Remembrance


The northeast blows,
my favorite among winds,

since it promises fiery spirit

and a good voyage to mariners.

But go now, and greet

the lovely Garonne,

and the gardens of Bordeaux,

where the path runs

beside the steep bank,

and the brook runs into the deep stream,

and a noble pair of oak and silver

poplars look down from above.

 
I remember well

how the crowns of the elm trees

lean over the mill,

and a fig tree grows in the courtyard.

On holidays dark-skinned women

walk upon the soft earth,

and in March,

when night and day are equal:

cradling breezes waft

across the gentle pathways,

heavy with golden dreams.

 
But someone hand me

the fragrant cup,

full of dark light,

that I may rest.

It would be sweet

to sleep among the shadows.

It isn't good

to stay mindless

with human thoughts.

On the other hand, conversation

is also good: to speak

the thoughts of the heart,

and to hear much of days of love,

and of deeds that occur.

 
But where are our friends —

Bellarmin and his companion?

Many are afraid to go to the source,

since treasure is first found in the sea.

Like painters, they gather up earth's beauty,

and they don't scorn winged war,

or to live alone for years

beneath the bare mast —

where the city's festivities

don't flash through the night, or

the sound of strings and native dancing.

 
But now the men

have left for India...

from the windy peaks

and vine-covered hills

where the Dardogne

comes down with the great

Garonne; wide as an ocean

the river flows outward.

But the sea takes

and gives memory,

and love fixes the eye diligently,

and poets establish

that which endures.

 

                     
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