Wednesday, 3 July 2024

Hans Christian Andersen: 'Hvile paa Heden' (1831)

 


A Stop on the Heath

 

- - - The naked heath

Which is its own border - -

               Grundtvig

 

Sorrowful, sweeping lies there before us

The sable-brown heath;

A single juniper bush stands out light-green

Amongst all the heather.

Round are strewn hummocks and hills

Which, like a high ridge, run through the landscape.

Though at each slope,

And even each wheel rut

Hard ochre subsoil protrudes.

We seem to be gliding over a planet that lies

Extinct beneath us; a grieving grave;

The full moon though gleams bright in the deep-blue sky

Where the strangely shaped cloud

Glides away as if swimming mountains.

All is so silent!

All that one hears is the carriage wheels scraping

Deep in the sand of the road,

The passengers though sit silent, wrapped in cloaks,

For the wind from the west is keen

Over desolate, sable-brown heath.

 

Here a house lies –

Alone, in desolate countryside,

Ramshackle, stunted;

Just like a wreck in a motionless sea,

It stands there before us.

 

In loose night attire

The housewife emerges;

An ugly woman, old and brown;

Her tattered skirt hangs shabbily

Round her pointed, bony thighs.

She quickly lights a fire of dried heather;

See her puffing, the smoke

Swirling jet-black into the air,

And the flame casting its reddish gleam

Onto her thin, wrinkled face.

 

We set up camp outside the house,

Make our arrak punch and sit there like gods,

Proudly, on the sable-brown, slumbering earth

That sails with the moon in the sky.

After a while the old woman grins and sips

The punch she is given, and talks

Of The Spanish, who were here

During the years of the war;

How the foreign visitors no one understood

Set up camp out here on the heath;

How often they wept like children

And spoke of their homes:

Then danced and pranced on moonlit evenings

And sang their strange native songs,

Far from home, alone,

On the desolate, sable-brown heath. –

 

Our meal over,

We sit on the carriage once more

And nod a farewell to the crone,

Who ghostlike gapes and nods in return.

 

But behind the door

A teenage girl peeps curiously out;

Looks at us in amazement, yawns and stretches

Her languorous, lovely limbs,

And the dress she has loosely slung round her

Slips from a well-formed shoulder

Revealing white marble out on the heath.

 

To see the original poem, go to here 


 

No comments:

Post a Comment