Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Parabolical Ballad



Fortunes like rockets fly routes parabolical,
Rainbows less widespread than gloom diabolical.
For instance, the iiery-red painter Gaugin,
Bohemian, though sales-agent until then:
To get to the Louvre from nearby Montmartre
He looped through Tahiti, just missing Sumatra.

Sped skyward, forgetting of money-born madness,
Of cackling wives and of stifling academies.
And so
          he surmounted
                    terrestrial gravity.

The priests of the fine arts were eager to have
                    at him:
"A parabola’s fine, but a straight line’s far
                    shorter.
Better copy old Eden,” they scoffed over porter.
But Gaugin zoomed away like today’s rocketeers
In a wind that went tearing at coat-tails and ears
And entered the Louvre not through the front door,
But crashed his parabola through ceiling and floor!
Each reaches his truth with his own share
                    of nerve:
A worm through a chink
                    and a man by a curve.

There once lived a girl—just a few blocks away.
We took college together until one fine day.
Why on earth did I fly
          like a blinking old ass
To mix with Tbilisi’s ambiguous stars?
Don’t blame me too hard for that barmy parabola,
Poor shoulders left out in the cold by a rambler!
How clear you rang out through the gloom of the
                    universe,
My slender antenna, in gales truly furious.
On and on I keep flying,
          to land by your call,
My earthly antenna left out in the cold.
It’s difficult business to fly a parabola.
Yet when art, love or history is the traveller,
Then, paragraphs, canons, prognoses defying,
Parabolical trajectories they go flying....
_ _ _
Siberian spring drowns galoshes in water
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Perhaps, after all, though, a straight line
                    is shorter?

ANDREI VOZNESENSKY


Translated by Dorian Rottenberg

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