The Great Enigma: New Collected Poems

The Great Enigma: New Collected Poems

The Great Enigma: New Collected Poems

The Great Enigma: New Collected Poems

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Overview

The collected poems of one of the world's greatest living writers, Tomas Transtromer, available in this comprehensive edition.

In day's first hours consciousness can grasp the world
as the hand grips a sun-warmed stone.


Translated into fifty languages, the poetry of Tomas Transtromer has had a profound influence around the world, an influence that has steadily grown and has now attained a prominence comparable to that of Pablo Neruda's during his lifetime. But if Neruda is blazing fire, Transtromer is expanding ice. The Great Enigma: New Collected Poems gathers all the poems Tomas Transtromer has published, from his distinctive first collection in 1954, 17 Poems, through his epic poem Baltics ("my most consistent attempt to write music"), and The Sad Gondola, published six years after he suffered a debilitating stroke in 1990 ("I am carried in my shadow / like a violin / in its black case."), to his most recent slim book, The Great Enigma, published in Sweden in 2004. Also included is his prose-memoir Memories Look at Me, containing keys into his intensely spiritual, metaphysical poetry (like the brief passage of insect collecting on Runmaro Island when he was a teenager). Firmly rooted in the natural world, his work falls between dream and dream; it probes "the great unsolved love" with the opening up, through subtle modulations, of "concrete words."

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780811216722
Publisher: New Directions Publishing Corporation
Publication date: 10/17/2006
Series: New Directions Paperbook Series , #1050
Pages: 288
Sales rank: 967,365
Product dimensions: 8.92(w) x 10.62(h) x 0.64(d)

About the Author

Nobel Prize Laureate and beloved Swedish poet Tomas Tranströmer (1931–2015) was born in Stockholm and worked as a psychologist. He wrote ten collections of poems that the Nobel Prize Committee praised for their “condensed, translucent images that give us fresh access to reality.” The best-known Scandinavian poet of the postwar period, and the most widely translated, his other books available in English include Selected Poems 1954–1986The Half-Finished HeavenFor the Living and the DeadNight Vision; and Windows and Stars. For many years after being seriously debilitated by a stroke, Tranströmer continued write. He was also an avid pianist and released a recording of classical piano pieces performed with his left hand. Tranströmer received numerous public recognitions for his poetry including the Neustadt International Prize for Literature, the Bonnier Award for Poetry, Germany’s Petrarch Prize, the Bellman Prize, the Swedish Academy’s Nordic Prize, the August Prize, and a Lifetime Recognition Award in 2007 from The Griffin Trust. In 2011 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.

Robin Fulton, a Scottish poet and longtime resident of Norway, has been translating Tranströmer for over thirty-five years.

Read an Excerpt

The Great Enigma

New Collected Poems
By Tomas Tranströmer

New Directions Publishing Corporation

Copyright © 2006 Tomas Tranströmer
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-0-8112-1672-2

Contents

Foreword......................................................................xiii 17 POEMS (17 DIKTER), 1954 I Prelude.....................................................................3 II Autumnal Archipelago: Storm.........................................................................4 Evening-Morning...............................................................4 Ostinato......................................................................5 III Five Stanzas to Thoreau...................................................6 Gogol.........................................................................7 Sailor's Yarn.................................................................8 Strophe and Counter-Strophe...................................................8 Agitated Meditation...........................................................9 The Stones....................................................................10 Context.......................................................................10 Morning Approach..............................................................11 There Is Peace in the Surging Prow............................................11 Midnight Turning Point........................................................12 IV Song.......................................................................13 V Elegy.......................................................................17 Epilogue......................................................................21 SECRETS ON THE WAY (HEMLIGHETER PÅ VÄGEN), 1958 I Solitary Swedish Houses.....................................................27 The Man Who Awoke with Singing over the Roofs.................................29 Weather Picture...............................................................29 The Four Temperaments.........................................................30 Caprichos.....................................................................31 II Siesta.....................................................................32 Izmir at Three O'Clock........................................................33 III Secrets on the Way........................................................34 Tracks........................................................................34 Kyrie.........................................................................35 IV A Man from Benin...........................................................36 Balakirev's Dream.............................................................38 V After an Attack.............................................................40 VI The Journey's Formulae.....................................................41 PRISON (FÄNGELSE), 1959 Prison........................................................................45 THE HALF-FINISHED HEAVEN (DEN HALVFÄRDIGA HIMLEN), 1962 I The Couple..................................................................49 The Tree and the Sky..........................................................49 Face to Face..................................................................50 Ringing.......................................................................50 Through the Wood..............................................................51 November with Nuances of Noble Fur............................................52 II The Journey................................................................53 C Major.......................................................................55 Noon Thaw.....................................................................56 When We Saw the Islands Again.................................................57 From the Hilltop..............................................................58 III Espresso..................................................................59 IV The Palace.................................................................60 Syros.........................................................................61 In the Nile Delta.............................................................62 V A Dark Swimming Figure......................................................63 Lament........................................................................64 Allegro.......................................................................65 The Half-Finished Heaven......................................................66 Nocturne......................................................................67 A Winter Night................................................................68 BELLS AND TRACKS (KLANGER OCH SPÅR), 1966 Portrait with Commentary......................................................71 Lisbon........................................................................72 From an African Diary.........................................................73 Crests........................................................................74 Hommages......................................................................75 Winter's Formulae.............................................................77 Morning Birds.................................................................79 About History.................................................................80 Alone.........................................................................82 On the Outskirts of Work......................................................84 After Someone's Death.........................................................85 Oklahoma......................................................................86 Summer Plain..................................................................87 Downpour over the Interior....................................................88 Under Pressure................................................................90 Open and Closed Spaces........................................................91 An Artist in the North........................................................92 In the Open...................................................................93 Slow Music....................................................................95 SEEING IN THE DARK (MÖRKERSEENDE), 1970 The Name......................................................................99 A Few Minutes.................................................................99 Breathing Space July..........................................................100 By the River..................................................................101 Outskirts.....................................................................102 Traffic.......................................................................103 Night Duty....................................................................104 The Open Window...............................................................105 Preludes......................................................................106 Upright.......................................................................108 The Bookcase..................................................................109 PATHS (STIGAR), 1973 To Friends Behind a Frontier..................................................113 From the Thaw of 1966.........................................................113 Sketch in October.............................................................114 Further In....................................................................115 The Outpost...................................................................116 Along the Radius..............................................................118 Looking Through the Ground....................................................120 December Evening 1972.........................................................121 The Dispersed Congregation....................................................122 Late May......................................................................123 Elegy.........................................................................124 BALTICS (ÖSTERSJÖAR), 1974 Baltics.......................................................................127 THE TRUTHBARRIER (SANNINGSBARRIÄREN), 1978 I Citoyens....................................................................143 The Crossing-Place............................................................144 The Clearing..................................................................144 How the Late Autumn Night Novel Begins........................................145 To Mats and Laila.............................................................146 From the Winter of 1947.......................................................147 II Schubertiana...............................................................148 III The Gallery...............................................................151 IV Below Zero.................................................................156 The Boat-The Village..........................................................156 The Black Mountains...........................................................157 Homeward......................................................................157 After a Long Drought..........................................................158 A Place in the Forest.........................................................158 Funchal.......................................................................159 THE WILD MARKET SQUARE (DET VILDA TORGET), 1983 I Brief Pause in the Organ Recital............................................163 From March 1979...............................................................164 Memories Look at Me...........................................................165 Winter's Gaze.................................................................165 The Station...................................................................166 II Answers to Letters.........................................................167 Icelandic Hurricane...........................................................168 The Blue Wind-Flowers.........................................................168 The Blue House................................................................169 III Satellite Eyes............................................................170 Nineteen Hundred and Eighty...................................................170 Black Postcards...............................................................171 Fire-Jottings.................................................................171 Many Steps....................................................................172 Postludium....................................................................172 IV Dream Seminar..............................................................173 Codex.........................................................................174 Carillon......................................................................170 Molokai.......................................................................178 FOR THE LIVING AND THE DEAD (FÖR LEVANDE OCH DÖDA), 1989 The Forgotten Captain.........................................................181 Six Winters...................................................................182 The Nightingale in Badelunda..................................................183 Early May Stanzas.............................................................184 Berceuse......................................................................184 Streets in Shanghai...........................................................185 Deep in Europe................................................................186 Leaflet.......................................................................187 The Indoors Is Endless........................................................187 Vermeer.......................................................................190 Romanesque Arches.............................................................191 Epigram.......................................................................191 Female Portrait, 19th Century.................................................192 Medieval Motif................................................................192 Air Mail......................................................................193 Madrigal......................................................................194 Golden Wasp...................................................................195 THE SAD GONDOLA (SORGEGONDOLEN), 1996 April and Silence.............................................................199 National Insecurity...........................................................199 A Page of the Nightbook.......................................................200 The Sad Gondola...............................................................20l Landscape with Suns...........................................................203 November in the Former DDR....................................................204 From July 1990................................................................205 The Cuckoo....................................................................205 Three Stanzas.................................................................206 Like Being a Child............................................................207 Two Cities....................................................................207 The Light Streams In..........................................................208 Night Journey.................................................................208 Haiku.........................................................................209 From the Island, 1860.........................................................211 Silence.......................................................................212 Midwinter.....................................................................213 A Sketch from 1844............................................................214 THE GREAT ENIGMA (DEN STORA GÅTAN), 2004 Eagle Rock....................................................................217 Façades.......................................................................218 November......................................................................219 Snow Is Falling...............................................................220 Signatures....................................................................221 Haiku.........................................................................222 PROSE MEMOIR MEMORIES LOOK AT ME (MINNENA SER MIG), 1993 Memories......................................................................233 Museums.......................................................................236 Primary School................................................................239 The War.......................................................................242 Libraries.....................................................................244 Grammar School................................................................246 Exorcism......................................................................252 Latin.........................................................................254 Index of titles and first lines...............................................259

Chapter One

I

Prelude Waking up is a parachute jump from dreams. Free of the suffocating turbulence the traveler sinks toward the green zone of morning. Things flare up. From the viewpoint of the quivering lark he is aware of the huge root systems of the trees, their swaying underground lamps. But aboveground there's greenery-a tropical flood of it-with lifted arms, listening to the beat of an invisible pump. And he sinks toward summer, is lowered in its dazzling crater, down through shafts of green damp ages trembling under the sun's turbine. Then it's checked. this straight-down journey through the moment, and the wings spread to the osprey's repose above rushing waters. The Bronze Age trumpet's outlawed note hovers above the bottomless depths. In day's first hours consciousness can grasp the world as the hand grips a sun-warmed stone. The traveler is standing under the tree. After the crash through death's turbulence, shall a great light unfold above his head?

II

AUTUMNAL ARCHIPELAGO

Storm Here the walker suddenly meets the giant oak tree, like a petrified elk whose crown is furlongs wide before the September ocean's murky green fortress. Northern storm. The season when rowanberry clusters swell. Awake in the darkness, listen: constellations stamping inside their stalls, high over the treetops.

Evening-Morning Moon-its mast is rotten, its sail is shriveled. Seagull-drunk and soaring away on currents. Jetty-charred rectangular mass. The thickets founder in darkness. Out on doorstep. Morning is beating, beats on ocean's granite gateways and sun is sparkling near the world. Half-smothered, the gods of summer fumble in sea mist.

Ostinato Under the buzzard's circling point of stillness ocean rolls resoundingly on in daylight, blindly chews its bridle of weed and snorts up foam over beaches. Earth is veiled in darkness where bats can sense their way. The buzzard stops and becomes a star now. Ocean rolls resoundingly on and snorts up foam over beaches. III Five Stanzas to Thoreau Yet one more abandoned the heavy city's ring of greedy stones. And the water, salt and crystal, closes over the heads of all who truly seek refuge.

* * * Silence slowly spiraling up has risen here from earth's recesses to put down roots and grow and with its burgeoning crown to shade his sun-heated doorstep. * * *

Kicks a mushroom thoughtlessly. Thunderclouds are piling on the skyline. Like copper trumpets crooked roots of trees are resounding, foliage scatters in terror. Autumn's headlong flight is his weightless mantle, flapping till again from the frost and ashes peaceful days have come in their flocks and bathe their claws in the wellspring.

* * * Disbelief will meet him who saw a geyser and escaped from wells filled with stones, like Thoreau disappearing deep in his inner greenness artful and hopeful.

Gogol The jacket threadbare as a wolf pack. The face like a marble slab. Sitting in the circle of his letters in the grove that rustles with scorn and error, the heart blowing like a scrap of paper through the inhospitable passageways. The sunset is now creeping like a fox over this country, igniting the grass in a mere moment. Space is full of horns and hooves and underneath the barouche glides like a shadow between my father's lit courtyards. St. Petersburg on the same latitude as annihilation (did you see the beauty in the leaning tower) and around the ice-bound tenements floating like a jellyfish the poor man in his cloak. And here, enveloped in fasts, is the man who before was surrounded by the herds of laughter, but these have long since taken themselves to tracts far above the tree line. Men's unsteady tables. Look outside, see how darkness burns hard a whole galaxy of souls. Rise up then on your chariot of fire and leave the country!

Sailor's Yarn There are bare winter days when the sea is kin to mountain country, crouching in grey plumage, a brief minute blue, long hours with waves like pale lynxes vainly seeking hold in the beach gravel. On such a day wrecks might come from the sea searching for their owners, settling in the town's din, and drowned crews blow landward, thinner than pipe smoke. (The real lynxes are in the north, with sharpened claws and dreaming eyes. In the north, where clay lives in a mine both day and night. Where the sole survivor may sit at the borealis stove and listen to the music of those frozen to death.)

Strophe and Counter-Strophe The outermost circle belongs to myth. There the helmsman sinks upright among glittering fish-backs. How far from us! When day stands in a sultry windless unrest- as the Congo's green shadow holds the blue men in its vapor- when all tiffs driftwood on the heart's sluggish coiling current piles up.

Sudden change: in under the repose of the constellations the tethered ones glide. Stern high, in a hopeless position, the hull of a dream, black against the coastline's pink. Abandoned the year's plunge, quick and soundless-as the sledge-shadow, doglike, big-travels over snow, reaches the wood.

Agitated Meditation

A storm drives the mill sails wildly round in the night's darkness, grinding nothing.-You are kept awake by the same laws. The grey shark belly is your weak lamp.

Shapeless memories sink to the sea's depths and harden there to strange columns.-Green with algae is your crutch. A man who takes to the seas comes back stiffened.

The Stones The stones we threw I hear fall, glass-clear through the years. In the valley the confused actions of the moment fly screeching from treetop to treetop, become silent in thinner air than the present's, glide like swallows from hilltop to hilltop until they've reached the furthest plateaus along the frontier of being. There all our deeds fall glass-clear with nowhere to fall to except ourselves.

Context Look at the grey tree. The sky has run through its fibers down in the earth-only a shrunk cloud is left when the earth has drunk. Stolen space is twisted in pleats, twined to greenery.-The brief moments of freedom rise in us, whirl through the Parcae and further.

Morning Approach The black-backed gull, the sun-captain, holds his course. Beneath him is the water. The world is still sleeping like a multicolored stone in the water. Undeciphered day. Days-like Aztec hieroglyphs. The music. And I stand trapped in its Gobelin weave with raised arms-like a figure out of folk art.

There Is Peace in the Surging Prow On a winter morning you feel how this earth plunges ahead. Against the house walls an air current smacks out of hiding. Surrounded by movement: the tent of calm. And the secret helm in the migrating flock. Out of the winter gloom a tremolo rises from hidden instruments. It is like standing under summer's high lime tree with the din of ten thousand insect wings above your head.

Midnight Turning Point The wood ant watches silently, looks into nothing. And nothing's heard but drips from dim leafage and the night's murmuring deep in summer's canyon. The spruce stands like the hand of a clock. spiked. The ant glows in the hill's shadow. Bird cry! And at last. The cloud-packs slowly begin to roll. IV

Song The gathering of white birds grew: gulls dressed in canvas from the sails of foundered ships but stained by vapors from forbidden shores. Alarm! Alarm! around refuse from a cargo boat. They crowded in and formed an ensign-staff that signaled "Booty here." And gulls careered across watery wastes with blue acres gliding in the foam. Athwart, a phosphorescent pathway to the sun. But Väinämöinen travels in his past on oceans glittering in ancient light. He rides. The horse's hooves are never wet. Behind: the forest of his songs is green. The oak whose leap's a thousand years long. The mighty windmill turned by birdsong. And every tree a prisoner in its soughing. With giant cones glinting in the moonlight when the distant pine glows like a beacon. Then the Other rises with his spell and the arrow, seeing far and wide, flees, the feather singing like a flight of birds. A dead second when the horse abruptly stiffens, breaks across the waterline like a blue cloud beneath the thunder's antenna. And Väinämöinen plunges heavy in the sea (a jumping-sheet the compass points hold tight). Alarm! Alarm! among the gulls around his fall! Like one bewitched, without anxiety, standing at the center of the picture of his joy, eleven corn sheaves bulging. Reliance-an alp-top humming in the ether three thousand meters up where the clouds sai! races. The puffed basking shark wallows guffawing soundlessly beneath the sea. (Death and renewal when the wave arrives.) And peacefully the breezes cycle through the leaves. On the horizon thunder rumbles dully (as the herd of buffalo flees in its dust). The shadow of a fist clenches in the tree and strikes down him who stands bewitched in his joyous picture where the evening sky seems to glow behind the wild boar's mask of clouds. His double, envious, arranges a secret rendezvous with his woman. And the shadow gathers and becomes a tidal wave a tidal wave with riding sea gulls darkened. And the port-side heart sizzles in a breaker. Death and renewal when the wave arrives. The gathering of white birds grew: gulls dressed in canvas from the sails of foundered ships but stained by vapors from forbidden shores. The herring gull: a harpoon with a velvet back. In closeup like a snowed-in hull with hidden pulses glittering in rhythm. His flier's nerves in balance. He soars. Footless hanging in the wind he dreams his hunter's dream with his beak's sharp shot. He plunges to the surface, full-blossomed greed, crams and jerks himself around his booty as if he were a stocking. And then he rises like a spirit. (Energies-their context is renewal, more enigmatic than the eel's migrations. A tree, invisible, in bloom. And as the grey seal in its underwater sleep rises to the surface, takes a breath, and dives-still asleep-to the seabed so now the Sleeper in me secretly has joined with that and has returned while I stood staring fixedly at something else.) And the diesel engine's throbbing in the flock past the dark skerry, a cleft of birds where hunger blossomed with stretched maw. At nightfall they could still be heard: an abortive music like that from the orchestra pit before the play begins. But on his ancient sea Väinämöinen drifted shaken in the squall's mitt or supine in the mirror-world of calms where the birds were magnified. And from a stray seed, far from land at the sea's edge growing out of waves, out of a fogbank it sprang: a mighty tree with scaly trunk, and leaves quite transparent and behind them the filled white sails of distant suns glided on in trance. And now the eagle rises. V

Elegy At the outset. Like a fallen dragon in some mist- and vapor-shrouded swamp, our spruce-clad coastland lies. Far out there: two steamers crying from a dream in the fog. This is the lower world. Motionless woods, motionless surface and the orchid's hand that reaches from the soil. On the other side, beyond these straits but hanging in the same reflection: the Ship, like the cloud hanging weightless in its space. And the water around its prow is motionless, becalmed. And yet-a storm is up! and the steamer smoke blows level-the sun flickers there in its grip-and the gale is hard against the face of him who boards. To make one's way up the port side of Death. A sudden draft, the curtain flutters. Silence ringing, an alarm clock. A sudden draft, the curtain flutters. Until a distant door is heard closing far off in another year. * * *

O field as grey as the buried bog-man's cloak. And island floating darkly in the fog. It's quiet, as when the radar turns and turns its arc in hopelessness. There's a crossroads in a moment. Music of the distances converges. All grown together in a leafy tree. Vanished cities glitter in its branches. From everywhere and nowhere a song like crickets in the August dark. Embedded like a wood beetle, he sleeps here in the night, the peat bog's murdered traveler. The sap compels his thoughts up to the stars. And deep in the mountain: here's the cave of bats. Here hang the years, the deeds, densely. Here they sleep with folded wings. One day they'll flutter out. A throng! (From a distance, smoke from the cave mouth.) But still their summer-winter sleep prevails. A murmuring of distant waters. In the dark tree a leaf that turns.

* * * One summer morning a harrow catches in dead bones and rags of clothing.-He lay there after the peat bog was drained and now stands up and goes his way in light. In every parish eddies golden seed around ancient guilt. The armored skull in the plowed field. A wanderer en route and the mountain keeps an eye on him. In every parish the marksman's rifle hums at midnight when the wings unfold and the past expands in its collapse and darker than the heart's meteorite. An absence of spirit makes the writing greedy. A flag begins to smack. The wings unfold around the spoils. This proud journey! where the albatross ages to a cloud in Time's jaws. And culture is a whaling station where the stranger walks among white gables, playing children, and still with each breath he takes he feels the murdered giant's presence.

* * *

Soft black-cock crooning from the heavenly spheres. The music, guiltless in our shadow, like the fountain water rising among the wild beasts, deftly petrified around the playing jets. The bows disguised, a forest. The bows like rigging in a torrent-the cabin's smashed beneath the torrent's hooves-within us, balanced like a gyroscope, is joy. This evening the world's calm is reflected when the bows rest on strings without being moved. Motionless in mist the forest trees and the water-tundra mirroring itself. Music's voiceless half is here, like the scent of resin rising from lightning-damaged spruce. An underground summer tot each of us. There at the crossroads a shadow breaks free and runs off to where the Bach trumpet points. Sudden confidence, by grace. To leave behind one's self-disguise here on this shore where the wave breaks and slides away, breaks and slides away.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from The Great Enigma by Tomas Tranströmer Copyright © 2006 by Tomas Tranströmer. Excerpted by permission.
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