Robert Bly, Hans Tentije, Hans Kloos, Volker Jehle, Tim Fountain, Donna Tartt, Marcelin Pleynet, Norman Maclean, J.J.L. ten Kate

De Amerikaanse dichter en schrijver Robert Bly werd geboren op 23 december 1926 in Madison, Minnesota. Zie ook alle tags voor Robert Bly op dit blog.

 

Prayer for My Father

Your head is still
restless, rolling
east and west.
That body in you
insisting on living
is the old hawk
for whom the world
darkens.
If I am not
with you when you die,
that is just.

It is all right.
That part of you cleaned
my bones more
than once. But I
will meet you
in the young hawk
whom I see
inside both
you and me; he
will guide
you to the Lord of Night,
who will give you
the tenderness
you wanted here.

 

The Night Abraham Called to the Stars

Do you remember the night Abraham first saw
The stars?
He cried to Saturn: “You are my Lord!”
How happy he was! When he saw the Dawn Star,

He cried, “”You are my Lord!” How destroyed he was
When he watched them set. Friends, he is like us:
We take as our Lord the stars that go down.

We are faithful companions to the unfaithful stars.
We are diggers, like badgers; we love to feel
The dirt flying out from behind our back claws.

And no one can convince us that mud is not
Beautiful. It is our badger soul that thinks so.
We are ready to spend the rest of our life

Walking with muddy shoes in the wet fields.
We resemble exiles in the kingdom of the serpent.
We stand in the onion fields looking up at the night.

My heart is a calm potato by day, and a weeping
Abandoned woman by night. Friend, tell me what to do,
Since I am a man in love with the setting stars.

 

 
Robert Bly (Madison, 23 december 1926)

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Giusepe di Lampedusa, Iván Mándy, Christa Winsloe, Albert Ehrenstein, Harry Shearer, Charles Sainte-Beuve, Mathilde Wesendonck, Martin Opitz

De Italiaanse schrijver Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa werd geboren in Palermo op 23 december 1896. Zie ook alle tags voor Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa op dit blog.

Uit: The Leopard (Vertaald door Archibald Colquhoun)

“Don Ciccio was still thundering on: “For you nobles it’s different. You might be ungrateful about an extra estate, but we must be grateful for a bit of bread. It’s different again for profiteers like Sedira with whom cheating is a law of nature. Small folk like us have to take things as they come. You know, Excellency, that my father, God rest his soul, was gamekeeper at the royal shoot of Sant’ Onofrio back in Ferdinand IV’s time, when the English were here? It was a hard life, but the green royal livery and the silver plaque conferred authority. Queen Isabella, the Spaniard, was Duchess of Calabria then, and it was she who had me study, made me what I am now, organist of the Mother Church, honoured by your Excellency’s kindness; when my mother sent off a petition to Court in our years of greatest need, back came five gold ounces, sure as death, for they were fond of us there in Naples, they knew we were decent folk and faithful subjects; when the King came he used to clap my father on the shoulder. ‘Don Liona,’ he said, ‘I wish we’d more like you, devoted to the throne and to my Person.’ Then the officer in attendance used to hand out gold coin. Alms, they call it now, that truly royal generosity; and they call it that so as not to give any themselves; but it was just a reward for loyalty. And if those holy Kings and lovely Queens are looking down at us from heaven to-day, what’ld they say? °The son of Don Leonardo Tumeo betrayed us!’ Luckily the truth is known in Paradise! Yes, Excellency, I know, people like you have told me, such things from royalty mean nothing, they’re just part of the job. That may be true, in fact is true. But we got those five gold ounces, that’s a fact, and they helped us through the winter. And now I could repay the debt my ‘no’ becomes a `yes’! I used to be a ‘faithful subject’, I’ve become a ‘filthy Bourbonite’. Everyone’s Savoyard nowadays! But I take `Savoyards’ with coffee!” And he dipped an invisible biscuit between finger and thumb into an imaginary cup. Don Fabrizio had always liked Don Ciccio, partly because of the compassion inspired in him by all who from youth had thought of themselves as dedicated to the Arts, and in old age, realising they had no talent, still carried on the same activity at lower levels, pocketing withered dreams; and he was also touched by the dignity of his poverty. But now he also felt a kind of admiration for him, and deep down at the very bottom of his proud conscience a voice was asking if Don Ciccio had not perhaps behaved more nobly than the Prince of Salina. »

 

 
Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa (23 december 1896 – 23 juli 1957)
Claudia Cardinale en Alain Delon in de gelijknamige film van Luchino Visconti, 1963

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Carol Ann Duffy

De Britse dichteres en toneelschrijfster Carol Ann Duffy werd geboren in een rooms-katholiek gezin in de Gorbals, een arm deel van Glasgow, op 23 december 1955. Het gezin verhuisde naar Stafford, Engeland, toen Duffy zes jaar oud was. Haar vader werkte voor English Electric. Hij was een vakbondsman en was in 1983 zonder succes kandidaat voor de Labour Party. Daarnaast leidde hij de Stafford Rangers-voetbalclub. Duffy volgde een opleiding aan de Saint Austin’s RC Primary School in Stafford, de St. Joseph’s Convent School (1967-1970) en de Stafford Girls High School (1970-1974). Daarna studeerde zij filosofie aan de University of Liverpool en behaalde een graad in 1977. In 1983 won zij de Poetry Competition. Zij werkte als poëzierecensent voor The Guardian van 1988-1989 en was redacteur van het poëzietijdschrift Ambit. In 1996 werd zij benoemd tot docent in poëzie aan de Manchester Metropolitan University, en werd later creatief directeur van de daaraan verbonden Writing School. In 1988 ontving zij de Somerset Maugham Award, in 1993 de Whitbread Award en de Forward Poetry Prize en in 2005 de T. S. Eliot Prize. Ook won zij verschillende keren de Scottish Arts Council Book Award. In mei 2009 werd zij benoemd tot Poet Laureate als opvolger van de teruggetreden Andrew Motion. Duffy is de eerste vrouwelijke Poet Laureate, de eerste Schotse, en eveneens de eerste openlijk biseksuele vrouw in die functie. Als toneelschrijfster produceerde zij werk dat onder meer werd opgevoerd in het Liverpool Playhouse en het Londense Almeida Theatre, waaronder Take My Husband (1982), Cavern of Dreams (1984), Little Women, Big Boys (1986), Loss (1986) en Casanova (2007).

The Light Gatherer

When you were small, your cupped palms
each held a candleworth under the skin, enough light to begin,
and as you grew,
light gathered in you, two clear raindrops
in your eyes,
warm pearls, shy,
in the lobes of your ears, even always
the light of a smile after your tears.
Your kissed feet glowed in my one hand,
or I’d enter a room to see the corner you played in
lit like a stage set,
the crown of your bowed head spotlit.
When language came, it glittered like a river,
silver, clever with fish,
and you slept
with the whole moon held in your arms for a night light
where I knelt watching.
Light gatherer. You fell from a star
into my lap, the soft lamp at the bedside
mirrored in you,
and now you shine like a snowgirl,
a buttercup under a chin, the wide blue yonder
you squeal at and fly in,
like a jewelled cave,
turquoise and diamond and gold, opening out
at the end of a tunnnel of years.

 

We Remember Your Childhood Well

Nobody hurt you. Nobody turned off the light and argued
with somebody else all night. The bad man on the moors
was only a movie you saw. Nobody locked the door.

Your questions were answered fully. No. That didn’t occur.
You couldn’t sing anyway, cared less. The moment’s a blur, a Film Fun
laughing itself to death in the coal fire. Anyone’s guess.

Nobody forced you. You wanted to go that day. Begged. You chose
the dress. Here are the pictures, look at you. Look at us all,
smiling and waving, younger. The whole thing is inside your head.

What you recall are impressions; we have the facts. We called the tune.
The secret police of your childhood were older and wiser than you, bigger
than you. Call back the sound of their voices. Boom. Boom. Boom.

Nobody sent you away. That was an extra holiday, with people
you seemed to like. They were firm, there was nothing to fear.
There was none but yourself to blame if it ended in tears.

What does it matter now? No, no, nobody left the skidmarks of sin
on your soul and laid you wide open for Hell. You were loved.
Always. We did what was best. We remember your childhood well.

 
Carol Ann Duffy (Glasgow, 23 december 1955)