Nature 2
Saadi Youssef | Poetry, Translations
translated by Khaled Mattawa
The remains of Atlantic hurricanes
have reached my house in the suburbs.
You are afraid to venture out even for a minute;
the Atlantic Ocean is knocking at your door
and it’ll knock your head if you open.
Calm down, Saadi.
Go back and stay happy in the upstairs room.
Saadi Youssef (1934-2021) is considered one of the most important contemporary poets in the Arab world. He was born near Basra, Iraq. Following his experience as a political prisoner in Iraq, he has spent most of his life in exile, working as a teacher and literary journalist throughout North Africa and the Middle East. He is the author of over forty books of poetry. Youssef has also published two novels and a book of short stories, and several books of essay and memoir. Youssef, who spent the last two decades of his life in London, was a leading translator to Arabic of works by Walt Whitman, Ngugi wa Thiongo, Federico Garcia Lorca, among many others.
Khaled Mattawa is the William Wilhartz Professor of English Language and Literature at the University of Michigan. His latest book of poems is Fugitive Atlas (Graywolf, 2020). A MacArthur Fellow, he is the current editor of Michigan Quarterly Review.