Here you will find the Poem In Hospital of poet Boris Pasternak
They stood, almost blocking the pavement, As though at a window display; The stretcher was pushed in position, The ambulance started away. Past porches and pavements and people It plunged with its powerful light Through streets in nocturnal confusion Deep into the blackness of night. The headlights picked out single faces, Militiamen, stretches of street. The nurse with a smelling-salts phial Was rocked to and fro on her seat. A drain gurgled drearily. Cold rain Was falling. The hospital-clerk Took out a fresh form of admission And filled it in, mark upon mark. They gave him a bed by the entrance; No room in the ward could be found. Strong iodine vapour pervaded The draught from the windows around. His window framed part of the garden, And with it a bit of the sky. The newcomer studied the floorboards, The ward and the objects nearby, When, watching the nurse's expression Of doubt, in her questioning drive, He suddenly knew this adventure Would hardly release him alive. Then, grateful, he turned to the window Behind which the wall, further down, Was breathing like smouldering tinder, Lit up by the glare of the town. There, far off the city was glowing All crimson-aflame; in its swell A maple-branch, ragged, was bowing To bid him a silent farewell. '0 Lord,' he was thinking, 'how perfect Thy works are, how perfect and right; The walls and the beds and the people, This death-night, the city at night! 'I drink up a sedative potion, And weeping, my handkerchief trace. 0 Father, the tears of emotion Prevent me from seeing Thy face. 'Dim light scarcely touches my bedstead. It gives me such comfort to drift And feel that my life and my lot are Thy priceless and wonderful gift. 'While dying in fading surroundings I feel how Thy hands are ablaze, The hands that have made me and hold me And hide like a ring in a case.'