A Soldier Dreams of White Lilies  by Mahmoud Darwish
Considered by Many to be the Palestinian Poet Laureate

He dreams of white lilies
a branch of an olive tree
her breast budding in water/
he told me he dreams
of a bird
of lemon blossom
& doesn’t ask why or wherefore
understanding only the things
he can smell
the things beneath his hands
understanding
as he told me
that home
is drinking his mother’s coffee
& coming back safely at evening.
I asked him:
& the land?
He said:
I don’t know it
& I don’t feel it as skin & heartbeat
as you poets say
but it caught my eye quite
suddenly like a street a shop a headline.
I asked him:
Do you love it?
He answered:
My love is a leisurely stroll
Or a glass of wine or an affair.
--Would you die for it?
--Let me tell you what keeps me in this place:
the speeches stirred me up
they taught me to love the idea of love
but I didn’t share the land’s heart.
The smell of grass/
putting down roots/
branches...
that part’s a dream it’s not real.
--& this love
does it cut deep as sun or desire?
He looked me in the eye:
I make love with a gun
he said
& the echo of my love is the sound
of festivals in ancient ruins
& the silence of an old old statue/
old beyond time & place & maker.
& then he told me
that when he left for a place at the front
his mother wept
her grief etching a new dream in his flesh:
that the Ministry of Defence
might harbour doves in its gates...
that doves might grow there,
He lit a cigarette & said as though
mincing between pools of blood:
I was dreaming of white lilies
of an olive branch
of a bird
taking the morning to its heart
in the branches of a lemon tree.
--But what did you see?
--I saw what I did:
red lilies blooming
in the sand
in breasts & in bellies.
--& how many did you kill?
--Counting is difficult...
I got a medal.
& to torture myself I asked him:
Tell me about one of them.
He straightened his spine
fiddled with his folded newspaper
& then singsong:
He sprawled on the stones
like a collapsing tent embracing its ridgepole
his high forehead wore a crown of blood
he had no medals on his chest
he was a pisspoor fighter
a farmer labouring man peddler something like that
like a tent he collapsed onto the stones & died
his arms stretched out like two dry streams
when I searched his pockets for identification
I found two photographs one of his wife
one of his small daughter...
--Did this grieve you?
--Mahmoud my friend
grief is a white bird
& you don’t find it on battlefields.
Soldiers don’t distinguish sin from grief.
The only birds around me were wings of black smoke.
After this
he talked to me about his first girl
& about distant streets
& reactions to the war
& the heroisms of broadcasting & press.
& when he’d hidden a cough in his handkerchief
I asked him:
Can we meet man to man?
He answered:
In a city far from here.
& when I’d filled his glass the fourth time
I said joking:
So you’re leaving... what about the homeland?
He said:
Leave me alone...
I am dreaming of white lilies
of a song-filled street
a house that’s well-lit.
I want a good heart
not the weight of a gun’s magazine.
I want a day & its sunlight
& no fascist victory exultation in it.
I want a smiling child in this day
not an issue of the war-machine.
I came here because I thought a sun
was approaching its zenith not setting.
I refuse to die
turning my gun my love
on women & children
to guard the orchards & wells
of oil tycoons & tycoons of weapons factories.
He said goodbye to me because
he was looking for white lilies
for a bird taking the morning to its heart
among olive branches/
because he understood only the things
he could smell
the things beneath his hands
understanding
as he told me
that home
is sipping his mother’s coffee
& coming back safely at evening...


Obituary   Mahmoud Darwish