I'd rip out
bureaucracy's guts,
I would.
No reverence for mandates —
good riddance!
Pack off to very hell
for good
any old paper,
but this one...
Past berths and compartments
drawn out in a line
moves a customs official,
most courteous Iooking.
Folks hand in their passports
and I hand in mine,
my crimson-jacketed
bookling.
Some passports
bring smiles
in a matter of instants.
Others
are fit but to fie on.
Special deference
is shown,
for instance
for those
with the double-bed
British Leo.
Bowing non-stop,
as if rocked by a ship,
eating their eyes
into the "kind old uncles",
they take,
as if they were taking a tip
the passports
of lanky Yankees.
At Polish passports
they bulge out their eyes
in thick-skulled
policemen's
donkeyness,
as if to say:
what
the devil are these
geographical
novelties?
Without even turning
their cabbage-like heads,
hardly deigning
to touch them,
they take,
absent-minded,
the passports of Swedes
and all sorts
of other Dutchmen.
But suddenly
Mr. Officer's face
turns awry,
as if
he has smelled disaster.
You've guessed it:
the officer's taken my
red-skinned hulk of a passport.
He handles it
like a hedgehog
or bomb,
like a bee
to be nipped
by the wings,
like a twisting rattlesnake
three yards long
with a hundred
deadly stings.
The porter winks;
to tell the truth,
he'd carry your luggage
free
all the way for you.
The gendarme
looks questioningly
at the sleuth,
the sleuth looks back:
what to do with this wayfarer?
With what delight,
by the gendarmes,
damn it,
I'd be flayed,
crucified,
hanged
for the crime of holding
a sickled,
hammered
Soviet passport
in my hand!
I'd rip out bureaucracy's guts,
I would.
No reverence for mandates —
good riddance!
Pack off to very hell
for good
any old paper,
but this one...
As
the most valuable
of certificates
I pull it
from the pants
where my documents are:
read it
envy me —
I'm a citizen
of the USSR!
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