The Dictators by Pablo Neruda

The Dictators

 

A stench sticks in the canefields:

A mix of blood and body, the permeating

foulness of a petal.

Among the coconut palms the tombs are full

of pulverized bone, of hushed rattles.

The delicate satrap chats

with wine glasses, chokers and cords of gold.

The little palace shines like a watch

And the quick puffs of laughter

pierce the corridors

gathering voices of the dead

with blue mouths freshly buried.

The weeping is hidden like a plant

whose seed falls ceaselessly on the ground

which, without light, makes the big blind leaves burgeon.

This rancor has been crafted scale by scale,

blow by blow, in the terrible swamp waters

with a snout full of silence and slime.

from Canto General 
(translation my own)