Skip to content
LALT-Iso-Black
  • menu
Search
Close this search box.
  • English
  • Español
Issue 13
Uncategorized

Three Poems

  • by Salgado Maranhão
Print Friendly, PDF & Email
  • February, 2020

Editor’s Note: We are happy to feature these poems by Salgado Maranhão in English and Portuguese, inspired by works by American painter Will Barnet, along with the paintings to which they refer. All paintings © Will Barnet Foundation, courtesy Alexandre Gallery, New York. Click “Spanish” to read in the original Portuguese.

 

Three Poems by Salgado Maranhão
Janus and the White Vertebra, 1955, ©Will Barnet Foundation.

 

Beneath the Gaze of Will Barnet
(Janus and the White Vertebra, 1955)    

From somewhere
come colors
spreading
through vertebrae,

coagulating clots
of light,
though there is no light
near by.

Figures take shape
like limbs
searching for each other

but, in fact,
they are mere gestures
meeting in the distance.

Or perhaps secret cries
that cannot be heard,
much like our being
which, the more it reveals itself,
the less it can be seen.

 

Three Poems by Salgado Maranhão
Dialogue in Green, 1968, ©Will Barnet Foundation.

 

Beneath the Gaze of Will Barnet
(Dialogue in Green, 1968)            

They are knit of the same
flesh
of absence, even
when—present—
they flow together.

For they are dressed
in the skins
of the night.

(an atavistic heritage
where guilt has no
face and where one plays chess
with nothingness)

Ah,
if I could only lash
their fears,
underscore
their inmost cells
exactly where nothing ever will be said.

but I am broken
into many,
subtracted
from the absence of myself.

 

Three Poems by Salgado Maranhão
Idle Hands, 1935, ©Will Barnet Foundation.

 

Beneath the Gaze of Will Barnet
(Idle Hands, 1935)                        

Behold a century
crushed
amongst its colors; behold

a dream stitched
in flames:
a solitary hand

grinding down the pigments
of a time that aches
in our blood.

There was a flash of lightning
tearing the law;

a night stripped bare
in the eyes of the dreamer.

A dizzying flight
to make the legend sweet:

a bee drowning
in its own honey.

Translated by Alexis Levitin

  • Salgado Maranhão

Salgado Maranhão, winner of all of Brazil's major poetry awards, has toured the United States five times, presenting his work at over one hundred colleges and universities. In addition to fourteen books of poetry, he has written song lyrics and made recordings with some of Brazil’s leading jazz and pop musicians.  He has published three collections of his work in English: Blood of the Sun (Milkweed Editions, 2012), Tiger Fur (White Pine Press, 2015), and Palavora (Dialogos Books, 2019). A fourth collection, Mapping the Tribe, will be published in 2020. On Nov. 13, 2017, Salgado received an honoris causa doctorate for his cultural achievements from the Federal University of Piaui in Teresina, Brazil.

  • Alexis Levitin
alexislevitin1

Alexis Levitin has published forty-five books in translation, mostly poetry from Portugal, Brazil, and Ecuador.  In addition to three books by Salgado Maranhão, his work includes Clarice Lispector’s Soulstorm and Eugénio de Andrade’s Forbidden Words, both from New Directions. He has served as a Fulbright Lecturer at the Universities of Oporto and Coimbra, Portugal, The Catholic University in Guayaquil, Ecuador, and the Federal University of Santa Catarina, in Brazil and has held translation residencies at Banff, Canada, Straelen, Germany (twice), and the Rockefeller Foundation Study Center in Bellagio, Italy.

PrevPrevious“The Last Visit” by Enrique Serna
NextPoems from When I’m Not Around by Annita Costa MalufeNext
RELATED POSTS

Five Poems

By Edwin Madrid

The Water of Life

By Elicura Chihuailaf

Yes, who can doubt it? / They tell me: Water is Life / But what does Water do / without the Air? / But what can the Air / and…

Footer Logo

University of Oklahoma
780 Van Vleet Oval
Kaufman Hall, Room 105
Norman, OK 73019-4037

  • Accessibility
  • Sustainability
  • HIPAA
  • OU Job Search
  • Policies
  • Legal Notices
  • Copyright
  • Resources & Offices
Updated 06/27/2024 12:00:00
Facebook-f X-twitter Instagram Envelope
Latin American Literature Today Logo big width
MAGAZINE

Current Issue

Book Reviews

Back Issues

Author Index

Translator Index

PUBLISH IN LALT

Publication Guidelines

Guidelines for Translators

LALT AND WLT

Get Involved

Student Opportunities

GET TO KNOW US

About LALT

LALT Team

Mission

Editorial Board

LALT BLOG
OUR DONORS
Subscribe
  • email
LALT Logo SVG white letters mustard background

Subscriptions

Subscribe to our mailing list.