Here you will find the Poem From early dawn the thirtieth of April... of poet Boris Pasternak
From early dawn the thirtieth of April Is given up to children of the town, And caught in trying on the festive necklace, By dusk it only just is settling down. Like heaps of squashy berries under muslin The town emerges out of crimson gauze. Along the streets the boulevards are dragging Their twilight with them, like a rank of dwarves. The evening world is always eve and blossom, But this one with a sprouting of its own From May-day anniversaries will flower One day into a commune fully blown. For long it will remain a day of shifting, Pre-festive cleaning, fanciful decor, As once it used to be with Whitsun birches Or pan-Athenian fires long before. Just so they will go on, conveying actors To their assembly points; beat sand; just so Pull up towards illuminated ledges The plywood boards, the crimson calico. Just so in threes the sailors briskly walking Will skirt the grass in gardens and in parks, The moon at nightfall sink into the pavements Like a dead city or a burnt-out hearth. But with each year more splendid and more spreading The taut beginning of the rose will bloom, More clearly grow in health and sense of honour, Sincerity more visibly will loom. The living folksongs, customs and traditions Will ever spreading, many-petalled lay Their scent on fields and industries and meadows From early buddings on the first of May, Until the full fermented risen spirit Of ripened years will shoot up, like the smell Of humid centifolia. It will have to Reveal itself, it cannot help but tell.