Read Poets Translate Poets: A Hudson Review Anthology Online
Authors: Paula Deitz
But if you want a man, I’ve never seen
A fi ner specimen than this Ramin:
What use is beauty if it doesn’t bless
Your life with pleasure and love’s happiness?
You’re innocent, you’re in the dark about it,
You don’t know how forlorn life is without it.
Women were made for men, dear Vis, and you
Are not exempt, whatever you might do.
Th
e well-born women of the world delight
In marrying a courtier or a knight,
And some, who have a husband, also see
A special friend who’s sworn to secrecy;
She loves her husband, she embraces him,
And then her happy friend replaces him.
You can have royal riches beyond measure,
Brocades, and jewels, and every kind of treasure,
But joy is something that you won’t discover
Until you have a husband or a lover.
If you need riches it’s to make you more
Attractive to him than you were before;
What use are all your red and yellow dresses
Unless they lead to kisses and caresses?
If you can see this, it was wrong of you
To slander me when all I said is true;
I spoke maternally, and as your nurse,
I’m trying to make things better now, not worse.
Ramin is worthy of you, and I’ve seen
Th
at you, dear Vis, are worthy of Ramin:
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Pe r s i a n
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You are the sun and he’s the moon; if he
Is like an elegant, tall cypress tree,
You are a bough of blossoms in the spring;
If you are milk, he’s wine. In everything
You’re worthy of each other’s love, and I
Will never grieve again until I die
If I can see love mutually requited
When you and he are happily united.”
And as the nurse spoke, at her voice’s sound,
A horde of devil’s demons crowded round,
And set a thousand traps, a thousand snares
Before her feet, to catch Vis unawares.
Th
e nurse went on: “A noble woman spends
Her life in pleasure, with her special friends
Or with her husband; you sit here and sigh,
And weep your heart away, and moan and cry.
Your youth will soon be gone, and you’ll have had
No time at all when you were young and glad;
How long will you stay grieving and alone?
You’re not composed of brass, my dear, or stone.”
And gradually the heart of Vis was stirred
And soft ened by the arguments she heard:
She felt herself assent, but did not let
Her tongue bear witness to her heart as yet.
Vis and Ramin then swore no force could sever
Th
e love that bound the two of them forever.
Ramin spoke fi rst: “I swear by God, and by
His sovereignty that rules the earth and sky,
I swear now by the sun, and by the light
Th
e shining moon bestows on us at night,
I swear by Venus and by noble Jupiter,
I swear by bread and salt and fl ickering fi re,
Fa k h r a ddi n G org a n i
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I swear by faith and God’s omnipotence,
And by the soul and all its eloquence,
Th
at while winds scour the wastelands and the mountains,
While waters fl ow in rivers and in fountains,
While night has darkness, and while streams have fi shes,
While stars have courses, and while souls have wishes,
Ramin will not regret his love, or break
Th
e binding oath that he and Vis now make,
He’ll never take another love, or cease
To give his heart exclusively to Vis.”
Vis promised love when Prince Ramin had spoken
And swore her promises would not be broken.
She gave him violets then and murmured, “Take
Th
is pretty posy, keep it for my sake,
Keep it forever, so that when you see
Fresh violets blooming you’ll remember me.
May any one who breaks our promise bow
And wither as these purple fl owers do now,
And when I see the spring’s new fl owers appear
I will recall the oaths we swore to here;
May any soul that breaks this oath decay
And shrivel as fresh fl owers do—in a day.”
And once these promises of love were given,
And they had called to witness God and heaven,
Th
ey lay beside each other telling tales
Of all their former sorrows and travails.
Vis lay beside her prince now, face to face,
Th
e full moon lay in Prince Ramin’s embrace,
And when Ramin aff ectionately placed
His gentle arm about her yielding waist
It was as if a golden torque should grasp
A silver cypress in its circling clasp,
And then Rezvan himself could not declare
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Pe r s i a n
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Which was the lovelier of this noble pair.
Th
eir pillow smelt of musk, and jeweled bed-covers
Bestrewed with roses lay upon the lovers.
Now lip to lip and cheek to cheek they lay
And struck the ball of pleasure into play;
So close together were their bodies pressed
Th
at rain could not have reached to either’s breast,
And Vis’s heart was now a balm that cured
Th
e agonies Ramin’s heart had endured,
For every wound she’d dealt his heart before
He kissed her face a thousand times and more.
Now happiness emboldened him, and he
Placed in the lock of pleasure longing’s key,
And felt his joy and eagerness increase
As he discerned the virgin seal of Vis;
Ramin pressed on and pierced this precious pearl,
And Vis was now a woman, not a girl.
When he withdrew the arrow, blood was seen
On wounded Vis, and on her prince, Ramin,
But though Ramin had wounded her she knew
A heartfelt pleasure and contentment too;
And now that their desire was satisfi ed
Th
eir love grew deeper and intensifi ed.
So for two months of luxury and leisure
Th
ey gave themselves to happiness and pleasure.
Dick Davis, 2007
Fa k h r a ddi n G org a n i
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P o l i s h
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Zbignie w Her bert
(1924–98)
Arion
Th
is is he—Arion—
the Grecian Caruso
concertmaster of the ancient world
expensive as a necklace
or rather as a constellation
singing
to the ocean billows and the traders in silks
to the tyrants and mule herders
Th
e crowns blacken on the tyrants’ heads
and the sellers of onion cakes
for the fi rst time err in their fi gures to their own disadvantage
What Arion is singing about
nobody here could say exactly
the essential thing is that he restores world harmony
the sea gently rocks the land
fi re gossips with water without hatred
in the course of one hexameter lie down
wolves and roedeer merlins and doves
and the child goes to sleep in the lion’s mane
as in a cradle
Look how the animals are smiling
People are living on white fl owers
and everything is just as good
as it was in the beginning
Th
is is he—Arion
expensive and multiple
the author of giddiness
standing in a blizzard of pictures
he has eight fi ngers like an octave
and he sings
Z big n i e w H e r be rt
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Until from the blue in the west
the luminous threads of saff ron unravel themselves
which indicate that night is coming close
Arion with a friendly shake of his head
says good-bye to
the mule herders and tyrants
the shopkeepers and philosophers
and takes his seat upon the back
of his tame dolphin
—I’ll be seeing you—
How handsome Arion is
—say all the girls—
when he fl oats out to sea
alone
with a garland of horizons on his head
To Marcus Aurelius
For Prof. Henryk Eizenberg
Good night Marcus put out the light
and shut the book For overhead
is raised a gold alarm of stars
while heaven talks some foreign speech
this the barbarian cry of fear
your Latin cannot understand
Terror continuous dark terror
against the fragile human land
begins to beat It’s winning Hear
its roar Th
e unrelenting stream
of elements will drown your prose
until the world’s four walls go down
As for us?—to tremble in the air
264
P o l i s h
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blow in the ashes stir the ether
gnaw our fi ngers seek vain words
and drag the fallen shades behind us
Well Marcus better hang up your peace
give me your hand across the dark
Let it tremble when the blind world beats
on senses fi ve like a failing lyre
Traitors—universe and astronomy
reckoning of stars wisdom of grass
and your greatness too immense
and Marcus my defenseless tears
Maturity
It’s good what happened
it’s good what’s going to happen
even what’s happening right now
it’s o.k.
In a nest pleated from the fl esh
there lived a bird
its wings beat about the heart
we mostly called it: unrest
and sometimes: love
evenings
we went along the rushing sorrow river
in the river one could see oneself
from head to toe
now
the bird has fallen to the bottom of the clouds
the river has sunk into the sand
helpless as children
and practised as old men
Z big n i e w H e r be rt
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we
are—simply—free
that is—ready to withdraw
In the night a nice old man arrives
and coaxes us with a deprecating shrug
—who are you?—we ask alarmedly
—Seneca—say the ones who fi nished grammar school
and those who aren’t familiar with Latin
just call me: the deceased
Th
e Wringer
Th
e inquisitors are in our midst. Th
ey live in vast subterranean houses and
only the shop-sign WRINGER HERE betrays their presence.
Tables with fl exed bronze muscles, powerful rollers, crushing slowly but
with precision, a driving-wheel, which knows no mercy—are waiting for us.
Th
e sheets, which they carry out of the wringer-shop, are like empty
bodies of magicians and heretics.
Episode in a Library
A blonde girl is bent over a poem. With a stiletto-sharp pencil she transfers
the words to a sheet of paper and changes them into stresses, accents,
caesuras. Th
e lament of a fallen poet now looks like a salamander eaten
away by ants.
When we carried him away under machine-gun fi re, I believed that his
still warm body would fi nd its resurrection in his words. Now, as I watch
the death of the words, I know there is no limit to decay. All that will be left aft er us in the black earth will be the dissipated sounds. Th
e accents over
nothingness and dust.
Peter Dale Scott, 1963
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P o r t u g u e s e
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Pero M eogo
(Th
irteenth Century)
“He goes, my lover,”
He goes, my lover,
With the love I have given,
Like a wounded deer
Before the king’s huntsman.
He goes, my lover,
With my love, mother,
Like a wounded deer
Before the tall hunter.
Down to the sea he will go
And die of his wound;
Th
at way will my lover go
If I let him leave my mind.
—Have a care, daughter;
Th
ere was one such, lately,
Who showed great desire