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Europa

 Europa



  City

  So this is city, is it?

  Dug earth, its water fired to air.

  Rust rocks smoothed to steel,

  Shouldering elm,

  And sand for eyes.

                     Mansfield 2006 ‘City’ Europa

After long travels, the final arrival in the city is always worth celebrating in writing.  The Anglo-Saxon poem, ‘The Ruin’ in the Exeter Book here in Devon does just that; the writer unfamiliar with the great urban works of the Romans arrives in one of their British cities 300 or 400 years after they have left.  Ruin expresses the poet's understanding of the deserted urban space.  In ‘City’ from my collection Europa, I try to convey the wonder of a traveller who has never seen a European city and its buildings.  The travel writer makes sense of the scene using only the elements of nature, bricks are not in the writer’s word hoard, so they appear as clay dug out of the ground, dried and baked.

I collected these poems to celebrate Britain becoming European on 1 January 1973 and the declaration of shared European citizenship for British subjects in Maastricht in 1992. Let’s finish the post with the French translation from Europa of those opening lines:     

  La grande ville

  C'est la ville, n'est-ce pas ?

  La terre creusée, son eau tirée à l'air.

  Les rocs de rouille lissés à l'acier,

  L'orme endossant,

  Et pour les yeux, on a le sable.

                        Mansfield 2006 ‘City’ Europa

 

Reference

Mansfield, Charlie (2006) Europa : le vers anglais à l’aube du troisième millénaire avec les traductions parallèles en français, Paris, Éditions Thélès.  ISBN 2847767606.   http://www.theles.fr/livre/charlie-mansfield_europa

 

 


Comments

  1. Hi Charlie, my email to your old Plymouth address bounced. What are you up to? Loved your Proust post -- brilliant.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for adding Comments, Linda. Much appreciated. I have changed to a gmail address now, which I'll send you. But you can always message me through ResearchGate from the About page of this blog. Or follow this link
      https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Charlie-Mansfield

      Delete
  2. Didn't realize you were also a poet! Bravo.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you, yes, it was an inspired collection I completed back then.

      Delete

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