Thursday, 28 June 2018
Wednesday, 27 June 2018
'The first time that I saw you' - Sjöberg
The first time...
The first time that I saw you it was a summer’s day
one morning when the sun was shining bright,
and all the meadow’s flowers, so varied in display,
in pairs stood bowing in its warming light.
So gentle was the morning breeze, and at the shore but slightly
a loving wavelet rippled round a shell the sand held tightly.
The first time that I saw you it was a summer’s day
the first time that I held your hand so lightly.
The first time that I saw you the sky was all ablaze,
so dazzling as the finely feathered swan.
There came then from the forest, the green-fringed forest’s haze,
a chorusing of birds in joyful song.
There trilled a song from high above whose beauty none could equal,
it was the tiny grey-fledged lark, as hard to glimpse as gleeful.
The first time that I saw you, the sky was all ablaze,
so dazzling and intense though without sequel.
And therefore when I see you, though it be winter’s day,
with snowdrifts lying glittering and cold,
I still hear larks’ quick trilling, the summer winds that stray
and spring’s keen urge to even so unfold.
I still sense that from downy beds green plants would be advancing
with cornflower and with cloverleaf all lovers’ joy enhancing,
that rays of summer sunshine upon your features play,
which softly blush in radiance entrancing.
Thursday, 21 June 2018
A Monet in words! Dèr Mouw on sun-specks on water that produce a bed of flowers
(flower party)
Lively
flowerbed on the canal’s still blue,
the sun-specks,
vivid and frolicsome, flicker,
now sudden irises,
dressed in gold knickers,
now up-flipped arrowheads,
golden in hue:
they’re
conjured from sight, fast-darting and zipping
from top to ripple-top;
when they’re at play,
you once glimpse
them, snake-like, a twining ray,
glinting and greasy,
between two waves slipping.
A hostile, grey-bristling,
shuddering blot
bounds forward
with shadow-beak grimly squat
to disturb the
frenziedly sparkling floor:
dull-silver harebells
all bob there afloat,
a golden rain drifts
on blue-crystal moat;
and the
flowerbed dances, noiseless once more.
One of Gerrit Komrij's '52 Sonnetten (bij het Verglijden van de Eeuw)'
The
cleaning lady speaks
My deadly enemies are dust and fluff.
I am the scourge of cobwebs great and small.
Just watch me turn out, empty, clean and buff -
I won’t put up with any wisps at all.
A house that’s quite in order, spick and span,
Means life can always have a new beginning.
My boss calls me - he’s never wrong, that man -
‘The Mondriaan of hearth and table linen.’
His fine arm chairs were never to my liking.
His standard lamp has now become strip lighting.
I’m a broom artist when all’s said and done.
I let the junk man have his bed - along
With thick and down-filled duvets. He’s quite sure
To dream both sound and sweet upon the floor.
Wednesday, 20 June 2018
Komrij, a Dèr Mouw fan, could turn a pretty sonnet himself
the language-forger
Language’s
consonants and vowels portray
The
corset and the flaccid belly’s spread.
A poet’s
one who’s able to display
An ease
when boning them that seems inbred.
Obese or
slim, his words without delay
Unite,
in fluid couplets sweetly wed.
His
secret’s effortlessness, not to lay
A smoke
screen. He takes language off to bed.
His
flask of wine is language – A to Z.
And when
half-drunk – albeit just in play –
He
spawns a child, an epic or quartet,
Or
something in-between – a sonnet, say.
His
fight with blubber, though, and whalebone stay
The
reader never knows is left unsaid.
Tuesday, 19 June 2018
'Linguistic fireworks' in this Dèr Mouw poem too
Niets kan het Brahman eren, niets hem
smaden,
dan Brahmans eigen lof en eigen spot:
geen spot, geen lof dan voor wat, wijze en
zot,
het Brahman speelt in wereldmaskeraden:
hij, kunst’naar in natuur en menschendaden,
is kanker hier, trapt ginds zijn hoogst
gebod,
en leeft de humor van almacht’ge God,
die, Christus, zich door Judas heeft
verraden.
Hij, liefde en zomer van vluchtige wereld,
vlindert en pauwt en nachtegaalt en merelt
majeur van klank- en kleurenrijke scherts:
hij, leed en herfst, in de eindigheid
gevangen
van schijnbaar zelf, schreit ’t onvervuld
verlangen
tot wereldpathétique in kleine terts.
Nothing honours Brahman, nor him degrades,
than Brahman’s own defaming and his praise:
no praise nor mocking, than for roles he
plays,
wise man and fool, in earthly masquerades:
artist in nature, in man’s acts portrayed,
he’s here a cancer, rules there by a nod,
and lives the humour of Almighty God
who – Christ – through Judas had himself
betrayed.
He – love and summer of world’s shifts –
regales,
butterflies, peacocks, blackbirds, nightingales
in major-sounding coloured raillery:
he – pain and autumn – in such shifts pinned
low
by each apparent self, shrieks longing’s woe
to worldly pathétique in minor key.
Friday, 15 June 2018
The only poem ever to start with 'Spitsbogend'. Dèr Mouw of course!
Spitsbogend
zetten kerkhofpopulieren
op zilvren
voorjaarslucht hun diagrammen:
als ordinaten
staan loodrecht de stammen,
waarom de
lijnenfantazieën zwieren.
Ze staan als
geel getong van ijle vlammen:
’t is of
dood-zelf het Pinksterfeest wou vieren;
ze staan als
lang orkest van reuz’ge lieren:
’t is of dood
preludeerde in vlucht van gammen;
ze staan als
sprok’ge groei van gouden veren,
uit dons van
groen rijzend de grijze schachten:
’t is of,
Phoenix, met nieuw ontvlamde krachten
het leven uit
de dood terug wou keren.
Op eens –
geruis, geruis. – Ik sta te wachten,
of ’t kerkhof
vliegen gaat naar zonnesferen.
The churchyard
poplars, gothic-arching, form
spring diagrams
against the silver sky:
as ordinates
the trunks, erect, stand high
and round them lines
of fantasies all swarm.
They stand like yellow tongues of thin flame-trails:
it’s as if
death itself’s observing Whitsun;
they stand, a giant-lyre
orchestra now risen:
as if death were
preluding flights of scales;
they stand like
sheerest gauze of golden feathers
their
green-down shafts of grey far upwards soar:
it’s as if
Phoenix, flaring strength rewon,
would have life
to return from death once more.
All at once – rustling
– and I wonder whether
the churchyard’s
flying off to realms of sun.