La extranjera(1938)A Francis de Miomandre. Habla con dejo de sus mares bárbaros, con no sé qué algas y no sé qué arenas; reza oración a dios sin bulto y peso, envejecida como si muriera. Ese huerto nuestro que nos hizo extraño, ha puesto cactus y zarpadas hierbas. Alienta del resuello del desierto y ha amado con pasión de que blanquea, que nunca cuenta y que si nos contase sería como el mapa de otra estrella. Vivirá entre nosotros ochenta años, pero siempre será como si llega, hablando lengua que jadea y gime y que le entienden sólo bestezuelas. Y va a morirse en medio de nosotros, en una noche en la que más padezca, con sólo su destino por almohada, de una muerte callada y extranjera. Gabriela Mistral (1889-1957) Nobel Prize in Literature 1945 |
The Stranger(1938)To Francis de Miomandre. She speaks in her way of her savage seas With unknown algae and unknown sands; She prays to a formless, weightless God, Aged, as if dying. In our garden now so strange, She has planted cactus and alien grass. The desert zephyr fills her with its breath And she has loved with a fierce, white passion She never speaks of, for if she were to tell It would be like the face of unknown stars. Among us she may live for eighty years, Yet always as if newly come, Speaking a tongue that plants and whines Only by tiny creatures understood. And she will die here in our midst One night of utmost suffering, With only her fate as a pillow, And death, silent and strange. Translated by: Helene Masslo Anderson From: Gabriela Mistral – The Poet and Her Work by Margot Arce de Vazquez New York University Press 1964 |
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Monday, 10 February 2014
Poetry Revisited: La extranjera – The Stranger
Labels:
Nobel laureates,
Poetry Revisited
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