from Ovid's Metamormphoses

 . . . what we were
and what we are today is not to be
tomorrow . . .

There is no thing that keeps its shape; for nature,
the innovator, would forever draw
forms out of other forms.  In all this world---
you can believe me---no thing ever dies.
By birth we mean beginning to re-form,
a thing's becoming other than it was;
and death is but the end of the old state;
one thing shifts here, another there; and yet
the total of all things is permanent.


Ovid, Metamorphoses
trans. Allen Mandelbaum

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Eavon Boland, "An Elegy for My Mother in which She Scarcely Appears"

Sharon Olds, "The Race"

Aria Aber, "Oakland in Rain"