The dogs in Your movies remind me 
of Laika. Did You, too, once stand 
on a mountain and watch the little light travel 
across the night sky? Had the dog had
a view, it would have seen the shining blue 
sphere with oceans and clouds. On the ground, 
Laika's breathing was monitored. The satellite 
plunged into the atmosphere and Laika fell, 
is falling in the draught through black mirrors,
does not have to be space sick anymore, is spared 
having to eat at the chime of the bell. Laika is no longer
travelling in a hermetically sealed cabin, 
chained to instruments showing how
long-term weightlessness has affected living 
creatures. Laika travels through the dark 
pure of heart, with all strays.
Laika's memory was honoured 
with a new brand of cigarettes in the Soviet Union.
The first dog in space 
did not come back, comes 
back as dust and rain.
Translated by Maria Freij                
This poem has not been translated into any other language yet.
I would like to translate this poem
 
                    