Garcia Lorca

                                  

   Another Twenty Poems

 

 

       


                                                  Contents

 

The Ballad of the Salt-Water 3

Encounter 4

From Moon Songs. 5

Dream.. 6

Wish. 7

The Little Ballad of the Three Rivers. 8

Paso (The Images of the Passion) 10

The Dawn. 11

A Singing. 12

Casida of the Recumbent Woman. 15

Gacela of the Flight 16

Night of Insomniac Love. 17

Gacela of the Terrible Presence. 18

Sonnet of the Wreath of Roses. 19

The Poet asks his Love to write. 20

Song. 21

Pueblo. 22

Landscape. 23

The Prisoner 24

Remanso, Final Song. 25

Index of First Lines. 26


 

                              The Ballad of the Salt-Water

 

                    The sea

smiles far-off.

                    Spume-teeth,

                    sky-lips.

 

                    ‘What do you sell, troubled child,

                    child with naked breasts?’

 

                    ‘Sir, I sell

salt-waters of the sea.’

 

‘What do you carry, dark child,

mingled with your blood?’

 

‘Sir, I carry

salt-waters of the sea.’

 

‘These tears of brine

where do they come from, mother?’

 

‘Sir, I cry

salt-waters of the sea.’

 

‘Heart, this deep bitterness,

where does it rise from?’

 

‘So bitter, the salt-waters

of the sea!’

 

The sea

smiles far-off.

Spume-teeth.

Sky-lips.


                                        Encounter

 

                                        Flower of sunlight.

                                        Flower of water.

 

          Myself:           Was that you, with breasts of fire,

                              so that I could not see you?

 

          She:              How many times did they brush you,

                              the ribbons of my dress?

 

          Myself:         In your sealed throat, I hear

                              white voices, of my children.

 

          She:              Your children swim in my eyes,

                              like pale diamonds.

 

          Myself:           Was that you, my love? Where were you,

                              trailing infinite clouds of hair?

 

          She:              In the Moon. You smile? Well then,

                              round the flower of Narcissus.

 

          Myself:           In my chest, preventing sleep,

                              a serpent of ancient kisses.

 

          She:              The moment fell open, and settled

                              its roots on my sighs.

 

          Myself:            Joined by the one breeze, face to face,

                              we did not know each other!

                             

          She:              The branches are thickening, go now.

                              Neither of us two has been born!

 

                                        Flower of sunlight.

                                        Flower of water.

                                       

                               


                                        From Moon Songs

 

                    The moon lays a long horn,

                    of light, on the sea.

 

                    Tremoring, ecstatic,

                    the grey-green unicorn.

 

                    The sky floats over the wind,

                    a huge flower of lotus.

 

                    (O you, walking alone,

                    in the last house of night!)


 

 

                                        Dream

 

                    My heart rests, by the cold fountain.

                              (Fill it with threads,

                              spider of silence.)

 

                    The fountain-water sang it the song.

                              (Fill it with threads,

                              spider of silence.)

 

                    My heart, waking, sang its desires.

                              (Spider of nothingness,

                              spin your mystery.)

 

                    The fountain-water listened sombrely.

                              (Spider of nothingness,

                              spin your mystery.)

 

                    My heart falls into the cold of the fountain.

                              (White hands, far-out,

                              hold back the water.)

 

                    The water carries it, singing with joy.

                              (White hands, far-out,

                              nothing there in the water!)

 


                              Wish

 

                    Just your hot heart,

                    nothing more.

 

                    My Paradise, a field,

                    no nightingales,

                    no strings,

                    a river, discrete,

                    and a little fountain.

 

                    Without the spurs,

                    of the wind, in the branches,

                    without the star,

                    that wants to be leaf.

 

                    An enormous light

                    that will be

                    the glow

                    of the Other,

                    in a field of broken gazes.

 

                    A still calm

                    where our kisses,

                    sonorous circles

                    of echoes,

                    will open, far-off.

 

                    And your hot heart,

                    nothing more.

 


                              The Little Ballad of the Three Rivers

 

                    The Guadalquivir’s river

                    runs past oranges and olives.

                    The two rivers of Granada,

                    fall, to wheatfields, out of snow.

 

                    Ay, Love, that goes,

                    and never returns!

 

                    The Guadalquivir’s river

                    has a beard of clear garnet.

                    The two rivers of Granada

                    one of sorrow, one of blood.

 

                    Ay, Love,

                    vanished down the wind!

 

                    For the sailing-boats,

Seville keeps a roadway:

Through the waters of Granada

only sighs can row.

 

Ay, Love, that went,

                    and never returned!

 

                    Guadalquivir – high tower,

                    and breeze in the orange-trees.

                    Dauro, Genil – dead turrets,

                    dead, above the ponds.

 

Ay, Love,

                    vanished down the wind!

 

Who can say, if water carries

a ghost-fire of cries?

 

Ay, Love, that went,

                    and never returned!

 

Take the orange petals,

take the leaves of olives,

Andalusia, down to your sea.

 

Ay, Love,

                    vanished on the wind!


 

                              Paso (The Images of the Passion)

 

                    Virgin in a crinoline,

                    Virgin of Solitude,

                    spreading immensely

                    like a tulip-flower.

 

                    In your boat of light,

                    go -

                    through the high seas

                    of the city.

                    through turbulent singing,

                    through crystalline stars.

                    Virgin in a crinoline

                    through the roadway’s river

                    you go,

                    down to the sea!

                   


                              The Dawn

 

                    New York’s dawn holds

                    four mud pillars,

                    and a hurricane of black doves,

                    paddling in foul water.

 

                    New York’s dawn

                    moans on vast stairways,

                    searching on the ledges,

                    for anguished tuberoses.

 

                    Dawn breaks and no one’s mouth breathes it,

                    since hope and tomorrow, here, have no meaning.

                    Sometimes coins, furiously swarming,

                    stab and devour the abandoned children.

 

                    The first to go outside know in their bones

                    Paradise will not be there, nor wild loves.

                    They know they go to the swamp of law, and numbers,

                    to play without art, and labour without fruit.

 

                    The light is buried by chains and by noise,

                    in the shameless challenge, of rootless science.

                    All across the suburbs, sleepless crowds stumble,

                    as if saved, by the moment, from a shipwreck of blood.

                   


 

                                        A Singing

                         

 (From; Blood Wedding: Act I)

GRANDMOTHER:      A singing, child, a singing

                              about the great stallion,

                              who would not drink the water,

the water in its blackness,

in among the branches.

Where it finds the bridge,

it hangs there, singing.

Who knows what water is,

my child,

its tail waving,

through the dark green chambers?

 

MOTHER (softly):       Sleep, my flower,

the stallion is not drinking.

 

GRANDMOTHER:      Sleep, my rose,

the stallion is crying.

His legs are wounded,

his mane is frozen,

in his eyes,

there is a blade of silver.

They went to the river.

Ay, how they went!

Blood running,

quicker than water.

 

MOTHER:                 Sleep, my flower,

the stallion is not drinking.

 

GRANDMOTHER:      Sleep, my rose,

the stallion is crying.


 

MOTHER:                 It would not touch

the wet shore,

his burning muzzle,

silvered with flies.

He would only neigh,

to the harsh mountains,

a weight of river, dead,

against his throat.

Ay, proud stallion

that would not drink the water!

Ay, pain of snowfall,

stallion of daybreak!

 

GRANDMOTHER:      Do not come here! Wait,

close the window,

with branches of dream,

and dreams of branches.

 

MOTHER:                My child is sleeping.

 

GRANDMOTHER:      My child is silent.

 

MOTHER:                Stallion, my child

has a soft pillow.

 

GRANDMOTHER:      Steel for his cradle.

 

MOTHER:                Lace for his covers.

 

GRANDMOTHER:      A singing, child, a singing.

 

MOTHER:                Ay, proud stallion

that would not drink the water!

 

GRANDMOTHER:      Don’t come here! Don’t enter!

                              Go up to the mountain

through the sombre valley,

to where the wild mare is.

 

MOTHER (gazing):       My child is sleeping.

 

GRANDMOTHER:      My child is resting.

 

                   

MOTHER (softly):       Sleep, my flower,

the stallion is not drinking.

 

GRANDMOTHER (rising, and very softly):

         

Sleep, my rose,

the stallion is crying.

 


Casida of the Recumbent Woman

 

                    To see you naked is to know the Earth.

                    The Earth glistening, empty of horses.

                    The Earth, reed-less, pure in form,

                    closed to futures, horizon of silver.

 

                    To see you naked is to see the concern

                    of rain searching for a fragile waist,

                    or the feverish sea’s immense face,

                    not finding its own brightness.

 

                    Blood will cry in the alcoves,

                    enter with swords on fire,

                    but you will not know the cache,

                    of the toad’s heart or the violet.

 

                    Your belly is a knot of roots,

                    your lips a dawn with no outline.

                    Under the bed’s cool roses,

                    the dead moan, waiting their turn.


                   

                    Gacela of the Flight

 

                    Often I lost myself in the sea,

                    my ears filled with fresh-cut flowers

                    my tongue filled with love and anguish.

                    often I lost myself in the sea,

                    as I am lost in the hearts of children.

 

                    No one when giving a kiss

                    fails to feel the smile of faceless people.

                    No one who touches a newborn child,

                    forgets the immobile skulls of horses.

 

                    Because the roses search the forehead,

                    for the toughened landscapes of bone,

                    and Man’s hands have no fate,

                    but to imitate roots, under the ground.

 

                    As I am lost in the hearts of children,

                    often I lost myself in the sea.

                    Ignorant of water, I go searching,

                    for death, in light, consuming me.

 


                    Night of Insomniac Love

 

                    Night approached us, with a full moon.

                    I began to cry, and you to laugh.

                    Your contempt was a god, and my whinings

                    a chain of doves and minutes.

 

                    Night left us. Crystal of pain

                    you wept for distant depths.

                    My sadness was a cluster of agonies,

                    over your fragile heart of sand.

 

                    Morning joined us on the bed,

                    our mouths placed over the frozen jet

                    of a blood ,without end, that was shed.

 

                    And the sun shone through the closed balcony,

                    and the coral of life opened its branch,

                    over my shrouded heart.

 

         


                    Gacela of the Terrible Presence

 

                    I want the river to lose its way.

                    I want the wind to quit the valley.

                   

I want the night to lose its sight,

                    and my heart its flower of gold;

 

                    the cattle to speak to the great leaves,

                    and the worm to die of shadows;

                   

the teeth on the skull to shine,

                    and the silk to be drowned in yellows.

 

                    I can see wounded midnight’s duel

                    struggling, knotted, with noon light.

                   

I resist the broken arch, where time suffers,

                    and the green venom of twilight.

 

                    But do not make a black cactus,

                    open in reeds, of your nakedness.

                   

Leave me afraid of dark planets,

                    but do not show me your calm waist.


                              Sonnet of the Wreath of Roses

 

                    The wreath, quick, I am dying!

                    Weave it quick now! Sing, and moan, sing!

                    Now the shadow is darkening my throat,

                    and January’s light returns, a thousand and one times.

 

                    Between what needs me, and my needing you,

                    starry air, and a trembling tree.

                    A thickness of windflowers lifts

                    a whole year, with hidden groaning.

 

                    Take joy from the fresh landscape of my wound,

                    break out the reeds, and the delicate streams,

                    and taste the blood, spilt, on thighs of sweetness.

 

                    But quick! So that joined together, and one,

                    time will find us ruined,

                    with bitten souls, and mouths bruised with love.

                   

 

 


                              The Poet asks his Love to write

 

                    Visceral love, living death,

                    in vain, I wait your written word,

                    and consider, with the flower that withers,

                    I wish to lose you, if I have to live without self.

 

                    The air is undying: the inert rock

                    neither knows shadow, nor evades it.

                    And the heart, inside, has no use

                    for the honeyed frost the moon pours.

 

                    But I endured you: ripped open my veins,

                    a tiger, a dove, over your waist,

                    in a duel of teeth and lilies.

 

                    So fill my madness with speech,

                    or let me live in my calm

                    night of the soul, darkened for ever.

                   

 


 

                                        Song

 

                    The girl with the lovely face,

                    goes, gathering olives.

                    The wind, that towering lover,

                    takes her by the waist.

                    Four riders go by

                    on Andalusian ponies,

                    in azure and emerald suits,

                    in long cloaks of shadow.

                    ‘Come to Cordoba, sweetheart!’

                    The girl does not listen.

                    Three young bullfighters go by,

                    slim-waisted in suits of orange,

                    with swords of antique silver.

                    ‘Come to Sevilla, sweetheart!’

                    The girl does not listen.

                    When the twilight purples,

                    with the daylight’s dying,

                    a young man goes by, holding

                    roses, and myrtle of moonlight.

                    ‘Come to Granada, my sweetheart!’

                    But the girl does not listen.

                    The girl, with the lovely face,

                    goes on gathering olives,

                    while the wind’s grey arms

                    go circling her waist.


 

                              Pueblo

 

                    A calvary,

                    on the naked hillside.

                    Clear water.

                    Centenarian olives.

                    Through the narrow alleys,

                    men with cloaks on,

                    and on turrets,

                    wind-vanes, circling.

                    Eternally

                    rotating.

                    O lost pueblo,

                    in Andalusia of sorrows!


                              Landscape

 

                    The field

of olives

like a fan,

opens, and closes.

Over the olives,

deep sky,

and dark rain,

of frozen stars.

Reeds, and blackness,

tremble, by the river.

Grey air shivers.

The olives

are full of cries.

A crowd

of imprisoned birds,

moving long tails

in shadow.


                              The Prisoner

 

                    Through the indecisive

branches

went a girl

who was life.

Through the indecisive

branches.

She reflected daylight,

with a tiny mirror,

which was the splendour,

of her unclouded  forehead.

Through the indecisive

branches.

In the dark of night,

lost, she wandered,

weeping the dew,

of this imprisoned time.

Through the indecisive

branches.

                   


 

                    Remanso, Final Song

 

                    The night is coming.

 

                    The moonlight strikes

                    on evening’s anvil.

 

                    The night is coming.

 

                    A giant tree clothes itself

                    in the leaves of cantos.

 

                    The night is coming.

 

                    If you came to see me,

                    on the path of storm-winds....

 

                    The night is coming.

 

                    ....you would find me crying,

                    under high, black poplars.

                    Ay, girl with the dark hair!

                    Under high, black poplars.

 

A remanso is a still pool in running water, the liquid calm that is

not swept on by the flow. I have translated remanso elsewhere to

signify what remains, as Lorca’s spirit remains, in the body of his poems.

 

 

 


                                                Index of First Lines

 

The sea. 3

Flower of sunlight. 4

The moon lays a long horn, 5

My heart rests, by the cold fountain. 6

Just your hot heart, 7

The Guadalquivir’s river 8

Virgin in a crinoline, 10

New York’s dawn holds. 11

GRANDMOTHER:                        A singing, child, a singing  12

To see you naked is to know the Earth. 15

Often I lost myself in the sea, 16

Night approached us, with a full moon. 17

I want the river to lose its way. 18

The wreath, quick, I am dying! 19

Visceral love, living death, 20

The girl with the lovely face, 21

A calvary, 22

The field. 23

Through the indecisive. 24

The night is coming. 25