Mallarme

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whats a good volume to begin with? preferably bilingual.

tom cleveland (tom cleveland), Monday, 21 June 2004 16:44 (nineteen years ago) link

Mallarme

Mal Armé

Mama Laid

Marmalade

Ma, Malaise

Mallarmé

the firefox, Tuesday, 22 June 2004 10:39 (nineteen years ago) link

this board is swarming with dadaists...

tom cleveland (tom cleveland), Tuesday, 22 June 2004 10:48 (nineteen years ago) link

I only remembering seeing one recent one in the bookshops. It had "Un coup de des" in typographic fanciness near the beginning, as I recall.

Casuistry (Chris P), Wednesday, 23 June 2004 05:09 (nineteen years ago) link

The touch of crime. Very particular. I don't know about its language. Sam Shepard took inspiration for his "Rock Star".

Bed, Thursday, 24 June 2004 08:50 (nineteen years ago) link

three weeks pass...
Mallarme. Sounds like a candy bar.

pepektheassassin (pepektheassassin), Sunday, 18 July 2004 04:03 (nineteen years ago) link

ten years pass...

Ever since Maria left me to go to another star––which one? Orion, Altair, or possibly you, green Venus?––I have always loved solitude. How many long days I have spent alone with my cat! By ‘alone’ I mean without a material creature: my cat is a mystic companion, a spirit. So I can say that I have spent long days alone with my cat, and alone with one of the last authors of the Latin decadence; because, singularly and strangely, ever since the fair creature passed away I have loved everything that can be summed up in the word ‘fall’. Thus my favourite time of year is the final languid phase of summer that comes immediately before autumn; and the time of day when I go for a walk is the time when the sun is resting just before it vanishes, when copper-yellow shafts are on the greyish walls and copper-red shafts on the windowpanes. And likewise, the literature to which my spirit turns for pleasure is the poetry of Rome in its final death-throes––as long, that is, as it doesn’t bear any whiff of the Barbarians’ rejuvenating advance or babble the puerile Latin of the early Christian hymns.

j., Monday, 9 March 2015 18:13 (nine years ago) link

one year passes...

I have a 'collected poems and other verse' of mallarme. And revisiting it, I enjoy the poems a lot - and it has the French too. But I don't know French, can't get the rhythm pronunciation. Am I losing a great deal reading it in English?

two crickets sassing each other (dowd), Monday, 29 August 2016 11:52 (seven years ago) link

got these fellows' translation recently, don't know what i think of it yet

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2015/09/on-azure-and-translating-mallarme/

j., Tuesday, 30 August 2016 04:54 (seven years ago) link

Cool - let me know how you find it!

I suppose it's really just the usual contradictions/tensions about translated poetry. If the french text wasn't there it wouldn't bother me at all - I'd just take the poems as they are. The presence of the original text forces me to view the translation as an imitation, in some way, rather than texts of their own. Though I re-read Edwin Morgan's essays recently, and he's very much a 'translation optimist', a sort of humanism to his approach.

I really just bought it for his 'constellation' style poems, which interest me, and which I like a lot, but I've been enticed by his standard verse. I guess I just need to keep at it.

two crickets sassing each other (dowd), Tuesday, 30 August 2016 06:45 (seven years ago) link

i have never really made any headway with french poetry, probably because the old enough stuff obeys such different norms that i just don't get a feel for it in the supposedly hamstrung translations

i read some howard (?) translations of baudelaire recently e.g. and the conceptual universe made sense to me but aside from a sort of stateliness the translations seemed quite devoid of poetry

j., Wednesday, 31 August 2016 02:51 (seven years ago) link

different norms than english poetry, i mean

j., Wednesday, 31 August 2016 02:51 (seven years ago) link


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