird-and-flower
				 watercolors
                that slant-eyed Chinese painters
						drip
                     from their long thin bamboo brushes.


NEWS FROM THE PARIS WIRELESS

      HALLO
	  HALLO
	      HALLO
      PARIS
	  PARIS
	      PARIS...
Voices race through the air
		     like the fiery greyhounds.
The wireless in the Eiffel Tower calls out:
      HALLO
	  HALLO
	      HALLO
      PARIS
	  PARIS
	      PARIS...

``I, TOO, am Oriental - this voice is for me.
My ears are receivers, too.
I, too, must listen to Eiffel.''
News from China
	      News from China
			   News from China:
The dragon that came down from the Kaf mountains
			   has spread his wings
across the golden skies of the Chinese homelands.
But
in this business it's not only the British lord's
gullet shaved
	      like the thick neck
				   of a plucked hen
that will be cut
but also
	the long
		 thin
		      beard of Confucius!

FROM GIOCONDA'S DIARY

``21 April''

Today my Chinese
		 looked my straight in the eye
and asked:
``Those who crush our rice fields
      with the caterpillar treads of their tanks
and who swagger through our cities
      like emperors of hell,
are they of YOUR race,
      the race of him who CREATED you?''
I almost raised my hand
      and cried ``No!''

``27 April''

      Tonight at the blare of an American trumpet
-the horn of a 12-horsepower Ford-
			     I awoke from a dream,
and what I glimpsed for an instant
			     instantly vanished.
What I'd seen was a still blue lake.
In this lake the slant-eyed light of my life
     had wrapped his fingers around the neck of a gilded fish.
I tried to reach him,
my boat a Chinese teacup
and my sail
	    the embroidered silk
		      of a Japanese
			   bamboo umbrella...

NEWS FROM THE PARIS WIRELESS

      HALLO
	  HALLO
	      HALLO
      PARIS
	  PARIS
	      PARIS...
The radio station signs off.
Once more
	  blue-shirted Parisians
		   fill Paris with red voices
		     and red colors...

FROM GIOCONDA'S DIARY

``2 May''

Today my Chinese failed to show up.

``5 May''

Still no sign of him...

``8 May''

My days
	are like the waiting room
				  of a station:
eyes glued
	to the tracks...

``10 May''

Sculptors of Greece,
painters of Seljuk china,
weavers of fiery rugs in Persia,
chanters of hymns to dromedaries in deserts,
dancer whose body undulates like a breeze,
craftsman who cuts thirty-six facets from a one-carat stone,
and YOU
	 who have five talents on your five fingers,
		       master MICHELANGELO!
Call out and announce to both friends and foe:
because he made too much noise in Paris,
because he smashed in the window
		    of the Mandarin ambassador,
      Gioconda's lover
		    has been thrown out
				     of France...
My lover from China has gone back to China...
And now I'd like to know
who's Romeo and Juliet!
If he isn't Juliet in pants
			and I'm not Romeo in skirts...
Ah,if I could cry-
		        if only I could cry...

``12 May''

	Today
	       when I caught a glimpse of myself
		    in the mirror of some mother's daughter
touching up the paint
		      on her bloody mouth
       in front of me,
       the tin crown of my fame shattered on my head.
While the desire to cry writhes inside me
				    I smile demurely;
like a stuffed pig's head
			  my ugly face grins on...
       Leonardo da Vinci,
	     may your bones
		  become the brush of a Cubist painter
for grabbing me by the throat - your hands dripping with paint -
and sticking in my mouth like a gold-plated tooth
this cursed smile...

Part Two
The Flight

FROM THE AUTHOR'S NOTEBOOK

Ah, friends, Gioconda is in a bad way...
Take it from me,
	 if she didn't have hopes
	      of getting word from afar,
she'd steal a guard's pistol,
	 and aiming to give the color of death
to her lips' cursed smile,
	 she'd empty it into her canvas breast...

FROM GIOCONDA'S DIARY

O that Leonardo da Vinci's brush
had conceived me
		 under the gilded sun of China!
That the painted mountain behind me
had been a sugar-loaf Chinese mountain,
that the pink-white color of my long face
                                  could fade,
that my eyes were almond-shaped!
And if only my smile
	     could show what I feel in my heart!
Then in the arms of him who is far away
	I could have roamed through China...

FROM THE AUTHOR'S NOTEBOOK

I had a heart-to-heart talk with Gioconda today.
The hours flew by
		 one after another
like the pages of a spell-binding book.
And the decision we reached
will cut like a knife
                      Gioconda's life
				      in two.
Tomorrow night you'll see us carry it out...

FROM THE AUTHOR'S NOTEBOOK

The clock of Notre Dame 
			strikes midnight.
Midnight
	 midnight.
Who knows at this very moment
	   which drunk is killing his wife?
Who know at this very moment
	   which ghost
		   is haunting the halls
				 of a castle?

Who knows at this very moment
	   which thief
		    is surmounting
			 the most unsurmountable wall?
Midnight... Midnight...
Who knows at this very moment...
I know very well that in every novel
			   this is the darkest hour.
Midnight
	    strikes fear into the heart of every reader...
But what could I do?
When my monoplane landed
		    on the roof of the Louvre,
the clock of Notre Dame
                     struck midnight.
And, strangely enough, I wasn't afraid
as I patted the aluminum rump of my plane
			   and stepped down on the roof...
Uncoiling the fifty-fathom-long rope wound around my waist,
I lowered it outside Gioconda's window
like a vertical bridge between heaven and hell.
I blew my shrill whistle three times.
And I got an immediate response
to those three shrill whistles.
Gioconda threw open her window.
This poor farmer's daughter
		      done up as the Virgin Mary
chucked her gilded frame
and, grabbing hold of the rope, pulled herself up...

SI-YA-U, my friend,
	      you were truly lucky to fall
to a lion-hearted woman like her...

FROM GIOCONDA'S DIARY

This thing called an airplane
		       is a winged iron horse.
Below us is Paris
     with its Eiffel Tower-
	  a sharp-nosed, pock-marked, moon-like face.
We're climbing,
	       climbing higher.
Like an arrow of fire
	       we pierce
			  the darkness.
The heavens rise overhead,
			   looming closer;
the sky is like a meadow full of flowers.
		      we're climbing,
				      climbing higher.

...................................................
      ...................................................
...................................................

I must have dozed off -
	       I opened my eyes.
Dawn's moment of glory.
The sky a calm ocean,
our plane a ship.
I call this smooth sailing, smooth as butter.
Behind us a wake of smoke floats.
Our eyes survey blue vacancies
               full of glittering discs...
Below us the earth looks
	       like a Jaffa orange
		   turning gold in the sun...
By what magic have I
	       climbed off the ground
		   hundreds of minarets high,
and yet to gaze down at the earth
	       my mouth still waters...

FROM THE AUTHOR'S NOTEBOOK

Now our plane swims
	      within the hot winds
		  swarming over Africa.
Seen from above,
	      Africa looks like a huge violin.
I swear
they're playing Tchaikovsky on a cello
		    on the angry dark island
				  of Africa.
And waiving his long hairy arms,
		    a gorilla is sobbing...

FROM THE AUTHOR'S NOTEBOOK

We're crossing the Indian Ocean.
We're drinking in the air
	       like a heavy, faint-smelling syrup.
An keeping our eyes on the yellow beacon of Singapore
- leaving Australia on the right,
	    Madagascar on the left -
and putting our faith in the fuel in the tank,
	    we're heading for the China Sea...

       ``from the journal of a deckhand named John aboard a 
British vessel in the China Sea''

One night
    a typhoon blows up out of the blue.
Man,
    what a hurricane!
Mounted on the back of yellow devil, the Mother of God
	     whirls around and around, churning up the air.
And as luck would have it,
	     I've got the watch on the foretop.
The huge ship under me
	     looks about this big!
The wind is roaring
   blast
	    after blast,
			blast
			      after blast...
The mast quivers like a strung bow.(*)
         *[What business do you have being way up there?
	       Christ, man, what do you think you are-a stork? N.H.]

Oops, now we're shooting sky-high --
		   my head splits the clouds.
Oops, now we're sinking to the bottom --
		   my fingers comb the ocean floor.
We're learning to the left, we're leaning to the right --
that is, we're leaning larboard and starboard.
My God, we just sank!
	       Oh no! This time we're sure to go under!
The waves
leap over my head
		     like Bengal tigers.
Fear
   leads me on
	     like a coffee-colored Javanese whore.
This is no joke - this is the China Sea... (*)
           *[The deckhand has every right to be afraid.
		  The rage of the China Sea is not to be taken lightly. N.H.]

Okay, let's keep it short.
PLOP...
What's that?
A rectangular piece of canvas dropped from the air
				into the crows nest.
The canvas
	   was some kind of woman!
It struck me this madame who came from the sky
             would never understand
		 our seamen's talk and ways.
I got right down and kissed her hand,
   and making like a poet, I cried:
``O you canvas woman who fell from the sky!
Tell me, which goddess should I compare you to?
Why did you descend here? What is your large purpose?''
She replied:
``I fell
	 from a 550-horsepower plane.
My name is Gioconda,
	 I come from Florence.
I must get to Shanghai
		   as soon as possible.'

FROM GIOCONDA'S DIARY

       The wind died down,
	     the sea calmed down.
The ship makes strides toward Shanghai.
The sailors dream,
	       rocking in their sailcloth hammocks.
A song of the Indian Ocean plays
		       on their thick fleshy lips:
``The fire of the Indochina sun
warms the blood
	     like Malacca wine.
They lure sailors to gilded stars,
			   those Indochina nights,
				those Indochina nights.

Slant-eyed yellow Bornese cabin boys
knifed in Sigapore bars
paint the iron-belted barrels blood-red.
Those Indochina nights, those Indochina nights.

A ship plunges on
to Canton,
55,000 tons.
Those Indochina nights...
As the moon swims in the heavens
      like the corpse of a blue-eyed sailor
		tossed overboard,
Bombay watches, leaning on its elbow...
			      Bombay moon,
				   Arabian Sea.
The fire of the Indochina sun
warms the blood
	   lie Malacca wine.
They lure sailors to gilded stars,
		       those Indochina nights,
			      those Indochina nights..."

Part Three
Gioconda's End

THE CITY OF SHANGHAI

Shanghai is a big port,
an excellent port,
It's ships are taller than
horned mandarin mansions.
My, my!
What a strange place, this Shanghai...

In the blue river boats
with straw sails float.
In the straw-sailed boats
naked coolies sort rice,
		   raving of rice...
My, my!
What a strange place, this Shanghai...

Shanghai is a big port,
The whites' ships are tall,
the yellows' boats are small.
Shanghai is pregnant with a red-headed child.
My, my!

FROM THE AUTHOR'S NOTEBOOK

Last night
when the ship entered the harbor
Gioconda's foot kissed the land.
Shanghai the soup, she the ladle,
she searched high and low for her SI-YA-U.

FROM THE AUTHOR'S NOTEBOOK

``Chinese work! Japanese work!
Only two people make this -
a man and a woman.

Chinese work! Japanese work!
Just look at the art
in this latest work of LI-LI-FU.''

Screaming at the tip of his voice,
the Chinese magician
		  LI.
His shriveled yellow spider of a hand
tossed long thin knives into the air:
one
   one more
	   one
	      one more
		       five
			   one more.
Tracing lightning-like circles in the air,
his knives flew up in a steady stream.
Gioconda looked,
           she kept looking,
		she'd still be looking
but, like a large-colored Chinese lantern,
	   the crowd swayed and became confused:
``Stand back! Gang way!
Chiang Kai-shek's executioner
	      is hunting down a new head.
Stand back! Gang way!''

One  in front and one close behind,
two Chinese shot around the corner.
The one in front ran toward Gioconda.
The one racing toward her, it was him, it was him - yes, him!
Her SI-YA-U,
	  her dove,
	       SI-YA-U...
A dull hollow stadium sound surrounded them.
And in the cruel English language
	   stained red with the blood
		of yellow Asia
		    the crown yelled:
``He's catching up,
he's catching up,
		  he caught-
			     catch him!''

Just, three steps away from Gioconda's arms
Chiang Kai-shek's executioner caught up.
His sword
	  flashed...
Thud of cut flesh and bone.
Like a yellow sun drenched in blood
SI-YA-U's head
	      rolled at her feet...
And this on a death day
Gioconda of Florence lost in Shanghai
her smile more famous than Florence.

FROM THE AUTHOR'S NOTEBOOK

A Chinese bamboo frame.
In the frame is a painting.
Under the painting, a name:
			   ``La Gioconda''...
In the frame is a painting:
     the eyes of the painting are burning, burning.
In the frame is painting:
     the painting in the frame comes alive, alive.
And suddenly
     the painting jumped out of the frame
	  as if from a window;
	       her feet hit the ground.
And just as I shouted her name
she stood up straight before me:
      the giant woman of a colossal struggle.

She walked ahead.
      I trailed behind.
From the blazing red Tibetan sun
to the China Sea
	  we went and came,
	  we came and went.
I saw
      Gioconda
	 sneak out under the cover of darkness
through the gates of a city in enemy hands;
I saw her
in a skirmish of drawn bayonets
	 strangle a British officer;
I saw her
t the head of a blue stream swimming with stars
wash the lice from her dirty shirt...

Huffling and puffling, a wood-burning engine
dragged behind it
forty red cars seating forty people each.
The cars passed one by one.
In the last car I saw her
standing watch:
	  a frayed lambskin hat on her head,
			boots on her feet,
                   a leather jacket on her back...

FROM THE AUTHOR'S NOTEBOOK

Ah, my patient reader!
Now we find ourselves in the French
military court in Shanghai.
The bench:
four generals, fourteen colonels,
and an armed black Congolese regiment.
The accused:
Gioconda.
The attorney for the defense:
an overly razed
-that is, overly artistic-
		   French painter.
The scene is set.
		 We're starting.

``The defense attorney presents his case:''

``Gentlemen,
this masterpiece
     that stands in your presence as the accused
is the most accomplished daughter of a great artist.
Gentlemen,
    this masterpiece...
Gentlemen...
my mind is on fire...
Gentlemen...
     Renaissance...
Gentlemen,
     this masterpiece-
	   twice this masterpiece...
Gentlemen, uniformed gentlemen...''
``C-U-U-U-T!
        Enough.
stop sputtering like a jammed machine gun!
Bailiff,
   read the verdict.''

``The bailiff reads the verdict:''

``The laws of France
    have been violated in China
by the above-named Gioconda, daughter of one Leonardo.
Accordingly,
   we sentence the accused
	   to death
	       by burning.
And tomorrow night at moonrise,
a Senegalese regiment
	       will execute said decision
			of this military court...''

THE BURNING

Shanghai is a big port.
The whites' ships are tall,
the yellows' boats small.
A thick whistle.
	       A thin Chinese scream.
A ship steaming into the harbor
	       capsized a straw-sailed boat...
Moonlight.
Night.
Handcuffed,
	 gioconda waits.
Blow, wind, blow...
A voice:
``All right, the lighter.
Burn, Gioconda, burn...''
A silhouette advances,
a flash...
They lit the lighter
and set Gioconda on fire.
The flames painted Gioconda red.
She laughed with a smile that came from her heart.
Gioconda burned laughing...

Art, Shmart, Masterpiece, Shmasterpiece, And so On,
  And So Forth,
    Immortality, Eternity-
			  H-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-Y...


    ``HERE ENDS MY TALE'S CONTENDING,
    THE REST IS LIES UNENDING...''
			    THE END

			Nazim Hikmet - 1929
		Trans. by Randy Blasing and Mutlu Konuk 1993




(##) GIOCONDA AND SI-YA-U:  Si-Ya-U, Hsiao San (b. 1896), Chinese 
revolutionary and man of letters. Hikmet met him in Moscow in 1922
and believed he had been executed in the bloody 1927 crackdown on 
Shanghai radicals after returning to China via Paris in 1924, when the
Mona Lisa did in fact disappear from the Louvre. The two friends were
reunited in Vienna in 1951 and traveled to Peking together in 1952. 
Translated into Chinese, this poem was later burned-along with Hsiao's
works- in the Cultural Revolution.