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Re: [xmca] About Nazim Hikmet, Pushkin, and Translation
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- Subject: Re: [xmca] About Nazim Hikmet, Pushkin, and Translation
- From: Michal Zellermayer <michalz@macam.ac.il>
- Date: Thu, 25 Jun 2009 10:03:41 +0300
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----- Original Message -----
From: "David Kellogg" <vaughndogblack@yahoo.com>
To: "Culture ActivityeXtended Mind" <xmca@weber.ucsd.edu>
Sent: Thursday, June 25, 2009 4:25 AM
Subject: Re: [xmca] About Nazim Hikmet, Pushkin, and Translation
Dear Ulvi (and Achilles, and maybe even Mike, who digs poetry and Chapter
Seven):
Last night after I sent off the snippet of Nazim Hikmet I was feeling a
little guilty about the way I cropped it, and it occurred to me that
cropping poetry is in a sense (perhaps even in the same sense) as difficult
as translating it.
On p. 252 of (Minick's version of) Thinking and Speech we have a very short
snippet of Pushkin:
Like rosy lips without a smile
I would not love Russian speech
Without grammatical errors.
Here is the original Russian:
Как уст румяных без улыбки,
Без грамматической ошибки
Я русской речи не люблю .
But what really helps me to understand it is not the original Russian but
the original context. It is Eugene Onegin. Tatyana, the Byron-reading
daughter of landed gentry, is visited by a tall, supercilious, handsome and
Byronic Eugene and promptly infatuated.
She commits a serious breach of propriety; she puts pen to paper. However,
as the daughter of Russian rural landowners, she does not have volitional
control of her own language. She knows conventionalized meanings and basic
interpersonal communication skills but she cannot express profound meanings
which are also deeply personal meanings in her own language.
She writes in French. Pushkin then slyly ‘translates’ her letter into
Russian, explaining that IF Tatyana had actually poured out her heart in
Russian it would be full of grammatical errors but that this would merely
add to the charm:
XXVI
I see another problem looming
To save the honour of our land
I must translate—no presuming
This letter from Tatyana’s hand
Her Russian was as thin as vapor
She never read a Russian paper
Our native speech had never sprung
Unhesitating from her tongue
She wrote in French…what a confession!
What can one do? As said above
Until this day, a lady’s love
In Russian never found expression
Till now our language—proud, God knows—
Has hardly mastered postal prose
XXVII
They should be forced to read in Russian
I hear you say. But can you see
A lady—what a grim discussion!
With The Well Meaner on her knee?
I ask you, each and every poet!
The darling objects –don’t you know it?
For whom to expiate your crimes
You’ve made so many secret rhymes
To whom your hearts are dedicated
Is it not true that Russian speech
So sketchily possessed by each
By all is sweetly mutilated
And it’s the foreign phrase that trips
Like native idiom from their lips?
XXVIII
Protect me from such apparition
On dance floor or break up of ball
As bonneted Academician
Or seminarist in yellow shawl.
To me unsmiling lips bring terror
However scarlet; free from error
Of grammar, Russian language too.
Now too my cost it may be true
That generations of new beauties
Heeding the press will make us look
More closely at the grammar book
That verse will turn to useful duties
On me all this has no effect
Tradition still keeps my respect…
XXIX
No, incorrect and careless chatter
Words mispronounced, thoughts ill-expressed
Evoke emotion’s pitter patter
Now as before, inside my breast
As Vygotsky remarks, this passage is often seen as frivolous, and the
pitter-patter of the translator's rhyme scheme doesn't help much. Nabokov
complained:
What is translation? On a platter
A poet's pale and glaring head
A parrot's screech, a monkey's chatter
And profanation of the dead!
And Nabokov himself translates Onegin into prose. But our translator-poet,
Sir Charles Johnstone, emphasizes that versifying lightness is part and and
parcel of Pushkin's profundity; it is the emotion that makes a man write a
piece of deathless literature about duelling (in which he rakes his hero
over the coals for doing it) and then throws his own life away in a careless
duel, the feeling of lived experience according to which poetry is the real
stuff of life and breathing lungs and beating heart are (literally)
pretexts.
David Kellogg
Seoul National University of Education
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