CONSIDERING
THE SNAIL
The snail
pushes through a green
night,
for the grass is heavy
with
water and meets over
the
bright path he makes, where rain
has
darkened the earth's dark. He
moves in
a wood of desire,
pale
antlers barely stirring
as he
hunts. I cannot tell
what
power is at work, drenched there
with
purpose, knowing nothing.
What is a
snail's fury? All
I think
is that if later
I parted
the blades above
the
tunnel and saw the thin
trail of
broken white across
litter, I
would never have
imagined
the slow passion
to that
deliberate progress.
PENSAR
EL CARACOL
El caracol avanza a empujones
por una
noche verde, pues la hierba
está
cargada de agua y pone trabas
a la
brillante senda que da forma,
donde la
lluvia ha oscurecido
la tierra
oscura.
Se
desplaza en un bosque del deseo,
moviendo
apenas las antenas ocres
cuando
caza. No sé decir
qué
fuerza le espolea a su labor,
sin saber
nada, ahí empapado a posta.
¿Cómo
entender la furia
del
caracol? Lo único
que
pienso es que si luego
no
hubiera separado la hojarasca
sobre el
túnel ni hubiera visto
el
reguero delgado
de baba
blanca y quebradiza,
no habría
imaginado nunca
una
pasión tan lenta
para este
lánguido progreso.
(Translated by Juan Manuel Romero)
Thom
Gunn (1929 –2004) fue un poeta británico nacionalizado
estadounidense. Incluido en el grupo “The Movement” junto a
Larkin, Davie, Jennings, Enright y Amis, su estética se alejó
pronto de la reacción antivanguardista que protagonizaron estos
poetas. Gunn romperá con el neoclasicismo de la poesía inglesa del
momento evolucionando hacia una cierta heterodoxia underground, que
lo llevaría a ser finalmente reconocido como una de las voces
maestras de la literatura gay y la contracultura americana. Su
extensa obra, en la que destacan títulos como Fighting Terms (1954),
The Sense of Movement (1959) o The Man with Night Sweats (1992) ha
recibido múltiples premios y está recogida ampliamente en las
antologías inglesas y norteamericanas.
Thom
Gunn (29
August 1929 – 25 April 2004), born Thomson
William Gunn,
was an Anglo-American poet who was praised both for his early verses
in England, where he was associated with The
Movement and
his later poetry in America, even after moving toward a looser,
free-verse style. After relocating from England to San
Francisco,
Gunn, who became openly gay, wrote about gay-related
topics—particularly in his most famous work, The
Man With Night Sweats in
1992—as well as drug use, sex, and topics related to his bohemian
lifestyle. He won numerous major literary awards.
From Wikipedia.
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