Guest poem submitted by Amulya Gopalakrishnan:
(Poem #816) I'm Explaining a Few Things You are going to ask: and where are the lilacs? and the poppy-petalled metaphysics? and the rain repeatedly spattering its words and drilling them full of apertures and birds? I'll tell you all the news. I lived in a suburb, a suburb of Madrid, with bells, and clocks, and trees. From there you could look out over Castille's dry face: a leather ocean. My house was called the house of flowers, because in every cranny geraniums burst: it was a good-looking house with its dogs and children. Remember, Raul? Eh, Rafel? Federico, do you remember from under the ground my balconies on which the light of June drowned flowers in your mouth? Brother, my brother! Everything loud with big voices, the salt of merchandises, pile-ups of palpitating bread, the stalls of my suburb of Arguelles with its statue like a drained inkwell in a swirl of hake: oil flowed into spoons, a deep baying of feet and hands swelled in the streets, metres, litres, the sharp measure of life, stacked-up fish, the texture of roofs with a cold sun in which the weather vane falters, the fine, frenzied ivory of potatoes, wave on wave of tomatoes rolling down the sea. And one morning all that was burning, one morning the bonfires leapt out of the earth devouring human beings -- and from then on fire, gunpowder from then on, and from then on blood. Bandits with planes and Moors, bandits with finger-rings and duchesses, bandits with black friars spattering blessings came through the sky to kill children and the blood of children ran through the streets without fuss, like children's blood. Jackals that the jackals would despise, stones that the dry thistle would bite on and spit out, vipers that the vipers would abominate! Face to face with you I have seen the blood of Spain tower like a tide to drown you in one wave of pride and knives! Treacherous generals: see my dead house, look at broken Spain : from every house burning metal flows instead of flowers, from every socket of Spain Spain emerges and from every dead child a rifle with eyes, and from every crime bullets are born which will one day find the bull's eye of your hearts. And you'll ask: why doesn't his poetry speak of dreams and leaves and the great volcanoes of his native land? Come and see the blood in the streets. Come and see The blood in the streets. Come and see the blood In the streets! |
Translated by Nathaniel Tarn. Here's one for all those who decry politically engaged literature as being aesthetically compromised: Pablo Neruda. For some of the most wonderful poems that combine Art and heart. He wrote some of the most burning, gorgeous lines but what powers his poetry is always his politics. Unlike Nabokov's idea that 'the sole purpose of art is aesthetic bliss', he fiercely believes that poems can make new worlds. He described the first of his poetry readings at a trade union meeting as 'the most important fact of my literary career'. This particular poem combines generosity, fight, painfulness... and lyricism, even as it shows up the absurdity of 'poppy-petalled metaphysics'. There's an aggressive overabundance - the spilling over of the merchandise, building up to the rush of violent visual images, (black friars spattering blessings) and then, the unexpected, bludgeoning moments of tenderness (the house of geraniums, the children's blood). Neruda's surreal, sure, but it isn't swimmy, soft-focus surrealism. His images cohere emotionally, with the energy of his anger, all the way up to the terrible finality of 'come out and see the blood on the streets'. The poem burns clean. Amulya.
18 comments: ( or Leave a comment )
Hello,
Just thought I should leap to poor old V.V.N.'s defence in Amulya's
comments on "I'm Explaining a Few Things". I think the comment Amulya's
referring to with "the sole purpose of art is aesthetic bliss" is from the
afterword to Lolita, where Nabokov says "For me a work of fiction exists
only insofar as it affords me what I shall bluntly call aesthetic bliss,
that is a sense of being somehow, somewhere, connected with other states of
being where art (curiosity, tenderness, kindness, ecstasy) is the norm."
(If this isn't what Amulya was referring to then I apologise!).
When you look at the full quotation, I think Nabokov's rather closer to
Neruda in wanting to "make new worlds" than might at first be evident. In
fact, he also said of his work that "What I would welcome at the close of a
book of mine is a sensation of its world receding in the distance and
stopping somewhere there suspended afar like a picture in a picture."
Granted, the kind of world he's looking to create is different (reflective,
self-conscious, deliberately enigmatic) from Neruda's, but I think the
intent is the same. In fact, given that the basic definition of art he
worked from was "beauty plus pity", he's actually (happily!) very close to
"I'm Explaining a Few Things", which - as Amulya says - combines "violent
visual images" with "bludgeoning moments of tenderness": beauty with pity,
or (not to coin a phrase) Art with heart...
Thanks,
Nick.
I know not when this poem was written, but it is a timely comparison to the
situation going on in Iraq: "Come and see the blood in the streets!"
Yeah... I loved this poem. Reminds me of the goings on in Africa though
- civil wars - children with gun. that line "from every dead child a
rifle with eyes" is so evocative I don't not think I shall forget it
Samsuddha Majumder
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Great poem. I don't know when it was written. But it was published in 1947 in Tercera Residencia.
wow
The last lines of this poem is very touching. Here the reader invites the reader to witness the carnage in the streets. One as observer, two as with some distant relationship to the street hereto refered and three, as somebody who has now arrived in the streets. I guess this poem reaches far and while. Pablo is trying to show us different approaches by which people can relate to the sad developments in our lives.
The last lines of this poem is very touching. Here the poet invites the reader to witness the carnage in the streets. One as observer, two as with someone with distant relationship to the street hereto refered and three, as somebody who has now arrived in the streets. I guess this poem reaches far and wide. Pablo is trying to show us different approaches by which people can relate to the sad developments in our lives.
The last lines of this poem is very touching. Here the poet invites the reader to witness the carnage in the streets. One as observer, two as someone with distant relationship to the street hereto refered and three, as somebody who has now arrived in the streets. I guess this poem reaches far and wide. Pablo is trying to show us different approaches by which people can relate to the sad developments in our lives.
sometimes is a little hard to explain situations, for that reason I like to have some word ready before any event.
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and then people ask why Pablo Neruda is considerate as the best poet of all time, when here is the evidence. JUst check out the peom, is simply written by a God of poetry.
What a stuff of un-ambiguity and preserveness of valuable know-how concerning unexpected feelings.
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