April 10, 2010
 
Continuing an April tradition, Huntington News Network is celebrating April -- National Poetry Month -- With a Poem a Day from Knopf
 

 
Special to Huntingtonnews.net
 
This poem is #66 in the hundred poems that make up If There Is Something To Desire, the first collection in English by the stunning Russian poet Vera Pavlova—stunning because of what she can do in under ten lines, sometimes under five. Her work is translated by her husband, Steven Seymour. Pavlova rarely titles her poems—this one is an exception—and her book is the first in the history of Knopf's poetry list to show an entire poem on the front jacket. (Follow the link below to get a printable broadside of that jacket, designed by Knopf's Peter Mendelsund with hand-lettering by the illustrator Leanne Shapton.)
 
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A Remedy for Insomnia
 
Not sheep coming down the hills,
not cracks on the ceiling—
count the ones you loved,
the former tenants of dreams
who would keep you awake,
once meant the world to you,
rocked you in their arms,
those who loved you . . .
You will fall asleep, by dawn, in tears.
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Go to the Poem-A-Day website to comment on this poem, share it on Facebook and Twitter, and much more.
 
Learn more about If There is Something to Desire
 
Visit Vera online at verapavlova.us
 
Watch Vera on PBS NewsHour
 
Download the broadside of Vera's jacket
 
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Excerpt from IF THERE IS SOMETHING TO DESIRE. Translation copyright © 2010 Steven Seymour. Excerpted by permission of Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
 
We welcome your feedback. Please send any thoughts or questions to aaknopf@randomhouse.com.