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Entries in Poems (181)

Sunday
Aug162009

Novalis, "Wenn alle untreu werden"

A poem ("If all and each became untrue") by this German poet.  You can read the original here.

If all and each became untrue,       
To you my loyalty wouldn't flail;         
That gratitude has not derailed,       
And died amidst the earth's bright hue.
For me does passion bind you near,
As you in pain pass from my side,
Forever does my heart abide
By you in joy, in endless cheer.

So oft am I beset by tears
For you are dead and gone above,
And many souls that you once loved
Have lost the traces of your years.
Impelled by love and love alone,
You did so much and did it well;
And now your waves have ceased to swell
Upon a shore that waits unknown.

You are of truest love divine,
To each as true as e'er before. 
As others your sweet love forswore,
True you remained, in spite of time. 
So is it felt as day recedes
That truest love shall always win;
Cry bitterly and nuzzle in,
Just like a child upon your knee.

You I have felt, you I have sensed,
O do not leave, please do not leave! 
Let me conjoin myself with thee
Forever love's red bow to bend.
Once brothers mine their gazes chart
Anew against the heavens high,
Then sink below to earthly quiet,
And fall to you upon your heart.

Monday
Aug102009

Borges, "Parábola del palacio"

A prose poem ("Parable of the palace") by this Argentine writer.  You can read the original as part of this collection.

That day, the Yellow Emperor showed the poet his palace.  They left behind in a long procession the first Western terraces which, like tiers of an almost boundless amphitheatre, sloped down towards a paradise or garden whose metal mirrors and intricate hedges of juniper already called to mind the labyrinth.  Gleefully they lost themselves within; at first, however, it was as if they had condescended to a game.  Later and not undisturbingly the straight paths sustained a very gentle yet continuous curve; secretly, then, they were encircled.  Around midnight, observation of the planets and the propitious sacrifice of a turtle allowed them to unbind themselves from this ostensibly bewitched region but not from the sensation of being lost, a sensation that would accompany them to the end.  They visited antechambers and patios and libraries; they walked through a hexagonal room with a water clock; and one morning from a tower they espied a man of stone who then eluded their sight forever.  Many a resplendent river was crossed in sandalwood canoes or perhaps just one river many times.  The poet reached the imperial retinue and the people lay prostrate at his feet, yet one day they stopped at an island on which someone did not stop owing to his never having glimpsed the Son of Heaven, and an executioner was obliged to behead him.  Their eyes looked with indifference upon black hair and black dances and complex masks of gold; what was real and what was dreamt became confused or, rather, the real was one of the configurations of dream.  It seemed impossible that the land could be something other than gardens, waters, architecture and forms of splendor.  Every ten paces a tower sliced through the air; to the eyes the color was identical, but the first was yellow and the last scarlet, so delicate were the gradations and so long the sequence.

Image result for giorgio de chiricoIt was at the foot of the penultimate tower where the poet (who was alien to the spectacles that all found so marvelous) recited the brief composition to which we now attach his name and which, according to the most eloquent historians, lent him both immortality and death.  The text itself has been lost; there are those who understand it to consist of one verse, others that think it but one word.  What is certain and incredible is that in the poem was an entire enormous palace in meticulous detail with every illustrious porcelain piece and every drawing upon that piece, and the shadows and lights of the dusks, and every ill-fated or joyous moment of the glorious dynasties of mortals, gods and dragons who had inhabited the palace throughout its endless past.  All were silent, but the emperor exclaimed: You have robbed me of my palace!  And the hangman's iron blade separated the poet from life.  

Others remember the story differently.  In our world no two things can be truly equal; the poet's having said the poem sufficed (they tell us) for the palace to vanish as if abolished and struck dead by the final syllable.  Such legends, of course, are mere literary conceits.  The poet lived and died the emperor's slave; his composition fell into oblivion because it deserved oblivion and his descendants still search, and will never find, the word of the universe.  

Sunday
Jul122009

Fet, "Вечер" 

A work ("Evening") by this Russian poet.  You can read the original here.

Above the river clear it roved  
And rang upon the meadow dark,
And danced aloft the silent grove
The other shore now all aspark.

The dusk and distance cloak each turn, 
Its course upon the western strand;
As golden cloud hems twist and burn,  
The parting smoke of sunswept land.

A hill both hot and damp I see,     
The day's exhale in night's deep gasp,  
The summer lightning, blue and green, 
The brightest fire of our sweet past.

Tuesday
Jun092009

Vallejo, "Amor"

A work ("Love") by this Peruvian man of letters.  You can read the original here.

You, Love, no longer come to my dead eyes;
For you my heart weeps, its ideals unshunned. 
Still open are the chalices to run
Autumnal hosts near your auroral wines.

Divine cross, Love, my deserts need your dew,
Your astral blood that yields both dreams and cries.
You, Love, no longer come to my dead eyes,
Which fear and seek your teary dawn anew!

I love you not, O Love, when you are far,
And raffled off in beards of merry bards,
Or short and fragile women's healthy glow.

Come fleshless Love as stunning ichor flows;
That I, in Godlike ways formed from this dust,
Might love and might create devoid of lust!

Sunday
May172009

Baudelaire, "Le vin de l'assassin"

A drinking song of sorts ("The assassin's wine") by this French poet.  You can read the original here.

charles-baudelaire.jpg Painting by Sabine Maffre | ArtmajeurMy wife is dead, and I am free        
To give myself to thirsty night!         
Yet when flat broke I'd seek alee,   
Her cries would rip my fibers tight. 

As happy as a king am I:                      
The air is pure, the heavens clear;           
Such was the joyful summer sky       
When I first loved my wife so dear! 

This horrid thirst that cuts me cold,
Can only be relieved with wine.
As much wine as a tomb will hold:
My grave, a massive pit of brine! 

An endless well I threw her down,      
And even sealed her fate that night 
With every stone from that high crown
Forgetting it all if I might!

In sermons of most tender vow,
Where nothing could rend us apart,
To lead through waves our love's bold prow,
So drunk on memory was my heart,

That I asked for a rendez-vous:
An evil eve; a darkened road.
And folly-stricken she came, too!
We all endure sweet folly's goad.

She was quite fine, a beauty spry
If tired now; and as for me, 
I loved her so, too much!  That's why
I bade her from this life to flee!

No one gets why, perhaps one blight,
Among this drunken, foolish crowd:
Could he have dreamt in morbid nights
Of turning wine to blackest shroud?

This blameless crook, as firmly safe
As iron cog with iron wheel;
Never would he in winter's chafe
Or summer's sun know love most real.

With black enchantment and black fears,
His cursed parade to panic's tune,
His vials of poison and his tears,
His rattling chains and mortal dunes!

And now I'm free, single once more!
Tonight dead drunk in my rebirth
Without cold fear or hot remorse,
I'll then lie down upon the earth.

And like a dog I'll take to sleep!
A chariot fast on heavy spoke;
With stones and mud it trudges deep,
This furious coach would gladly stroke

My guilty head into the sod
Or split me into equal parts! 
And I would mock, as I mock God
The Devil and Dee's Table charts!