What Kind of a Person by Yehuda Amichai

"What kind of a person are you," I heard them say to me.
I'm a person with a complex plumbing of the soul,
Sophisticated instruments of feeling and a system
Of controlled memory at the end of the twentieth century,
But with an old body from ancient times
And with a God even older than my body.
 
I'm a person for the surface of the earth.
Low places, caves and wells
Frighten me. Mountain peaks
And tall buildings scare me.

I'm not like an inserted fork,
Not a cutting knife, not a stuck spoon. 
I'm not flat and sly
Like a spatula creeping up from below.
At most I am a heavy and clumsy pestle
Mashing good and bad together
For a little taste
And a little fragrance. 

Arrows do not direct me. I conduct
My business carefully and quietly
Like a long will that began to be written
The moment I was born. 

Now I stand at the side of the street
Weary, leaning on a parking meter.
I can stand here for nothing, free. 

I'm not a car, I'm a person,
A man-god, a god-man
Whose days are numbered. Hallelujah. 

~ from A Life of Poetry: 1948 - 1994, translated from the Hebrew 
by Barbara and Benjamin Harshav, (HarperCollins, 1994)
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