Moon River

Patsy bursts full throttle into the day
It’s 6 a.m. and already I hear
her in the shower singing Moon River
wider than a mile 
                      She’s a bottle half-
full kinda girl  no two ways  Always has
a smile and a kind word on her soft red
lips  Moments later she appears wearing
a large bath towel  Come on lazy bones
she shouts  It’s a big blue day and sun is
in the air  Let’s go out and change the world
I pull the duvet over my head and
pray  Where are the rains of yesteryear I
sigh  Last night we strolled down by the river
The water was low
                          the sky full of stars

John Lyons

Blaise Cendrars – Laughter

I laugh
I laugh
You laugh
We laugh
Nothing else matters
Except this laughter that we love
You have to know how to be silly and happy

Blaise Cendrars

Translation by John Lyons


Rire

Je ris
Je ris
Tu ris
Nous rions
Plus rien ne compte
Sauf ce rire que nous aimons
Il faut savoir être bête et content


BlaiseCendrarsThe French poet, Blaise Cendrars (1887-1961), lost his right arm during the Battle of the Somme in 1915. An important member of the Montparnasse community of writers and artists, Cendrars was an inspirational influence on many American writers, including John Dos Passos and Henry Miller.

Anna de Noailles – In mourning

Anna de Noailles

In this extract from Le livre de ma vie, published in 1932, Anna de Noailles meditates on the emotional impact of her father’s death.

How can we not think here of the secret mourning devoid of any pomp which, later, accompanies the death of those of our friends who take our lives with them? They leave us lying there, with no choice but to meditate on their intolerable absence. The old crimson wool sweater that we wore during times of tender and familiar conversations; in the moments of our work, contemplated by them; during intimate meals, and that they kissed on the shoulder, the elbow, the wrist, does not offer us the entertainment of thinking of leaving them! When, staggering, without them, we begin to take our first steps again on the land which stole them from us and which, in all places, will seem funereal to us, we can henceforth put on the dress chosen at random from the wardrobe; we can cover our hair with a hat trimmed with robin feathers or purple camellias, without worrying about our appearance, which no longer matters to us. Unhealed misfortunes do not reveal themselves to passers-by or even to our superficial relationships. They do not register in the concierge’s lodge nor in the hallways of our houses; the murder they’ve committed on us remains our secret and our inexhaustible knowledge. . .

Translation by John Lyons


Comment ne pas songer ici au deuil secret et dénué de tout apparat qui, plus tard, accompagne la mort de ceux de nos amis qui emportent avec eux notre vie? Ils nous laissent gisants, sans nul autre parti à prendre que de méditer leur intolérable absence. Le vieux tricot de laine cramoisie que nous portions à l’heure des conversations tendres et familières; aux instants de notre travail, par eux contemplé; au cours des repas intimes, et qu’ils baisaient à l’épaule, au coude, au poignet, ne nous offre pas le divertissement de songer à le quitter! Lorsque, chancelants, amputés d’eux, nous recommençons à faire nos premiers pas sur la terre qui nous les a dérobés et qui, en tous lieux, nous semblera funèbre, nous pouvons revêtir désormais la robe décrochée au hasard dans l’armoire; nous pouvons poser sur nos cheveux un chapeau garni de plumes de rouge-gorge ou de pourpres camélias, sans nous préoccuper de notre aspect, qui ne nous tient plus à cœur. Les malheurs sans guérison ne se révèlent pas aux passants ni même à nos relations superficielles. Ils n’ont pas de registre dans la loge du concierge ni dans le vestibule de nos maisons; le meurtre qu’ils ont exercé sur nous demeure notre secret et notre inépuisable savoir. . .

How like a winter your absence

How like a winter your absence has been
how cold the days    how dark the starry nights
and all around the bare December scene
I swear it breaks my heart to see such sights
The countryside now racked by bitter frosts
no leaf    no fruit    just misery abounds
and farmers facing ruin
                                      count their costs
while poacher and gamekeeper do their rounds
And yet all seemed so fair in summer time
when you and I took pleasure where we willed
with joy each village steeple seemed to chime
and not a day went by but it was filled
with love in all its deep simplicity
our loving hearts content
                                          as they should be

John Lyons

Paul Éluard – Uninterrupted Poetry

We need to see touch smell taste hear
To light a fire under the blue and white sky
Always the first fire the star on earth
And the first flower in our nascent body.

Il nous faut voir toucher sentir goûter entendre
Pour allumer un feu sous le ciel blanc et bleu
Toujours le premier feu l’étoile sur la terre
Et la première fleur dans notre corps naissant.

PAUL ÉLUARD from POÉSIE ININTERROMPUE

Translation by John Lyons

We go like the blossom

We go like the blossom  a slow burn to
extinction  consumed by the very air
that we breathe to keep us alive  Built-in
obsolescence you might say  So what is
the point of it all?
                         Is it to grow rich
and famous?  To be known for being known?
Who will read us when we’re gone? Who will care?
When I was a child I wrote as a child
Simple compositions to reflect my
simple life  All so far away and gen-
tle now  I loved the open fields and an-
cient woodlands or to wander down to the
wide grey river to watch the boats go by
The anglers on the pier
                             bating their breath

John Lyons

Paul Éluard – The two of us

The two of us holding hands
We believe everywhere’s home
Under the gentle tree under the black sky
Under every roof on the fringes of fire
On the empty street in broad daylight
In the vague eyes of the crowd
Alongside the foolish and the wise
Among the children and the adults
Nothing mysterious about love
Proof of that ourselves
Lovers feel at home in our home

Paul Éluard

Translation by John Lyons


Nous Deux

Nous deux nous tenant par la main
Nous nous croyons partout chez nous
Sous l’arbre doux sous le ciel noir
Sous tous les toits au coin du feu
Dan la rue vide en plein soleil
Dans les yeux vagues de la foule
Auprès des sages et des fous
Parmi les enfants et les grands
L’amour n’a rien de mystérieux
Nous sommes l’évidence même
Les amoureux se croient chez nous.

Paul Éluard

All that breath

All that breath   From the moment of birth how
many cubic metres?   The Amazon
forest churning out life thousands of miles
away  The magic of symbiosis
of give and take 
                            Take nothing for granted
Gertrude sits within four walls composing
her psalms and Alice patiently observes
as she embroiders a fine linen nap-
kin  Abandon a garden and the house
is bigger   At dinner the beef was carved
as a kind consideration  Much plea-
sure was had on all sides of the table 
Outside  fresh flowers flourished in the warm
sunshine  A gentle breeze
                                        brought gentle rain 

John Lyons

Crystal tears on the Western Front

It’s a room hung with words   That’s its form
A cave in the mind  replete with ochre
images of man and woman   of wild
beasts etched on bony walls    A space in time
recorded for all time  A hunter’s tale
told to all who gather round the flame that
flickers in the fading light   Beauty and
truth where silence sleeps
                             and the moon’s face looms
large   and songs of innocence have been heard
and dance has had its turn  Nothing lives for-
ever   though nothing truly dies  How strange
that ev’ry loving breath denied the ache
of art must wither as it were upon
the vine  Crystal tears
                                    on the Western Front

John Lyons

Paul Éluard – Us no matter where

The bird halts observes an invisible prey
He hunts he provides for his young
The wherewithal to sing fly sleep

To the harsh contact with the dense forest
He prefers the damp fields
Teeming with the day’s last straws

The fine web of life
Gently covers your face
And you hold in this basket
Our means our reasons for living
You’re as wise as you are beautiful
You attract the most beautiful words

We will talk tonight about us and the birds
We won’t listen to the long and sorry history
Of people driven from their homes
By golden-jawed death
Men with less pride than beasts
Who track misfortune everywhere
May they not appear quite naked then
In a haven of clarity such as our own

We take care of each other
Day by day we preserve our life
Like a bird his hatched form
And his pleasure
Among so many birds to come

Paul Éluard (from Le livre ouvert, 1940)

Translation by John Lyons