Joseph Brodsky (1940–1996), born in Leningrad to a Jewish family, was the youngest person to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature (1987). Exiled from the Soviet Union, he settled in the United States, where he went on to become the Poet Laureate (1991). His reputation was enhanced by his collections published in English: Selected Poems; A Part of Speech; and To Urania. Among his many honors are doctorates from Yale and Oxford, induction into the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, and the National Book Critics Award, for his essay collection Less Than One. Brodsky died of a heart attack at age fifty-five in his Brooklyn Heights apartment.

Photograph by Nancy Crampton.

December 24, 1971

by Joseph Brodsky

  For V.S.

When it’s Christmas we’re all of us magi.
At the grocers’ all slipping and pushing.
Where a tin of halvah, coffee-flavored,
is the cause of a human assault-wave
by a crowd heavy-laden with parcels:
each one his own king, his own camel.

Nylon bags, carrier bags, paper cones,
caps and neckties all twisted up sideways.
Reek of vodka and resin and cod,
orange mandarins, cinnamon, apples.
Floods of faces, no sign of a pathway
toward Bethlehem, shut off by blizzard.
People on couch
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