John Hegley, Tim O’Brien, Louis Untermeyer, Inge Merkel, Sergej Aksakov

De Engelse dichter John Hegley werd geboren op 1 oktober 1953 in Londen. Zie ook mijn blog van 1 oktober 2008 en ook mijn blog van 1 oktober 2009 en ook mijn blog van 1 oktober 2010

 

A Somewhat Absent Minded Attempt to Be Politically Correct

Someone I don’t know that well

tells me they have a little boy.

“Oh yes,” I enquire, “and how old is he or she?”

 

Bonfire Night

the doors open

everyone comes out

everyone is ready

for fireworks

all except the dog

Eddie

he is shut up in the sheddie

even out of doors we have indoor fireworks

Dad says it is better to be safe than dead

the air is full of the smell of next doors fireworks

Mum says they are very good this year

this year Christopher is allowed

to help his dad to light the fireworks

he is very excited

he is very proud

he is twenty-eight

 

John Hegley (Londen, 1 oktober 1953)

 

De Amerikaanse schrijver Tim O’Brien werd geboren op 1 oktober 1946 in Austin, Minnesota. Zie ook mijn blog van 1 oktober 2010

 

Uit: Going After Cacciato

„Liquid and shiny, a mix of rain and clay, the trail took them higher. Out of radio range, beyond the reach of artillery.

Cacciato eluded them but he left behind the wastes of his march: empty ration cans, bits of bread, a belt of gold-cased ammo dangling from a shrub, a leaking canteen, candy wrappers, worn rope. Hints that kept them going. Luring them on, plodding along the bed of a valley; once they saw his fire on a distant hill. Straight ahead was the frontier.

“He makes it that far,” Doc said on the morning of the sixth day, pointing to the next line of mountains, “and he’s gone, we can’t touch him. He makes the border and it’s bye-bye Cacciato.”

“How far?”

Doc shrugged. “Six klicks, eight klicks. Not far.”

“Then he’s made it,” Paul Berlin said.

“Maybe so.”

“By God, he has!”

“Maybe.”

“By God! Lunch at Maxim’s!”

“What?”

“A cafeteria deluxe. My old man ate there once…truffles heaped on chipped beef and toast.”

“Maybe.”

The trail narrowed, then climbed, and a half hour later Stink spotted him.

He stood at the top of a small grassy hill, two hundred meters ahead. Loose and at ease, smiling, Cacciato already had the look of a civilian. Hands in his pockets, patient, serene, not at all frightened. He might have been waiting for a bus.

Stink yelped and the lieutenant hurried forward with the glasses.

“Got him!”

“It’s — “

“Got him!” Stink was crowing and hopping. “I knew it, the ding-dong’s givin’ up the ghost. I knew it!”

 

Tim O’Brien (Austin, 1 oktober 1946)

 

De Amerikaanse dichter en bloemlezer Louis Untermeyer werd geboren op 1 oktober 1885 in New York City. Zie ook mijn blog van 1 oktober 2010

Ash Wednesday

(Vienna)

I

Shut out the light or let it filter through

These frowning aisles as penitentially

As though it walked in sackcloth. Let it be

Laid at the feet of all that ever grew

Twisted and false, like this rococo shrine

Where cupids smirk from candy clouds and where

The Lord, with polished nails and perfumed hair,

Performs a parody of the divine.

The candles hiss; the organ-pedals storm;

Writhing and dark, the columns leave the earth

To find a lonelier and darker height.

The church grows dingy while the human swarm

Struggles against the impenitent body’s mirth.

Ashes to ashes. . . . Go. . . . Shut out the light.

(Hinterbrühl)

II

And so the light runs laughing from the town,

Pulling the sun with him along the roads

That shed their muddy rivers as he goads

Each blade of grass the ice had flattened down.

At every empty bush he stops to fling

Handfuls of birds with green and yellow throats;

While even the hens, uncertain of their notes,

Stir rusty vowels in attempts to sing.

He daubs the chestnut-tips with sudden reds

And throws an olive blush on naked hills

That hoped, somehow, to keep themselves in white.

Who calls for sackcloth now? He leaps and spreads

A carnival of color, gladly spills

His blood: the resurrection—and the light.

 


Louis Untermeyer (1 oktober 1885 – 18 december 1977)

 

De Oostenrijkse schrijfster Inge Merkel werd geboren op 1 oktober 1922 in Wenen. Zie ook mijn blog van 1 oktober 2008 en ook mijn blog van 1 oktober 2009 en ook mijn blog van 1 oktober 2010

 

Uit:Das große Spektakel

“Vor dem Aussteigen im vierten Stock erfuhr ich noch, daß der neue Herr sie für jeden Donnerstag

zum Putzen engagiert habe; nachmittags.

«Wer putzt am Nachmittag?» fragte sich die Hausmeisterin; noch dazu wolle der Herr um keinen Preis während des Putzens zu Hause sein. Sie mißbilligte dieses in sie gesetzte Vertrauen, erwähnte noch einmal das Fehlen von Schlafzimmergarnitur und Buffet mit greller Lache und schwenkte prallsteißig mit Kübel und Fetzen in die offene Wohnung ein.

Trotz masochistischen Horchzwanges vernahm ich am nächsten Tag von unten her nur gedämpftes

Rumoren, dann nichts mehr.

Als ich einmal mit dem Aufzug die vierte Etage passierte, sah ich durch die Glasscheibe den neuen Mieter en profil von unten emporwachsen. Bequem ausgetretene Schuhe verloren sich in legere

Hosenbeine aus abgewetztem Schnürlsamt. Sodann kamen breite, knochige Hände ins Blickfeld,

die zornig mit dem Schlüsselloch kämpften. Im Höherschweben registrierte ich einen ausgeprägten

Hinterkopf mit grau gekräuseltem Haarkranz, scharfnasig mit Brille.

Während ich meiner Mansarde zutrieb, streifte mich das vage Gefühl, diese Erscheinung irgendwann

schon einmal gesehen zu haben. Ich hätte den neuen Fußnachbarn vergessen, weil er sich so ruhig verhielt, wenn nicht an jedem Donnerstag zwischen drei und fünf Uhr die Hausmeisterin unten mit dem Staubsauger gewerkt hätte, wozu Ö3 auf voller Lautstärke erscholl. Alle musikalischen Darbietungen des Senders wurden von der Weibsperson mit durchdringendem Gesang begleitet. Ich gewöhnte es mir an, meine Besorgungen auf diese Zeit zu verlegen.”

 

Inge Merkel (1 oktober 1922 – 15 januari 2006)

 

De Russische schrijver Sergej Aksakov werd geboren op 1 oktober 1791 in Oefa.Zie ook mijn blog van 1 oktober 2008. en ook mijn blog van 1 oktober 2010

 

Uit: A Russian Gentleman (Vertaald door J. D. Duff)

When my grandfather lived in the Government of Sim-birsk, on the ancestral estate granted to his forefathers bythe Tsars of Muscovy, he felt cramped and confined. Notthat there was really want of room ; for he had arableland and pasture, timber and other necessaries in abundance ; but the trouble was, that the estate which hisgreat-grandfather had held in absolute possession, had

ceased to belong to one owner. This happened quitesimply : for three successive generations the family consisted of one son and several daughters ; and, when someof these daughters were married, their portions took theshape of a certain number of serfs and a certain amountof land. Though their shares were not large, yet, as theland had never been properly surveyed, at this time fourintruders asserted their right to share in the managementof it. To my grandfather, life under these conditions wasintolerable : there was no patience in his passionate temperament ; he loved plain dealing and hated complicationsand wrangles with his kith and kin.

For some time past, he had heard frequent reportsabout the district of Ufa — how there was land there withoutlimit for the plough and for stock, with an indescribableabundance of game and fish and all the fruit of theearth ; and how easy it was to acquire whole tracts of landfor a very trifling sum of money. If tales were true, youhad only to invite a dozen of the native Bashkir chiefs in

certain districts to partake of your hospitality ; you provided two or three fat sheep, for them to kill and dress in their own fashion ; you produced a bucket of whisky,with several buckets of strong fermented Bashkir meadand a barrel of home-made country beer — which proves,by the way, that even in old days the Bashkirs were notstrict Mahometans — and the rest was as simple as A B C.“

 


Sergej Aksakov (
1 oktober179112 mei 1859
)