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Showing posts with label Poet: Federico Garcia Lorca. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poet: Federico Garcia Lorca. Show all posts

Romance Sonambulo -- Federico Garcia Lorca

Guest poem sent in by Anustup Datta
(Poem #210) Romance Sonambulo
  Green, how I want you green.
  Green wind. Green branches.
  The ship out on the sea
  and the horse on the mountain.
  With the shade around her waist
  she dreams on her balcony,
  green flesh, her hair green,
  with eyes of cold silver.
  Green, how I want you green.
  Under the gypsy moon,
  all things are watching her
  and she cannot see them.

  Green, how I want you green.
  Big hoarfrost stars
  come with the fish of shadow
  that opens the road of dawn.
  The fig tree rubs its wind
  with the sandpaper of its branches,
  and the forest, cunning cat,
  bristles its brittle fibers.
  But who will come? And from where?
  She is still on her balcony
  green flesh, her hair green,
  dreaming in the bitter sea.

  --My friend, I want to trade
  my horse for her house,
  my saddle for her mirror,
  my knife for her blanket.
  My friend, I come bleeding
  from the gates of Cabra.
  --If it were possible, my boy,
  I'd help you fix that trade.
  But now I am not I,
  nor is my house now my house.
  --My friend, I want to die
  decently in my bed.
  Of iron, if that's possible,
  with blankets of fine chambray.
  Don't you see the wound I have
  from my chest up to my throat?
  --Your white shirt has grown
  thirsty dark brown roses.
  Your blood oozes and flees
  around the corners of your sash.
  But now I am not I,
  nor is my house now my house.
  --Let me climb up, at least,
  up to the high balconies;
  Let me climb up! Let me,
  up to the green balconies.
  Railings of the moon
  through which the water rumbles.

  Now the two friends climb up,
  up to the high balconies.
  Leaving a trail of blood.
  Leaving a trail of teardrops.
  Tin bell vines
  were trembling on the roofs.
  A thousand crystal tambourines
  struck at the dawn light.

  Green, how I want you green,
  green wind, green branches.
  The two friends climbed up.
  The stiff wind left
  in their mouths, a strange taste
  of bile, of mint, and of basil
  My friend, where is she--tell me--
  where is your bitter girl?
  How many times she waited for you!
  How many times would she wait for you,
  cool face, black hair,
  on this green balcony!
  Over the mouth of the cistern
  the gypsy girl was swinging,
  green flesh, her hair green,
  with eyes of cold silver.
  An icicle of moon
  holds her up above the water.
  The night became intimate
  like a little plaza.
  Drunken "Guardias Civiles"
  were pounding on the door.
  Green, how I want you green.
  Green wind. Green branches.
  The ship out on the sea.
  And the horse on the mountain.
-- Federico Garcia Lorca
        (Translated by William Logan)

Comments :

I discovered this poem recently and was transfixed. The sheer power of the
imagery and the vivid yet chilling picture it conjured up held me
spellbound. In my imgaination, I saw Franco's Spain and the rout of the
Republicans - and a broken wounded soldier coming home in the night to meet
his true love. I could hear the guitar notes in the background as the two
friends climb up to the balcony for the girl who used to wait there. The use
of phrases like 'gypsy moon', 'hoarfrost stars', 'the forest, cunning cat'
adds to the mystery of it all. What happened to her when the soldiers came?
Did she jump from the balcony into the green sea and become one with it? Is
the reflection of the gypsy moon in the water her 'eyes of cold silver'? The
more I read it, the more it haunts me, and the superb atmospheric quality
reminds me of Walter de la Mare.

A brief biography of Lorca is available at www.poets.org, along with the
Spanish original of this poem.

Anustup