De Australische schrijver David Malouf werd geboren op 20 maart 1934 in Brisbane. Zie ook mijn blog van 20 maart 2007 en ook mijn blog van 20 maart 2008 en ook mijn blog van 20 maart 2009.
Uit: Ransom
„The sea has many voices. The voice this man is listening for is the voice of his mother. He lifts his head, turns his face to the chill air that moves in across the gulf, and tastes its sharp salt on his lip. The sea surface bellies and glistens, a lustrous silver-blue-a membrane stretched to a fine transparency where once, for nine changes of the moon, he had hung curled in a dream of pre-existence and was rocked and comforted. He hunkers down now on the shelving pebbles at its edge, bunches his cloak between his thighs. Chin down, shoulders hunched, attentive.
The gulf can be wild at times, its voices so loud in a man’s head that it is like standing stilled in the midst of battle. But today in the dawn light it is pondlike. Small waves slither to his sandalled feet, then sluice away with a rattling sound as the smooth stones loosen and go rolling.
The man is a fighter, but when he is not fighting he is a farmer, earth is his element. One day, he knows, he will go back to it. All the grains that were miraculously called together at his birth to make just these hands, these feet, this corded forearm, will separate and go their own ways again. He is a child of earth. But for the whole of his life he has been drawn, in his other nature, to his mother’s element. To what, in all its many forms, as ocean, pool, stream, is shifting and insubstantial. To what accepts, in a moment of stillness, the reflection of a face, a tree in leaf, but holds nothing, and itself cannot be held.
As a child he had his own names for the sea. He would repeat them over and over under his breath as a way of calling to her till the syllables shone and became her presence. In the brimming moonlight of his sleeping chamber, at midday in his father’s garden, among oakwoods when summer gales bullied and the full swing of afternoon came crashing, he felt himself caught up and tenderly enfolded as her low voice whispered on his skin. Do you hear me, Achilles? It is me, I am still with you. For a time I can be with you when you call.“
David Malouf (Brisbane, 20 maart 1934)
De Duitse schrijver en arts Jens Petersen werd geboren op 20 maart 1976 in Pinneberg. Zie ook mijn blog van 20 maart 2007 en ook mijn blog van 20 maart 2009.
Uit: Die Haushälterin
„Vielleicht hatte ich damals ein falsches Bild von meinem Vater, aber als ich begann, genauer darüber nachzudenken, war es für uns beide zu spät. Er maß zwei Meter, konnte mit seinen blauen Augen die Luft zerschneiden und trug einen schmalen Schnurrbart, den er mit Brother’s love in Form hielt. Seine bevorzugten Schuhe waren älter als ich, handgenähte Budapester, die er mit einem Geschirrtuch polierte, in deren Profil graue Flusen vom Teppich seines Büros un
d die hellen Körnchen der Pfade des städtischen Friedhofs steckten. Wenn das Wetter schlechter wurde, spielte sein Darm verrückt. Hinter dem Kaffeeservice für besondere Gäste lag im oberen Küchenregal ein Vorrat bunter Schachteln. Sobald die Krämpfe kamen, verzog er den Mund, ging zum Schrank, schluckte zwei grüne Kapseln mit einem Teelöffel Honig und sah nach oben, als harrte dort einer, der ihn erlösen könnte. Er liebte Antiquitäten; unser Haus war voll davon. Mein Urgroßvater hatte sie während der Wirtschaftskrise erstanden. Sie stammten aus Epochen, deren Namen ich ständig vergaß. Jede Volute war voller Bedeutung, aber sobald mein Vater in Monologe verfiel, nickte ich mit dem Kopf, sank in eine Art Trance und dachte an Schallplatten, die ich mir kaufen wollte, oder an Mädchen. »Diese Intarsien«, setzte er an, »diese Servante«, »diese Poudreuse«, »dieser Bauernspiegel« … Wenn ich mich auf Stühle setzte, Schubladen oder Schränke öffnete, rechnete ich mit berstendem Holz, porösem Leim, dem Ausreißen eines Griffes. Es war eines dieser Häuser, in denen man nachts zu bleiben hatte, wo Erwachsene einen haben wollten, im Bett; das knarzende Parkett hätte jeden verbotenen Schritt direkt an ihr Schlafzimmer übermittelt. Mein Urgroßvater hatte das Haus zwischen den Kriegen gekauft – »für eine Milliarde Reichsmark!«. Diese Anekdote erzählte mein Vater bei Familientreffen, wenn meinen Onkels und Tanten der Gesprächsstoff ausging. Er dröhnte es in die Runde: »Für eine Milliarde Reichsmark!«, mit bemühtem Ernst, als wollte er unser Lachen erzwingen. In solchen Momenten schämte ich mich. In jede Lehne, jeden Deckel, selbst in den Schuhschrank bei der Garderobe hatte mein Urgroßvater seine Initialen graviert.“
Jens Petersen (Pinneberg, 20 maart 1976)
De Duitse dichter en schrijver Johann Christian Friedrich Hölderlin werd geboren op 20 maart 1770 in Lauffen am Neckar in het Hertogdom Württemberg. Zie ook mijn blog van 20 maart 2007 en ook mijn blog van 20 maart 2008.en ook mijn blog van 20 maart 2009.
Geh unter, schöne Sonne
Geh unter, schöne Sonne, sich achteten
Nur wenig dein, sie kannten dich, Heilige, nicht,
Denn mühelos und stille bist du
Über den Mühsamen aufgegangen.
Mir gehst du freundlich unter und auf, o Licht !
Und wohl erkennt mein Auge dich, Herrliches !
Denn göttlich stille ehren lernt ich,
Da Diotima den Sinn mir heilte.
O du des Himmels Botin ! wie lauscht ich dir !
Dir Diotima ! Liebe ! wie sah von dir
Zum goldnen Tage dieses Auge
Glänzend und dankend empor. Da rauschten
Lebendiger die Quellen, es atmeten
Der dunkel Erde Blüten mich liebend an,
Und lächelnd über Silberwolken
Neigte sich segnend herab der Aether.
Abendphantasie
Vor seiner Hütte ruhig im Schatten sitzt
Der Pflüger, dem Genügsamen raucht sein Herd.
Gastfreundlich tönt dem Wanderer im
Friedlichen Dorfe die Abendglocke.
Wohl kehren itzt die Schiffer zum Hafen auch,
In fernen Städten, fröhlich verrauscht des Markts
Geschäft’ger Lärm; in stiller Laube
Glänzt das gesellige Mahl den Freunden.
Wohin denn ich? Es leben die Sterblichen
Von Lohn und Arbeit; wechselnd in Müh’ und Ruh’
Ist alles freudig; warum schläft denn
Nimmer nur mir in der Brust der Stachel?
Am Abendhimmel blühet ein Frühling auf;
Unzählig blühn die Rosen und ruhig scheint
Die goldne Welt; o dorthin nimmt mich
Purpurne Wolken! und möge droben
In Licht und Luft zerrinnen mir Lieb’ und Leid! –
Doch, wie verscheucht von töriger Bitte, flieht
Der Zauber; dunkel wirds und einsam
Unter dem Himmel, wie immer, bin ich –
Komm du nun, sanfter Schlummer! zu viel begehrt
Das Herz; doch endlich, Jugend! verglühst du ja,
Du ruhelose, träumerische!
Friedlich und heiter ist dann das Alter.
Friedrich Hölderlin (20 maart 1770 – 7 juni 1843)
De Franse schrijver Benoît Duteurtre werd geboren op 20 maart 1960 in Saint-Adresse nabij le Havre. Zie ook mijn blog van 20 maart 2009.
Uit: Gaieté parisienne (Vertaald door Bruce Benderson)
“Nicholas got up to wander through the square. He gazed at the cathedral’s towers, hemmed within the scaffolding of a cleaning company. He tried to make out the high passageways through which Quasimodo and Esmeralda had run in that old movie. He got closer to the façade, where hundreds of cameralenses competed for views of copies of medieval statues. Autumn sun infused the bodies coming and going through the two doors. A few of them lingered on the bridge, watching the tourist boats pass, their loudspeakers recounting the history of la Cité. At a distance hummed the flock of protector buses.
On the square, acrobats and sidewalk artists were holding a small street fair. Perched on a traffic post, a man made up like the eighteenth century imitated the slow, jerky motions of an elderly robot. On stools in front of easels, painters portrayed Notre-Dame and its branch of the river–in the impressionist style. They studied the scene minutely, before returning to their canvases, where their brushes– like magic wands– eliminated all traces of traffic, buses, tourists, video cameras, and scaffolding, reconstituting the image of Paris éternel.
At the center of the square, some kids were running around a donkey. This real beast was harnessed to a souvenir cart: the Eiffel tower, the Butte of Monmartre, French flags, cold drinks, declarations of the rights of man…The animal had a basketball cap from a Chicago team, stuck between his two long ears. The brats were gorging him on candy and soft drinks. A plasticpail hung under his back end, so he could relieve himself. Now and then,he let out a piercing shriek, and a few passersby became angry about seeing him treated so barbarically, far from nature’s wide open spaces.“
Benoît Duteurtre (Saint-Adresse, 20 maart 1960)
De Afrikaans-Amerikaanse schrijver, journalist en cultuurcriticus Touré werd geboren op 20 maart 1971 in Milton, Massachusetts. Zie ook mijn blog van 20 maart 2007 en ook mijn blog van 20 maart 2009.
Uit: Soul City
„Cadillac stepped out of the station onto Groove Street and saw men cooling down the block with walks of such visible rhythm, physical artistry, and attention to aesthetics that it looked like a pimp-stroll convention. Across the street a barber was clipping and snipping at a prodigious fro in an open-air barbershop, clipping with the arrogance of a famous painter wielding his brush, snipping whether in or out of the fro, turning those scissors into a snare. On the corner a street sweeper swept with a theatricality that transformed his duty into modern dance.
On Mojo Road a flock of girls double-dutched, pigtails bouncing, the rope cracking at lightning speed, while the three in the middle danced in the air, never touching the ground. They seemed to be levitating, but those ropes were moving so fast it was difficult to tell exactly what was going on. Maybe the ropes were whipping up a mini-sonic boom that created a pocket of air that the girls could surf for a moment, like an invisible magic carpet. That made no sense. But what he saw made no sense either: six- and seven-year-old girls in rainbow-colored tights with ropes zipping under their bent legs eight, nine, ten times before they touched the sidewalk. They touched down less from gravity than from boredom, as if they’d been just hanging out in the air.
He checked into his hotel, the Copasetic on Cool Street, then walked from Nappy Lane to Gravy Ave to Cornbread Boulevard. The sidewalks were forty to fifty feet wide and the streets were abuzz with all-age minifestivals of hair braiding, marble shooting, bubble blowing, puddle stomping, roller-skating, faithful preaching, “God’s coming!,” mommies strolling, babies toddling, groceries spilling, lots of flirting, and gossip flying. On Bookoo Boulevard the Vinylmobile crept by, offering old albums for a few dollars, and children poured from homes to chase it as children elsewhere chase ice cream trucks.“
Touré (Milton, 20 maart 1971)
De Amerikaanse dichter en fotograaf Gerard Joseph Malanga werd geboren op 20 maart 1943 in New York. Zie ook mijn blog van 20 maart 2007 en ook mijn blog van 20 maart 2009.
Uit: Richard Marshall interviews Gerard Malanga
GM: My most recent poem is a poem I wrote for the actor John Thaw. I’m just a fan of his. So I wrote this poem because I was sad to hear of his death. I followed his Mor
se TV series. It was on public educational television. I don’t know how big or popular it was, but I certainly enjoyed the series. It was not so much about solving the crime as about an in-depth way of looking at someone who had to solve a problem in a way. That was part of his job. It was a highly intellectual series, I thought, but done in a very subtle and tasteful way. I read an obituary in The Times and something hit me. I thought I would immerse myself in a poem where I would be talking to him and he would be talking to me. I started the poem two weeks ago with the idea that I would premier it at the reading at the ICA. I finished it after a week. It’s still a little bit in the raw state. It might be a bit too long, but at the moment I can’t see any way of cutting it. It’s a poem that kept on growing and I have already eliminated a lot of lines. Was he popular over here?
RM: Yes. Very. Hugely so.
GM: Oh really! Well, the shocking thing for me was that he was a year older than me. I was looking at one of the publicity shots where he was leaning up against the Jaguar in a white trench coat and he looked so old. He looked older than he was. And that saddened me even more because here was a man at the height of his talent and powers, a brilliant actor, and I never thought he got as much recognition as he could have got. Everybody knew him as Inspector Morse. He did do other series, where he was a lawyer, but I never saw very much of it. But he dies at the age of sixty a year after his character dies. I was so sad and I just felt as a fan I needed to acknowledge that to some degree. I was thinking of the American audience, not the British one, and I was thinking did they really know who this man was. That’s why I started to write these lines.“
Gerard Malanga (New York, 20 maart 1943)
Zie voor nog meer schrijvers van de 20e maart ook mijn vorige twee blogs van vandaag.