Marcelin Pleynet, Norman Maclean, Sara Coleridge, J.J.L. ten Kate, Giusepe di Lampedusa, Iván Mándy

De Franse dichter, schrijver en essayist Marcelin Pleynet werd geboren op 23 december 1933 in Lyon. Zie ook alle tags voor Marcelin Pleynet op dit blog.

Uit: Chagall en France

« Chagall arrive pour la première fois à Paris en 1910, il a vingt-trois ans, il n’en repartira qu’en 1914, pour revenir en 1923 et rester en France jusqu’à ce que la guerre l’en chasse, en 1941. Il séjournera alors aux États-Unis, de 1941 à 1948, date à laquelle il s’installe définitivement en France.
Si l’on fait le compte, on constate que Chagall a passé plus des deux tiers de sa vie en France, et notamment dans la maturité de son âge et de son art.
Certes, dans un poème qui fut très souvent reproduit, Chagall prend soin de préciser : « Seul est le mien / Le pays qui se trouve dans mon âme », avant de poursuivre en développant les thèmes qui illustrent son œuvre : « En moi fleurissent des jardins / Mes fleurs sont inventées / Les rues m’appartiennent / Mais il n’y a pas de maisons / Elles ont été détruites dès mon enfance / Les habitants vagabondent dans l’air / À la recherche d’un logis / Ils habitent mon âme.»
Ce qui est une autre façon de dire que le seul pays qu’il se reconnaît est celui que déploient sa peinture et son âme (l’âme de sa peinture), et que sa peinture ne connaît pas de frontière. Et en effet la peinture de Chagall ne connaît pas de frontière, elle est certainement aujourd’hui l’œuvre la plus universelle qui soit. Pourtant, Chagall vécut près de soixante ans en France et il n’a jamais manqué de souligner (alors même qu’il s’était momentanément installé aux États-Unis) tout ce qui le rattachait à l’art et à la culture française.
En 1943, lors d’une conférence prononcée au « Pontigny » franco-américain, à Mount’Holyoke College et publiée dans La Renaissance, revue de l’École libre des hautes études de New York, Chagall déclare : « Je suis arrivé à Paris comme poussé par le destin .. Le soleil de l’art ne brillait alors qu’à Paris, et il me semblait et il me semble jusqu’à présent qu’il n’y a pas de plus grande révolution de l’œil que celle que j’ai rencontrée en 1910, à mon arrivée à Paris. Les paysages, les figures de Cézanne, Manet, Monet, Seurat, Renoir, Van Gogh, le fauvisme de Matisse et tant d’autres me stupéfièrent. Ils m’attiraient comme un phénomène de la nature.”

 

 
Marcelin Pleynet (Lyon, 23 december 1933)
La joie familiale door Marc Chagall, 1976

 

De Amerikaanse schrijver Norman Fitzroy Maclean werd geboren op 23 december 1902 in Clarinda, Iowa. Zie ook alle tags voor Norman Maclean op dit blog.

Uit: A River Runs Through It

“The fight seemed suddenly to stop itself. She was lying on the floor IletNN cell us. Then we but h began to cry and fight in a rage, each one shouting, “You son of bitch, you knocked my mother down.” She got off the floor, and, blind without her glasses, staggered in circles between us, saying without recognizing which one she was addressing, “No, it wasn’t you. I just slipped and fell.” So this was the only time we ever fought. Perhaps we always wondered which of us eras tougher, but, if boyhood questions aren’t answered before a certain point in time, they can’t ever be raised again. So we returned to being gracious to each other, as the wall sug-gested that we should be. We also felt that the woods and rivers were gracious to us when we walked together beside them. It is true that we didn’t often fish together anymore. We were both in our early thirties now, and “now” from here on is the summer of 1937. My ft tiler had retired and he and mother were living in Missoula, our old home town, and Paul was a reporter in Helena, the state capital. I had “gone off and got married,” to use my brother’s description of this event in my life. At the moment, I was living with my wife’s family in the little town of Wolf Creek, but, since Wolf Creek is only forty miles from Helena, we still saw each other from time to time, which meant, of course, fishing now and then together. In fact, the reason I had come to Helena now was to see him about fishing. The fact also is that my mother-in-law had asked me to. I wasn’t happy, but I was fairly sure my brother would finally say yes. He had never said plain no to me, and he loved my mother-in-law and my wife, whom he included in the si gn on the wall, even though he could never under-stand “what had come over me” that would explain why marriage had ever crossed my mind. I ran into him in front of the Montana Club, which was built by rich gold miners supposedly on the spot where gold was discovered in Last Chance Gulch.”

 


Norman Maclean (23 december 1902 – 2 augustus 1990)
Scene uit de film van Robert Redford uit 1992 met Craig Sheffer (Norman) en Brad Pitt (Paul)

 

De Engelse dichteres, schrijfster en vertaalster Sara Coleridge werd geboren op 23 december 1802 in Greta Hall, Keswick. Zie ook alle tags voor Sara Coleridge op dit blog.

 

The Boy That Would Rather Be Naughty Than Good (Fragment)

Young Ronald one day in a fury was roaring,
His passion still higher and higher was soaring;
Cried he, while the tears from his eyelids were pouring,
“I’d rather be naughty than good!”
To learn stupid lessons I’ll never engage,
I’ll storm, and I’ll bluster and riot and rage,
I ne’er will consent to be kept in a cage,
I will go and walk in the wood.”

His mother, astonished, cried “Ronald, for shame!
This terrible temper unless you can tame,
Such folly the rod must be called to reclaim,
And every one else will be ruffled.
Don’t stare with your eyes, and don’t wrinkle your brow,
Nor stamp and kick up such a dust and a row,
Nor shake your head angrily like the mad cow
Whose horns the old farmer has muffled.

 

 
Sara Coleridge (23 december 1802 – 3 mei 1852)

 

De Nederlandse dichter-dominee Jan Jakob Lodewijk ten Kate werd geboren op 23 december 1819 in Den Haag. Zie ook alle tags voor J.J.L. ten Kate op dit blog.

 

Bloemkrans
voor de liefste

Wanneer, ook dán als de andre tekens zwijgen,
De ziel haar zucht in kleuren wedergeeft,
De Min haar blos in ’t rozenblad doet stijgen,
De Erinnring in ’t vergeet-mij-nietje beeft;
Als Hope fladdert in de groene twijgen,
De Rouw in ’t lover der cypresse zweeft;
Als Jaloezij de gele tulp doet hijgen,
De Glorie in de frissen lauwer leeft:

Dan diende ik U een bonte krans te schenken,
Waaruit ge U álle kleuren toe zag wenken
Op ’t levendig fluweel van blad en bloem:
Gij immers zijt mijn Liefde, mijn Herdenken,
Mijn Vreugde en Smart, mijn IJver en mijn Roem,
Die ik de mijne in dood en leven noem!

 

Werd de Liefde eens geknakt

Werd de Liefde eens geknakt in haar tedere knop,
Tot haar blaren verwelkten en vielen,
Geen genegenheids-zon wekt haar leven weer op,
Want maar eens bloeit de lente der zielen.

Is de Hope misleid, dan ontvlucht zij het hart,
En keert weer door beloften noch giften;
Maar de Erinnring blijft achter en leeft van de smart,
En broedt voort op de puinhoop der driften.

Men verhaalt, dat de zwaluw haar nestje ontwijkt,
Als de stormwind de gevel doet kraken;
Maar de nachtuil keert in tot het huis dat bezwijkt,
Waar ze bouwt in een klove der daken.

 

Sonnet op het Sonnet

Geverfde pop, met rinkelen omhangen,
Gebulte jonkvrouw in uw staal’ korset,
Lamzaligste aller vormen, stijf Sonnet!
Wat rijmziek mispunt deed u ’t licht erlangen?

Te klein om één goed denkbeeld op te vangen,
Voor epigram te groot en te koket,
Vooraf geknipt, koepletje voor koeplet,
Kroopt ge onverdiend in onze minnezangen.

Neen! de echte Muze eist vrijheid; en het Lied,
Onhoudbaar uit het zwoegend hart gerezen,
Zij als een bergstroom die zijn band ontschiet!

Gij deugt tot niets, tenzij het deugen hiet,
Om, enkel door de broddelaars geprezen,
Op Geysbeek een berijmd vervolg te wezen.

 


J.J.L. ten Kate (23 december 1819 – 24 december 1889)

 

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)

“And the Sedira, all the various Sedira, from the petty one who violated arithmetic at Donnafugata to the major ones at Palermo and Turin, had they not committed a crime by choking such consciences? Don Fabrizio could not know it then, but a great deal of the slackness and acquiescence for which the people of the South were to be criticised during the next decade, was due to the stupid annulment of the first expression of liberty ever offered them. Don Ciccio had said his say. And now his genuine but rarely shown side of “austere man of principle” was taken over by one much more frequent and no less genuine, that of snob. For Tumeo belonged to the zoological species of “passive snob”, a species unjustly reviled nowadays. Of course the word “snob” was unknown in the Sicily of 186o; but just as tuberculosis existed before Koch, so in that remote era there were people for whom to obey, imitate and above all avoid distressing those whom they considered of higher social rank than themselves was the supreme law of life; snobbery, in fact, is the opposite of envy. At that time a man of this type went under various names; he was called “devoted”, “attached”, “faithful;” and life was happy for him since a nobleman’s most fugitive smile was enough to flood an entire day with sun; and accompanied by such affectionate appellatives, the restorative graces were more frequent than they are to-day. Now Don Ciccio’s frankly snobbish nature made him fear causing Don Fabrizio distress, and he searched diligently round for ways to disperse any frowns he might be causing on the Prince’s Olympian brow; the best means to hand was suggesting they should start shooting again; and so they did. Surprised in their afternoon naps some wretched woodcock and another rabbit fell under the marks-men’s fire, particularly accurate and pitiless that day as both Salina and Tumeo were identifying those innocent creatures with Don Calogero Sedira.”

 


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

 

De Hongaarse schrijver Iván Mándy werd geboren op 23 december 1918 in Boedapest. Zie ook alle tags voor Iván Mándy op dit blog.

Uit: The Watermelon Eaters (Vertaald door Albert Tezla)

“And the Sedira, all the various Sedira, from the petty one who violated arithmetic at Donnafugata to the major ones at Palermo and Turin, had they not committed a crime by choking such consciences? Don Fabrizio could not know it then, but a great deal of the slackness and acquiescence for which the people of the South were to be criticised during the next decade, was due to the stupid annulment of the first expression of liberty ever offered them. Don Ciccio had said his say. And now his genuine but rarely shown side of “austere man of principle” was taken over by one much more frequent and no less genuine, that of snob. For Tumeo belonged to the zoological species of “passive snob”, a species unjustly reviled nowadays. Of course the word “snob” was unknown in the Sicily of 186o; but just as tuberculosis existed before Koch, so in that remote era there were people for whom to obey, imitate and above all avoid distressing those whom they considered of higher social rank than themselves was the supreme law of life; snobbery, in fact, is the opposite of envy. At that time a man of this type went under various names; he was called “devoted”, “attached”, “faithful;” and life was happy for him since a nobleman’s most fugitive smile was enough to flood an entire day with sun; and accompanied by such affectionate appellatives, the restorative graces were more frequent than they are to-day. Now Don Ciccio’s frankly snobbish nature made him fear causing Don Fabrizio distress, and he searched diligently round for ways to disperse any frowns he might be causing on the Prince’s Olympian brow; the best means to hand was suggesting they should start shooting again; and so they did. Surprised in their afternoon naps some wretched woodcock and another rabbit fell under the marks-men’s fire, particularly accurate and pitiless that day as both Salina and Tumeo were identifying those innocent creatures with Don Calogero Sedira.”

 


Iván Mándy (23 december 1918 – 26 oktober 1995)
Adventstijd in Boedapest

 

Zie voor nog meer schrijvers van de 23e december ook mijn vorige blog van vandaag.

Robert Bly, Hans Kloos, Norman Maclean, Sara Coleridge, Donna Tartt, Tim Fountain, Marcelin Pleynet, J.J.L. ten Kate, Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa

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.

 

Passing an Orchard by Train

Grass high under apple trees.
The bark of the trees rough and sexual
the grass growing heavy and uneven.

We cannot bear disaster like
the rocks-
swaying nakedly
in open fields.

One slight bruise and we die!
I know no one on this train.
A man comes walking down the aisle.
I want to tell him
that I forgive him that I want him
to forgive me.

 

Bach’s B Minor Mass

The Walgravian ancestors step inside Trinity Church.
The tenors, the horns, the sopranos, the altos
Say: “Do not be troubled. Death will come.”

The basses as they sing reach into their long coats
And give bits of dark bread to the poor, saying,
“Eat, eat, in the shadow of jethro’s garden.”

The Clarinets remind us of the old promise
That the orphans will be fed. The oboes reply,
“Oh, that promise is too wonderful for us!”

Don’t worry, my dears. The tidal wave that
Wipes out whole cities is merely the wood thrush
Lifting her wings to catch the morning sun.

We know that God gobbles up the Faithful.
The Harvesters on the sea floor are feeding
All of those ruined by the depth of the sea.

We know that people live and die. Even after
Their tree has splintered and fallen in the night, once
Dawn has come, the birds can do nothing but sing.

 

Watering the Horse

How strange to think of giving up all ambition!
Suddenly I see with such clear eyes
The white flake of snow
That has just fallen in the horse’s mane!

 


Robert Bly (Madison, 23 december 1926)

Lees verder “Robert Bly, Hans Kloos, Norman Maclean, Sara Coleridge, Donna Tartt, Tim Fountain, Marcelin Pleynet, J.J.L. ten Kate, Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa”

Robert Bly, Norman Maclean, Sara Coleridge, Donna Tartt, Tim Fountain, Marcelin Pleynet, Iván Mándy, 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.

 

A Dream On The Night Of First Snow

I woke flour a first-day-of-snow dream.
I dreamt I met a girl in an attic,
who talked of operas, intensely.
Snow has bent the poplar over nearly to the ground,
new snowfall widens the plowing.
Outside maple leaves floated on rainwater,
yellow, matted, luminous.
I found a salamander! and held him.
When I put him down again,
he strode over a log
with such confidence, like a chessmaster,
the front leg first, then the hind
leg, he rose up like a tractor climbing
over a hump in the field
and disappeared toward winter, a caravan going deeper into
mountams,
dogs pulling travois,
feathers fluttering on the lance: of the arrogant men.

 

Poems in Three Parts

1
Oh on an early morning I think I shall live forever!
I am wrapped in my joyful flesh
As the grass is wrapped in its clouds of green.

2
Rising from a bed where I dreamt
Of long rides past castles and hot coals
The sun lies happily on my knees;
I have suffered and survived the night
Bathed in dark water like any blade of grass.

3
The strong leaves of the box-elder tree
Plunging in the wind call us to disappear
Into the wilds of the universe
Where we shall sit at the foot of a plant
And live forever like the dust.

 

Gratitude To Old Teachers

When we stride or stroll across the frozen lake,
We place our feet where they have never been.
We walk upon the unwalked. But we are uneasy.
Who is down there but our old teachers?
Water that once could take no human weight-
We were students then- holds up our feet,
And goes on ahead of us for a mile.
Beneath us the teachers, and around us the stillness.

 

 
Robert Bly (Madison, 23 december 1926)

Lees verder “Robert Bly, Norman Maclean, Sara Coleridge, Donna Tartt, Tim Fountain, Marcelin Pleynet, Iván Mándy, J.J.L. ten Kate”

Robert Bly, Norman Maclean, Sara Coleridge, Donna Tartt, Marcelin Pleynet, Iván Mándy, J.J.L. ten Kate, Tim Fountain

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.

 

For My Son Noah Ten Years Old

Nigh and day arrive and day after day goes by
And what is old remains old and what is young remains young and grows old.
The lumber pile does not grow younger nor the two-by-fours lose their darkness
but the old tree goes on the barn stands without help so many years;
the advocate of darkness and night is not lost.

The horse steps up swings on one leg turns its body
the chicken flapping claws onto the roost its wings whelping and walloping
but what is primitive is not to be shot out into the night and the dark.
And slowly the kind man comes closer loses his rage sits down at table.

So I am proud only of those days that pass in undivided tenderness
when you sit drawing or making books stapled with messages to the world
or coloring a man with fire coming out of his hair.
Or we sit at a table with small tea carefully poured.
So we pass our time together calm and delighted.

 

In Rainy September

In rainy September when leaves grow down to the dark
I put my forehead down to the damp seaweed-smelling sand.
What can we do but choose? The only way for human beings
is to choose.
The fern has no choice but to live;
for this crime it receives earth water and night.

we close the door. “I have no claim on you.”
Dusk comes. “The love I have had with you is enough.”
We know we could live apart from the flock.
The sheldrake floats apart from the flock.
The oaktree puts out leaves alone on the lonely hillside.

Men and women before us have accomplished this.
I would see you and you me once a year.
We would be two kernels and not be planted.
We stay in the room door closed lights out.
I weep with you without shame and without honor.

 

Wanting Sumptuous Heavens

No one grumbles among the oyster clans,
And lobsters play their bone guitars all summer.
Only we, with our opposable thumbs, want
Heaven to be, and God to come, again.
There is no end to our grumbling; we want
Comfortable earth and sumptuous Heaven.
But the heron standing on one leg in the bog
Drinks his dark rum all day, and is content.

 

 
Robert Bly (Madison, 23 december 1926)

Lees verder “Robert Bly, Norman Maclean, Sara Coleridge, Donna Tartt, Marcelin Pleynet, Iván Mándy, J.J.L. ten Kate, Tim Fountain”

The Garden Year (Sara Coleridge)

Aan alle bezoekers en mede-bloggers een gelukkig Nieuwjaar!

 

 
Stadsgezicht van Haarlem bij winter door Adrianus Eversen, 19e eeuw

 

The Garden Year

January brings the snow,
Makes our feet and fingers glow.

February brings the rain,
Thaws the frozen lake again.

March brings breezes, loud and shrill,
To stir the dancing daffodil.

April brings the primrose sweet,
Scatters daisies at our feet.

May brings flocks of pretty lambs
Skipping by their fleecy dams.

June brings tulips, lilies, roses,
Fills the children’s hands with posies.

Hot July brings cooling showers,
Apricots, and gillyflowers.

August brings the sheaves of corn,
Then the harvest home is borne.

Warm September brings the fruit;
Sportsmen then begin to shoot.

Fresh October brings the pheasant;
Then to gather nuts is pleasant.

Dull November brings the blast;
Then the leaves are whirling fast.

Chill December brings the sleet,
Blazing fire, and Christmas treat.

 

 
Sara Coleridge (23 december 1802 – 3 mei 1852)
Greta Hall, waar Coleridge werd geboren.

 

Zie voor de schrijvers van de 1e januari ook mijn vorige drie blogs van vandaag.

Sara Coleridge

De Engelse dichteres, schrijfster en vertaalster Sara Coleridge werd geboren op 23 december 1802 in Greta Hall, Keswick, als derde kind van Samuel Taylor Coleridge en zijn vrouw Sarah Fricker. In het huis woonden, na 1803, de Coleridges , Robert Southey en zijn vrouw ( mevrouw Coleridge ’s zus) en Mrs Lovell (andere zuster), weduwe van Robert Lovell, de dichter allemaal samen, maar Coleridge was vaak van huis. In 1822 publiceerde Sara Coleridge een vertaling in drie grote delen van Martin Dobrizhoffers “An Account of the Abipones, an Equestrian People of Paraguay.” In september 1829, na een verloving van zeven jaar trouwde Sara Coleridge met haar neef Henry Nelson Coleridge. De eerste acht jaar van haar huwelijksleven woonden zij in een klein huisje in Hampstead, waar vier van haar kinderen werden geboren. In 1834 publiceerde Coleridge haar “Pretty Lessons in Verse for Good Children.” In 1837 verhuisde de Coleridges naar Chester Place, Regents Park en in hetzelfde jaar verscheen “Phantasmion, a Fairy Tale” het langste originele werk van Coleridge. De liederen in Phantasmion werden destijds veel bewonderd door Leigh Hunt en andere critici. In 1843 overleed Henry Coleridge waardoor zijn weduwe voor de taak kwam te staan de werken van haar vader te redigeren. Zij voegde er enkele werken van zichzelf aan toe, waaronder het “Essay on Rationalism.” Tijdens de laatste jaren van haar leven was Sara Coleridge invalide. Kort voor haar dood vermaakte zij zich door het schrijven van een kleine autobiografie voor haar dochter. Daarmee kwam zij slechts tot haar negende jaar. De biografie werd voltooid door haar dochter en gepubliceerd in 1873, samen met enkele van haar brieven, onder de titel “Memoires en brieven van Sara Coleridge. “Sara Coleridge overleed in Londen op 3 mei 1852.

From “Phantasmion” – One Face Alone

ONE face alone, one face alone,
These eyes require;
But, when that long’d-for sight is shown,
What fatal fire
Shoots through my veins a keen and liquid flame,
That melts each fibre of my wasting frame!

One voice alone, one voice alone,
I pine to hear;
But, when its meek mellifluous tone
Usurps mine ear,
Those slavish chains about my soul are wound,
Which ne’er, till death itself, can be unbound.

One gentle hand, one gentle hand,
I fain would hold;
But, when it seems at my command,
My own grows cold;
Then low to earth I bend in sickly swoon,
Like lilies drooping ’mid the blaze of noon.

 

He Came Unlook’d For

HE came unlook’d for, undesir’d,
A sunrise in the northern sky,
More than the brightest dawn admir’d,
To shine and then forever fly.

His love, conferr’d without a claim,
Perchance was like the fitful blaze,
Which lives to light a steadier flame,
And, while that strengthens, fast decays.

Glad fawn along the forest springing,
Gay birds that breeze-like stir the leaves,
Why hither haste, no message bringing,
To solace one that deeply grieves?

Thou star that dost the skies adorn,
So brightly heralding the day,
Bring one more welcome than the morn,
Or still in night’s dark prison stay.


Sara Coleridge (23 december 1802 – 3 mei 1852)