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Issue 18
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Three Poems

  • by Yolanda Pantin
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  • May, 2021

Glacier Perito Moreno

The poem fell like a deafening block of ice.

Sparse-leaved shrubs grow here
and sheep crop

with small shifts forward;

they don’t seem to move, yet advance
across the ground.

I thought I might come close to wisdom,
facing that landscape,

a whim as infantile
as picking your nose

until it bleeds.

It was a moment of poetic
stupefaction: a lump of cold rearing up

seventy metres above us.

In front of the glacier,
we sought the certainty of powerlessness.

Not because we were nothing,
but that the noise of the mass as it plunged

resounded
like an open heart.

Translated by Ruth Fainlight

 

Translating ourselves

There is something fascinating

to be found between not understanding
and the desire to understand

something similar to the task making a poem
or translating a fragment

from an unknown tongue

Something as true
as the axe-split wood

in our primal need
to articulate

a thought
or sketch something

that will send signals
out of a clearing in the forest

to the autistic child

Small victories
in the human communication

—What are they saying?
—What does it mean?

Minimal gestures and minimal words
that somewhat calm

The growing anxiety

I only understand
what I project onto you

what the foreign language
unchains

out of its strange music
when

out of any place

dislocating
emerge

searchlights, also unexpected
allusions to bears, leopards

or the word ‘wolf’

brought out by desire
from beyond the erudite reference

to the founding of Rome
and ignoring

what it could mean

in dialogue
rather than in poetic

monologue

if we could all speak
in the same language

interchanges, intellectual lectures
in museum galleries

would the word ‘wolf’
arise on its own

fully substantiated?

For

what we can finally grasp

out of the silent orphanhood
of impossible phrases

in our vacillating
attempts to make progress

through the clearing in the forest

—What are you saying?
—What are you trying to say me?

when a word surfaces
and one believes one understands

what it could not be
and what Is

the absolute truth of the poem
and also its failure

Translated by Judith Ortiz Cofer

 

Kazimir in the Prow of a Boat
(Variations on a painting by Malevich)

1

I was sailing down the Yenisei
Toward the mouth of the river
In the maw of the landscape
To be devoured.

I was traveling onboard
Across the landscape
Without counting the days
Since my destruction.

I was traveling toward my capitulation
To houses without
Clear views
Without a thought for the humble

Investiture of the monk.
I was distracted, not looking,
When I saw the riders
In a small oil painting,

And I lost my mind.

2

I was sailing down the Yenisei
Toward the mouth of the river
In the maw of the landscape
To be devoured.

I was traveling onboard
Across History
Without counting the days
Since my destruction.

I was traveling toward my capitulation
To houses without
Clear views
Without a thought for the humble

Architecture of the laity.
I was distracted, not looking,
When I saw the riders
Approaching the riverbank,

And I lost my mind

3

I was sailing down the Yenisei
Toward the mouth of the river
In the maw of the landscape
To be devoured.

I was traveling onboard
Across my History
Without counting the days
Since my destruction.

I was traveling toward my capitulation
To houses without
Clear views
Without a thought for the white

Investiture of the saint.
I was distracted, not looking,
When I saw the horses
Approach the riverbank,

And I lost my mind.

Translated by Clinton Krute

Ruth Fainlight was born in New York, but has mainly lived in Britain since she was 15, having also spent some years living in France and Spain. She studied for two years at the Birmingham and Brighton Colleges of Art. In addition to her own works, Fainlight has also provided criticism for BBC Radio, The Times Literary Supplement, The Guardian and numerous other publications. She was married to the British writer Alan Sillitoe (1928–2010) and has a son, David, who is a photographer for The Guardian, and an adopted daughter, Susan. Fainlight lives in London. She has twice been Poet in Residence at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, and was a close friend of Sylvia Plath in the years leading up to Plath’s death.

Judith Ortiz Cofer (February 24, 1952 – December 30, 2016) was a Puerto Rican American author. Her critically acclaimed and award-winning work spans a range of literary genres including poetry, short stories, autobiography, essays, and young-adult fiction. Ortiz Cofer was the Emeritus Regents’ and Franklin Professor of English and Creative Writing at the University of Georgia, where she taught undergraduate and graduate creative writing workshops for 26 years. In 2010, Ortiz Cofer was inducted into the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame, and in 2013, she won the University’s 2014 Southeastern Conference Faculty Achievement Award. Ortiz Cofer hailed from a family of storytellers and drew heavily from her personal experiences as a Puerto Rican American woman. In her work, Ortiz Cofer brings a poetic perspective to the intersection of memory and imagination. Writing in diverse genres, she investigated women issues, Latino culture, and the American South. Ortiz Cofer’s work weaves together private life and public space through intimate portrayals of family relationships and rich descriptions of place. Her own papers are currently housed at the University of Georgia’s Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library.

Venezuelan poet Yolanda Pantin. Photo: Lisbeth Salas, La Poeteca. CC BY-SA 4.0.
  • Yolanda Pantin

Photo: Yolanda Castaño

Yolanda Pantin was born in Caracas in 1954. She studied Letters at the Universidad Católica Andrés Bello. She is a poet, essayist, editor, and children’s book author. She has published the following verse collections: Casa o Lobo (1981), Correo del Corazón (1985), La Canción Fría (1989), Poemas del Escritor (1989), El Cielo de París (1989), Los Bajos Sentimientos (1993), La Quietud (1998), El Hueso Pélvico (2002), Poemas Huérfanos (2002), La Épica del Padre (2002), País (2007), 21 caballos (2011), Bellas Ficciones (2016), and Lo que hace el tiempo (2017). In 2014, Pre-textos published País, poesía reunida 1981-2011. In 1989 she received the Premio Fundarte de Poesía in Caracas. She received a Rockefeller Foundation grant at Bellagio Study Center. In 2004, she received a Guggenheim grant. For her complete works, she received the Premio Poetas del Mundo Latino “Víctor Sandoval” in Aguascalientes, Mexico in 2015, and  she received the XVII Premio Casa de América de Poesía Americana in Madrid, Spain in 2017. In 2020, she received the Premio Federico García Lorca in Granada, Spain.

  • Clinton Krute, Judith Ortiz Cofer, Ruth Fainlight
PrevPreviousThree Poems by Micaela Paredes Barraza
Next“The Other Against the World: On the Fiction of Ariana Harwicz” by Maximiliano CrespiNext
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