Border of a Dream: Selected Poems of Antonio Machado (Spanish Edition) (25 page)

BOOK: Border of a Dream: Selected Poems of Antonio Machado (Spanish Edition)
5.15Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
Proverbs and Songs

to José Ortega y Gasset

1

The eye you see is not

an eye because you see it.

It is eye because it sees you.

2

To converse

first ask,

then... listen.

3

All narcissism glows

as an ugly vice

and one by now old.

4

But seek in your mirror the other

who walks with you.

5

Between living and dream

there is a third way.

Guess it.

6

Now your Narcissus

can’t spot himself in the mirror

since he is the glass.

7

A new century? Still the same

flaming up the same forge?

And does water still race

in old pipes into a gorge?

8

Today is always still.

9

Sun in the Ram. My window

is open to the cold air.

O gossip of far water!

The twilight wakes the river.

10

In the ancient hamlet

—O wide towers with storks!—

the chatty noise dies out,

and in the solitary field

water sounds among the rocks.

11

Again I play my part

bound up with water,

yet water in the living

rock of my heart.

12

When water sounds, can you know

if it is water from a peak or valley,

a plaza, garden or from an orchard?

13

What I find astounds me:

leaves of garden balm

smell of ripe lemon.

14

Never lay out your frontier

or sharpen your profile.

That is all veneer.

15

Look for your counterpart

who always walks with you

and mostly is what you are not.

16

When spring comes

soar into flowers.

Don’t suck wax.

17

In my solitude

I have seen very clear things

that are not true.

18

Good are water and thirst,

good are shadow and sun;

the honey from rosemary,

the honey of a flowerless field.

19

At the border of the road

there is a stone fountain

and a small earthen jar

—gurgling—that no one moves.

20

Guess this riddle.

What is a fountain,

a jug and water?

21

I’ve seen people even

drink from mud puddles.

Thirst has its caprices.

22

Let there be but one symbol:

quod elixum est ne asato.

Don’t roast what’s been boiled.

23

Sing, sing, sing,

the cricket in its cage

next to its tomato.

24

Slowly shape a good letter.

Making things fine

means more than making them.

25

Anyhow.

Ah! anyhow,

it’s vital to liven your oars,

the snail told the greyhound.

26

At last some active men!

The puddle was dreaming

of its mosquitoes.

27

O empty skull!

To think it all took place

inside you, skull!

said a second Dr. Pandolfo.

28

Singers, leave

the clapping and cheers

to others.

29

Wake up, singers:

Let echoes end,

voices begin.

30

Don’t hunt for dissonance.

In the end nothing sounds bad

and people dance to any tune.

31

A wrestler over the hill.

Yesterday a prince,

tomorrow trash.

32

Brawler, boxer,

beat up the wind.

33

Anyhow.

Oh, anyhow,

You hang onto the fetish of waiting

for your quota of punches.

34

O rinnovarsi o perire...

It doesn’t sound good.

Navigare è necessario...
39

Better. Live to see.

35

A new cipher is ripening

and will snare its groupies.

An activist is as useless

as a rational being.

36

The poet doesn’t look

for the fundamental I
40

but the essential you.

37

A doctor said: “As old

as the world” means to be

learned, forgotten and buried

like Rameses’s mummy.

38

But the doctor didn’t know

that today is always still.

39

Find a mirror in someone,

but not for shaving

or dyeing your hair.

40

The eyes you sigh for,

get it straight,

eyes you see yourself in

are eyes because they see you.

41

“Now old words are heard.”

Well, sharpen your ears.

42

Christ teaches: love your neighbor

as yourself, yet never

forget the neighbor is someone else.

43

He said another truth:

Find the you who is never yours

and never can be.

44

Don’t despise words.

Poets, the world is noisy

and mute. Only God talks.

45

Everything for others?

Young man, fill your jar

so they will drink it up.

46

One lies more than can be counted

for lack of imagination.

Truth also is invented.

47

Authors, the scene ends

with one rule of theater:

In the beginning was the mask.

48

The worst of the gang

of scoundrels is one who forgets

his vocation as devil.

49

Did you say a half-truth?

They’ll say you lie twice

if you spill the other half.

50

To you I don’t allude

in my song, friend.

That you is me.
41

51

Give time to time.

For your cup to run over.

you must fill it first.

52

Hour of my heart.

The hour of a hope

and a despair.

53

Beyond living and dreaming

is what matters most:

coming awake.

54

His voice quivers when he sings.

Now they don’t hiss his lyrics,

they’re hissing his heart.

55

Now there were some who said:

Cogito ergo non sum.
42

What an exaggeration!

56

Gypsy talk.

“How are we doing, pal?”

“Circling down the shortcut.”

57

Some in despair

only heal with the rope,

others with seven words.

Faith is back in style.

58

I thought my fireplace dead

and stirred the ashes.

I burned my fingers.

59

He broke into a laugh!

A very serious man!

No one would guess it.

60

Let’s divvy the work.

The bad guys dip the arrow,

the good ones flex the bow.

61

Like don Sem Tob,

he dies his white hair

and more reasonably.

62

To find work for the wind

he sewed the tree’s dry leaves

with a double thread.

63

He felt the four winds

at the crossroads

of his thought.

64

Do you know the invisible

spinners of dreams?

Two of them: green hope

and grim fear.

They bet on who

spins more and more lightly,

she with a gold ball,

he with a black ball.

With the thread we are given

we weave when we weave.

65

Sow mallow

but don’t eat it,

said Pythagoras.

Answer the ax

—said the Buddha and the Christ!—

with your sandalwood aroma.

It’s good to remember

the old words

that come back and ring out.

66

Pay attention.

A solitary heart

is not a heart.

67

Bees, singers,

not to the honey but to flowers.

68

Every fool has the vice

of confusing worth and price.

69

He saw his shadow walking in dreams.

Good hunter of himself,

always lying in ambush.

70

He caught his bad man,

who on sunblue days

walks with his head down.

71

Give your poems double light,

reading them head on

and at an angle.

72

Don’t worry if it goes around

and slips from hand to hand:

out of gold is made a coin.

73

From an
Art of Table Manners,

lesson one:

You must not pick up the spoon

with the fork.

74

Lord Saint Jerome,

let go of that stone

you pound yourself with.

He bashed me with it.

75

Gypsy talk:

“For going around

take the middle road.

You’ll never get there.”

76

Your tongue sets the tone,

not too high nor too low.

Just stay with it.

77

Tartarin in Kant’s Königsberg!

With his cheek on his fist,

he managed to learn everything.
43

78

Melt gold in a smelting cup,

and engrave lyre and bow

not on a jewel but a coin.

79

In the Castilian ballad,

don’t look for harsh Spanish salt.

Poet, better than an old ballad

is the singing of young women.

They leave you with something

you can’t deny: a melody

of tracing song and story

of a yesterday that still is.

80

A concept pristine pure

is usually an empty husk.

Maybe it’s a red cauldron.

81

If it is good to live

it is better to dream,

and best of all,

Mother, to wake.

82

Not sun but a bell

when it wakes you

is the peak of morning.

83

What wit! In sad Hesperia,
44

the western promontory,

in this tired tail end

of Europe, ready to be skinned,

and in an ancient city

tiny like a thimble,

the little man smoking

and thinking, laughing as he thinks.

The high towers have fallen,

and in the trash can

lie the Kaiser’s crown

and the Czar’s head.

Baeza, 1919

84

Among the figs I am soft.

Among the rocks I am stone.

That’s bad!

85

Your truth? No, Truth,

and come with me to look for it.

Yours, you can keep it.

86

In my solitude

I have friends.

When I am with them

how remote they are!

87

O Guadalquivir!

I saw you born in Cazorla,

and die today in Sanlúcar.

A bubble of bright water,

under a green pine,

you were. How wonderful your sound!

Like me, near the sea,

river of brackish mud,

do you dream of your springs?

88

Baroque thought

paints shavings of fire.

It swells and complicates adornment.

89

Nevertheless.

Oh, nevertheless,

there’s always one true burning coal

in the blaze of the theater.

90

Are the leaves of sweet basil,

lavender and sage

now ashamed of their fragrance?

91

Ever on high, ever on high.

Renewal? From above.

The grease pole told the tree.

92

The tree said, Fear the ax,

O pole nailed in the ground.

For you, pruning is downfall.

93

What is truth? The river

that flows and passes by

where the boat and boatman

are also waves of water?

Or this sailor’s dream

always of shore and anchor?

94

I give advice, an old man’s vice:

never follow my advice.

95

Yet there is no reason

to disdain

advice that is confession.

96

Do you feel the new sap?

Take care, sapling,

that no one finds out.

97

Be careful that the dry pole

doesn’t hear about

your green eyes.

98

Your prophecy, poet.

“Tomorrow the dumb will speak

heart and stone.”

99

“But art?”

“It is pure game

that is the same as pure life

that is the same as pure fire.

You will see coal burn.”

39
“Either renew yourself or perish” and “Sailing is necessary” are Italian sayings found in Gabriele D’Annunzio (1863–1938), an energetic writer, who later supported Mussolini during the Fascist regime.

40
Reference is again to Bergson’s “Essay on the Immediate Data of Consciousness.” See notes 20 and 22 on Bergson.

41
In keeping with love and the metaphysics of the mirrored world as fantasy and illusion, these ironic words parallel the wisdom and cunning of Walt Whitman in his “Song of Myself,” who is always seeking you, whose you and I are paradoxically the same in separation and union, and who ends “Song of Myself” with those paradoxes, saying, “If you want me again look for me under your boot-soles,” and concludes, saying, “I stop somewhere waiting for you.”

42
Machado turns “Je pense, donc je suis” of Descartes (who also quotes the Latin) into
Cogito ergo non sum,
meaning “I think, therefore I am not.”

43
Ironically, he links Alphonse Daudet’s Tartarin de Tarascon, who claims great trips he never made, to his hero Kant, who wrote his
Critique
without leaving his city of Königsberg.

BOOK: Border of a Dream: Selected Poems of Antonio Machado (Spanish Edition)
5.15Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Getting Near to Baby by Audrey Couloumbis
Well in Time by Suzan Still
Dancing Naked by Shelley Hrdlitschka
I Married a Communist by Philip Roth
Goat Mother and Others: The Collected Mythos Fiction of Pierre Comtois by Pierre V. Comtois, Charlie Krank, Nick Nacario
Summer of Frost by L.P. Dover
The Battle for Terra Two by Stephen Ames Berry