Poem
María Mercedes Carranza
Bogotá, 1982
No one looks at another face to facefrom North to South distrust: suspicion
among smiles and careful politeness.
Dark the air and fear
in all the doorways and the elevators, in the beds.
A loose rain falls
like a deluge: world city
that will never know happiness.
Soft smells that look like remembrances
after so many years that are in the air.
Half-done city, always on the verge of looking like something
like a girl that begins to menstruate,
precarious, with no beauty whatever.
Nineteenth-century patios with geraniums
where very old ladies still serve chocolate;
tenement courtyards
inhabited by dirt and pain.
On the steep and always crepuscular streets
– an opaque light as if filtered by seedy alabaster plates –
scenes as familiar as death and love take place;
these streets are the labyrinth where I must walk and retrace
the steps that at the end will be my whole life.
Grey are the walls, and the trees,
and the air from the brow to the feet of the inhabitants.
Far off the green exists, a metallic and serene green,
a Patinir green of lagoon or river,
and behind the mountains it may be possible to see the sun.
The city that I love looks too much like my life;
the weariness and boredom of living together unite us
but also the irreplaceable customs and the wind.
© Translation: 2004, Nicolás Suescún
Bogotá, 1982
Bogotá, 1982
Nadie mira a nadie de frente,de norte a sur la desconfianza, el recelo
entre sonrisas y cuidadas cortesías.
Turbios el aire y el miedo
en todos los zaguanes y ascensores, en las camas.
Una lluvia floja cae
como diluvio: ciudad de mundo
que no conocerá la alegría.
Olores blandos que recuerdos parecen
tras tantos años que en el aire están.
Ciudad a medio hacer, siempre a punto de parecerse a algo
como una muchacha que comienza a menstruar,
precaria, sin belleza alguna.
Patios decimonónicos con geranios
donde ancianas señoras todavía sirven chocolate;
patios de inquilinato
en los que habitan calcinados la mugre y el dolor.
En las calles empinadas y siempre crepusculares,
luz opaca como filtrada por sementinas láminas de alabastro,
ocurren escenas tan familiares como la muerte y el amor;
estas calles son el laberinto donde he de andar y desandar
todos los pasos que al final serán mi vida.
Grises las paredes, los árboles
y de los habitantes el aire de la frente a los pies.
A lo lejos el verde existe, un verde metálico y sereno,
un verde Patinir de laguna o río,
y tras los cerros tal vez puede verse el sol.
La ciudad que amo se parece demasiado a mi vida;
nos unen el cansancio y el tedio de la convivencia
pero también la costumbre irremplazable y el viento.
From: Tengo miedo
Publisher: Editorial Áncora, Bogotá
Publisher: Editorial Áncora, Bogotá
Poems
Poems of María Mercedes Carranza
Close
Bogotá, 1982
No one looks at another face to facefrom North to South distrust: suspicion
among smiles and careful politeness.
Dark the air and fear
in all the doorways and the elevators, in the beds.
A loose rain falls
like a deluge: world city
that will never know happiness.
Soft smells that look like remembrances
after so many years that are in the air.
Half-done city, always on the verge of looking like something
like a girl that begins to menstruate,
precarious, with no beauty whatever.
Nineteenth-century patios with geraniums
where very old ladies still serve chocolate;
tenement courtyards
inhabited by dirt and pain.
On the steep and always crepuscular streets
– an opaque light as if filtered by seedy alabaster plates –
scenes as familiar as death and love take place;
these streets are the labyrinth where I must walk and retrace
the steps that at the end will be my whole life.
Grey are the walls, and the trees,
and the air from the brow to the feet of the inhabitants.
Far off the green exists, a metallic and serene green,
a Patinir green of lagoon or river,
and behind the mountains it may be possible to see the sun.
The city that I love looks too much like my life;
the weariness and boredom of living together unite us
but also the irreplaceable customs and the wind.
© 2004, Nicolás Suescún
From: Tengo miedo
From: Tengo miedo
Bogotá, 1982
No one looks at another face to facefrom North to South distrust: suspicion
among smiles and careful politeness.
Dark the air and fear
in all the doorways and the elevators, in the beds.
A loose rain falls
like a deluge: world city
that will never know happiness.
Soft smells that look like remembrances
after so many years that are in the air.
Half-done city, always on the verge of looking like something
like a girl that begins to menstruate,
precarious, with no beauty whatever.
Nineteenth-century patios with geraniums
where very old ladies still serve chocolate;
tenement courtyards
inhabited by dirt and pain.
On the steep and always crepuscular streets
– an opaque light as if filtered by seedy alabaster plates –
scenes as familiar as death and love take place;
these streets are the labyrinth where I must walk and retrace
the steps that at the end will be my whole life.
Grey are the walls, and the trees,
and the air from the brow to the feet of the inhabitants.
Far off the green exists, a metallic and serene green,
a Patinir green of lagoon or river,
and behind the mountains it may be possible to see the sun.
The city that I love looks too much like my life;
the weariness and boredom of living together unite us
but also the irreplaceable customs and the wind.
© 2004, Nicolás Suescún
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