Monday, February 13, 2012

A Long Way to Go... from poem by Tomas Transtromer



This poet as most readers here may know was just last year given the international laurel wreath for poetry.

I am fascinated by the images and density of the words and find them so appropos...

"He who has gone furthest has a long way to go."

"The Europeans mostly stay clustered by the car as if it were Mama."

"The crickets are as strong as electric razors."

Tomas Transtromer's "From an African Diary"/thanks to Hal Johnson
(1963)

On the Congolese marketplace pictures
shapes move thin as insects, deprived of their human power.
It's a hard passage between two ways of life.
He who has arrived has a long way to go.

A young man found a foreigner lost among the huts.
Didn't know whether to take him for a friend or a subject for extortion.
His doubt disturbed him. They parted in confusion.

The Europeans mostly stay clustered by the car as if it were Mama.
The crickets are as strong as electric razors. The car drives home.
Soon the beautiful darkness comes, taking charge of the dirty clothes.
Sleep.
He who has arrived has a long way to go.

It helps perhaps with handshakes like a flight of migratory birds.
It helps perhaps to let truth out of the books.
It is necessary to go further.

The student reads in the night, reads and reads to be free
and having passed his exam he becomes a step for the next man.
A hard passage.
He who has gone furthest has a long way to go.

--Tomas Tranströmer
tr. Robin Fulton


fr. Bells and Tracks (1966)
and in The Great Enigma: New Collected Poems
[New York: New Directions, 2006]

==========
I found the above here

See this Tomas Stranstromer Interview here

More Stranstromer poems - short Bio here





I feel a resonance with this newly-discovered poet because of the poetry and also because I am one-half swedish.

The photos above found as follows:

The Orient-Express train here

The Congo River (with village in background) 1889. Photo from Vingt années de vie africaine: 1874-1893, by Alexandre Delcommune, 1922. Public domain.

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