Evening: Poetry of Anna Akhmatova (8 page)

BOOK: Evening: Poetry of Anna Akhmatova
2.68Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Its end and ravens’ cries

Are now resounding near.

I didn’t sleep this night,

Too late for sleep
, I fear…

Oh, how unbearably white

Is this curtain here.

Welcome!

 

1909

 

II

 

The same voice and gaze aglow,

That same flaxen hair.

As it was a year ago.

Light-rays streaming through the air

Colors on white walls bestow…

Fragrances of lilies flow

And the simple words you share.

 

1909

Читая Гамлета

I

 

У кладбища направо пылил пустырь,

А за ним голубела река.

Ты сказал мне: "Ну что ж, иди в монастырь

Или замуж за дурака..."

Принцы только такое всегда говорят,

Но я эту запомнила речь,-

Пусть струится она сто веков подряд

Горностаевой мантией с плеч.

 

1909 Киев

 

II

 

И как будто по ошибке

Я сказала: "Ты..."

Озарила тень улыбки

Милые черты.

От подобных оговорок

Всякий вспыхнет взор...

Я люблю тебя, как сорок

Ласковых сестёр.

 

1909

 

Reading Hamlet

I

 

The graveyard, wasteland, and the shore,

Where the river shines cool and blue.

You told me: “Get to a nunnery or

Find a fool to marry you…”

That’s the sort of thing princes say, I know,

But I’ll never forget this one, –

Like an ermine mantle let your words shine and flow

For many years, and on, and on.

 

1909 Kiev

 

II

 

As if by mistake, beguiled,

I used the familiar “You…”

A flashing shadow of a smile

Lit up your face anew.

When one blunders so absurdly,

Gazes will alight…

Still I love you
like some forty

Tender sisters might.

 

1909

***

И когда друг друга проклинали

В страсти, раскаленной добела,

Оба мы еще не понимали,

Как земля для двух людей мала,

И что память яростная мучит,

Пытка сильных - огненный недуг! -

И в ночи бездонной сердце учит

Спрашивать: о, где ушедший друг?

А когда, сквозь волны фимиама,

Хор гремит, ликуя и грозя,

Смотрят в душу строго и упрямо

Те же неизбежные глаза.

 

1909

 

***

And cursing each other with brute

Passion, white-hot all through,

Neither one of us understood

How small the earth was for two,

That memory torments with spite,

Afflicting the most strong-hearted,

That one learns to plead in the night:

Where has my friend departed?

And as the c
hoir voices rise,

Happy and menacing, that instant,

The same two stern and certain eyes

Survey the soul, persistent.

 

1909

Первое возвращение

На землю саван тягостный возложен,

Торжественно гудят колокола,

И снова дух смятен и потревожен

Истомной скукой Царского Села.

Пять лет прошло. Здесь все мертво и немо,

Как будто мира наступил конец.

Как навсегда исчерпанная тема,

В смертельном сне покоится дворец.

 

1910

 

First return

A heavy shroud is placed onto the ground,

The bells are droning in a solemn show,

The spirit is again confused and troubled

By weary boredom of the Tsarskoe Selo.

Five years have passed. And all is dumb and dead here,

The world has reached the end, it seems.

The theme exhausted for all time is set here,

The palace rests now in a mortal dream.

 

1910

***

Я и плакала и каялась,

Хоть бы с неба грянул гром!

Сердце темное измаялось

В нежилом дому твоем.

Боль я знаю нестерпимую,

Стыд обратного пути...

Страшно, страшно к нелюбимому,

Страшно к тихому войти,

А склонюсь к нему нарядная,

Ожерельями звеня;

Только спросит: «Ненаглядная!

Где молилась за меня?»

 

1911

 

***

I cried and I even repented,

Let the sky thunder and groan!

My dark heart just couldn’t stand it

In your forsaken vacant home.

I know a pain that is unbearable,

The shame of returning stunned…

How frightening it is, how terrible -

To the unloved, to the quiet one.

If I bend down by him, sparkling,

As my necklace jingles free;

He will only ask me: “Darling!

Where was it you prayed for me?”

 

1911

***

Меня покинул в новолунье

Мой друг любимый. Ну так что ж!

Шутил: «Канатная плясунья!

Как ты до мая доживёшь?»

 

Ему ответила, как брату,

Я, не ревнуя, не ропща,

Но не заменят мне утрату

Четыре новые плаща.

 

Пусть страшен путь мой, пусть опасен,

Ещё страшнее путь тоски…

Как мой китайский зонтик красен,

Натерты мелом башмачки!

 

Оркестр весёлое играет,

И улыбаются уста.

Но сердце знает, сердце знает,

Что ложа пятая пуста!

 

Ноябрь 1911

Царское Село

 

***

At the new moon, he walked out,

The friend I loved. I’ll be okay!

“Tightrope dancer,” He joked loud,

“How will you survive till May?”

 

As to a brother, I replied then,

Without gripes or jealousy,

But four new cloaks just aren’t likely

To replace this loss for me.

 

Let there be danger where I walk,

The way of grief fills me with dread…

The bottom of my shoes are chalked,

My Chinese parasol shines red!

 

The orchestra plays gleefully

An
d lips are smiling with delight

And yet the heart, the heart can see

The fifth lodge is unoccupied!

 

November 1911,

Tsarskoe Selo

***

Мурка, не ходи, там сыч

На подушке вышит,

Мурка серый, не мурлычь,

Дедушка услышит.

Няня, не горит свеча,

И скребутся мыши.

Я боюсь того сыча,

Для чего он вышит?

 

1911

 

***

There’s an owl sewn - don’t stir -

Onto the pillow near us,

O, gray Moorka, do not purr,

My grandfather will hear us.

Nanny, candles will not burn,

Mice are scratching, fearless,

Why was that owl ever sewn?

I’m scared of his appearance.

 

1911

 

Anna Akhmatova
(June 23, 1889 - March 5, 1966) is considered by many to be one of the greatest Russian poets of the Silver Age. Although true fame and recognition did not come until her later, “Evening,” her first poetry collection, had caught the attention of many prominent literary critics of the time and helped to solidify her career as a writer. One of the forefront leaders of the Acmeism movement, which focused on rigorous form and directness of words, she was a master of conveying raw emotion in her portrayals of everyday situations. Her works range from short lyric love poetry to longer, more complex cycles, such as Requiem, a tragic depiction of the Stalinist terror. During the time of heavy censorship and persecution, her poetry gave voice to the Russian people. To this day, she remains one of Russia’s most beloved poets and has left a lasting impression on generations of poets that came after her.

Thank you for taking the time to read my work. Translation is a labor of love. Over time, what I’ve learned is that you often get back what you put into it. I enjoy every minute of it as it allows me to not only delve deeper into the poetry I love, but to also share this love with you, my readers.

 

My hope is that this book will lead you to explore my other books of Russian poetry translations. For a full-list of my books, see the following page.

 

If you enjoyed my work and have a moment to spare, I would really appreciate a short review. Your help in spreading the word is gratefully received.

 

Also, I would like to invite you to visit my new website dedicated to Russian poetry translations:
Discernible Sound
. As always don’t hesitate to contact me with any questions and/or comments.

 

Sincerely,

 

Andrey Kneller

 

 

Also by Andrey Kneller:

 

Rosary: Poetry of Anna Akhmatova

White Flock: Poetry of Anna Akhmatova

Final Meeting: Selected Poetry of Anna Akhmatova

Wondrous Moment: Selected Poetry of Alexander Pushkin

My Poems: Selected Poetry of Marina Tsvetaeva

Backbone Flute: Selected Poetry of Vladimir Mayakovsky

February: Selected Poetry of Boris Pasternak

The Stranger: Selected Poetry of Alexander Blok

Unfinished Flight: Selected Poetry of Vladimir Vysotsky

O, Time…: Selected Poetry of Victoria Roshe

Discernible Sound: Selected Poetry

 

 

 

 

Other books

Captain of Rome by John Stack
Sudden Response by R.L. Mathewson
Tunnels by Lesley Downie
Sensations by Tessie Bradford
The Sound of the Mountain by Yasunari Kawabata, Edward G. Seidensticker
Out on the Cutting Edge by Lawrence Block
Bygones by LaVyrle Spencer