The song
Sailor, my dear, my heaven-made spouse!
There is one thing that I beg of
you, man:
Kiss any strangers, and give them your flowers,
love many
women. But, pray, don't love one.
These are the words that I send
with my letter,
piercing land after land they will moan;
stay there as
long as you wish, and you'd better
love all the countries, but, pray, don't
love one.
Give me a whistle -- when tired of roving.
Held in
sweet bondage, or about to drown,
play with your life as you wish, when
you're roaming,
but don't ruin ours because it is one.
Fate
Fate is above me. Why should I browse?
Sleeping in dosses, an outcast, I
rove.
Grief is a cellar,
that opens in every old house.
A ditch is
below me and fate is above.
What did I want? Well, a life of
contentment.
What did I get? Just a coffin and wreath...
Under the
cradle a grave has been latent.
Fate is above me, a ditch is beneath.
Up in the sky my soul, like a hound,
howls, despaired,
the
trigger to pull it was keen.
Fate has come over my family background,
and on the earth where fate is my kin.
What have I done, apart from
the simple
poems I've written in passing to date?
I've been a lightening
conductor for people.
Now I have broken my back. Such is fate.
Self-Portrait
Unshaven and thin, with an angular face
He's lain on my mattress
for
several days.
A cast-iron shadow hangs down the stair,
the lips, huge
and bulging, smuggle and flare.
"Hello, Russian poets, -- his voice
sounds wistful --
shall I give you a razor or, maybe, a pistol?
Are you
a genius? Disdain all this chaos...
Or, p'rhaps, you will say your
confessional prayers?
Or take a newspaper, clip out a bar
and roll
self-reproach like you roll a cigar?"
Why is he cuddling you when I'm
there?
Why is he trying my scarf on? How dare?
He's squinting at my
cigarettes... Oh yes!
Keep off me! Keep off!
SOS! SOS!
Abuses and awards
A poet can't be in disfavour,
he needs no awards, no fame.
A star has no
setting whatever,
no black nor a golden frame.
A star can't be
killed with a stone, or
award, or that kind of stuff.
He'll bear the
blow of a fawner
lamenting he's not big enough.
What matters is
music and fervour,
not fame, nor abuse, anyway.
World powers are out of
favour
when poets turn them away.
Outros papos
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