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    To A. P. Kern
  
    
      
    I call to mind a moment’s glory.
  
You stood before me, face to face,
Like to a vision transitory,
A spirit of immaculate grace.
    
      
    In hopeless torments of surrender,
  
In worldly tumult and alarm,
Your voice long echoed low and tender,
My dreams were of your face’s charm.
    
      
    Years passed. Rude winds blew all asunder,
  
Scattered the dreams that once were mine,
And I forgot your voice so tender,
The features of your face divine.
    
      
    To deserts and to darkness banished,
  
My days grew long with naught to do;
My God, my inspiration vanished,
My tears, my life, my love for you.
    
      
    My soul awakened and uprisen,
  
Again I see you face to face,
Like to a transitory vision,
A spirit of immaculate grace.
    
      
    My heart beats fast in exultation,
  
And all for it begins anew,
With God again, and inspiration,
    And life, and tears, and love for you.
    
      
    
      
    
      
    Anchar
    
      
    
      
    In desert, withered and burned,
  
On ground that is dry and sultry,
Anchar, alone in the world,
Stands like an awful, silent sentry.
    
      
    The nature of the thirsty land,
  
Has borne him on the day of terror,
And flesh of roots and boughs, dead,
Was filled with venom blood forever.
    
      
    The poison oozes through his bark
  
And melts at noon in beams from heaven,
And thickens in the evening dark--
A tar, transparent one and heavy.
    
      
    And birds don't visit him at all,
  
Not any tiger for him wishes
And only, sometimes, comes a whirl,
To fly away, but as pernicious.
    
      
    And if, by chance, a cloud sprays
  
His leaves in wandering alone,
From all his twigs, the poisoned rains
Pour into scorching sand and stone.
    
      
    But once a man had sent a man,
  
To desert -- to the poison demon,
The slave obediently ran,
And by the morn he brought the venom.
    
      
    He brought the resin of the death,
  
A twig with faded leaves, by morning,
And heavy sweat, on his pale face,
In icy rivulets was rolling.
    
      
    He came, and lay, and fell in fit,
  
In shadow of the tent, in fluster,
The slave had died by the feet
Of his inexorable master.
    
      
    The prince immediately breathed
  
The evil tar into his arrows,
And sent with them the poison-death,
To alien lands--the lands of neighbors.
    
      
    
      
    Night
    
      
    
      
    My voice for you is languid, low and light,
  
Troubling the silence of the dark, late night.
A sullen candle at the pillow's verge
Glows; and my verses murmurously merge
And gush; the brooks of love flow full of you
And in the darkness that your eyes shine through
To smile at me, there are the sounds i hear:
    I'm yours....I'm yours....my dear...my only dear.
    
      
    
      
    translated by A.Z. FOREMAN
    
      
    
      
    
      
    Ode to Liberty
    
      
    
      
    Flee, begone, vanish from my sight,
    
      
    Oh, ye feeble princess of Cythera
    
      
    Thou, lofty muse of Liberty,
    
      
    Where art thou, bane of kings, come nearer!
    
      
    A garland of flowers from me wrench,
    
      
    Smash down with hands the coddled lyre…
    
      
    I sing of Freedom’s victorious fire
    
      
    Chastised vice enthroned on royal bench.
    
      
    
      
    Reveal to me the noble path
    
      
    Of the self aggrandized Gaul
    
      
    In whom amidst famed catastrophe
    
      
    Thou inspired hymns audacious
    
      
    Nurslings of frivolous Destiny,
    
      
    Tyrants of the world! Tremble!
    
      
    And ye, take heart and pay attention,
    
      
    Rise up, trampled slaves!
    
      
    
      
    Alas! Wherever I cast (my) gaze
    
      
    Everywhere scourges, everywhere irons,
    
      
    The laws’ destructive mockery,
    
      
    Serfdom’s helpless tears;
    
      
    Everywhere lawless sovereignty
    
      
    The heavy fog of prejudice
    
      
    Has confirmed – slavery’s dreaded Genius
    
      
    And Glory’s baneful intensity.
    
      
    
      
    There only upon the royal head
    
      
    The nation’s quilt has not come to lie
    
      
    Where potent with sacred Liberty
    
      
    Is powerful laws’ association
    
      
    Where to all is offered their firm shield
    
      
    Where, grasped by steadfast hands
    
      
    Rise up protecting citizens, of equal heads
    
      
    Their sword glissades without choice
    
      
    
      
    To attack the breach from on high
    
      
    With righteous force;
    
      
    Where honesty is their hand
    
      
    By either eager greed or fear.
    
      
    Monarchs! To your crown and throne
    
      
    The law delivers – and not nature;
    
      
    Ye stand superior above the nation,
    
      
    Higher still than ye infinite Law.
    
      
    
      
    And woe, misery to the family
    
      
    Where it hotheadedly slumbers,
    
      
    Where for nations or for kings
    
      
    It is feasible to override the laws!
    
      
    Thee I assemble you all to witness,
    
      
    Oh, martyr of infamous fallacies,
    
      
    Who for an ancestry in rebellious storms
    
      
    Lay down his sovereign head.
    
      
    
      
    Up steps Louis to his death
    
      
    In full view of voiceless progeny,
    
      
    Without his crown he bowed his head
    
      
    To the bloody scaffold of Mutiny.
    
      
    Mute the Law –mute the nation,
    
      
    There swings the unlawful ax…
    
      
    And lo – a corrupted purple
    
      
    Lies like all shackled Gaul.
    
      
    
      
    Autocratic Miscreant!
    
      
    Thee, thy throne I detest,
    
      
    Descent means thy children’s death
    
      
    With savage delight I see.
    
      
    Nations perceive upon thy brow
    
      
    The sign of execration,
    
      
    Thou [art] the horror of the world, a disgrace of nature,
    
      
    A rebuke to God on earth.£
    
      
    
      
    When on the murky Neva
    
      
    The star of midnight shone
    
      
    And the worry free head
    
      
    Subdued sleep weighs down
    
      
    The thoughtful singer gazes
    
      
    Upon the threatened sleeping midst the haze
    
      
    Abandoned monument of the tyrant,
    
      
    The palace deserted to oblivion –
    
      
    
      
    Echoes of terror, Cleo’s voice erupts
    
      
    Behind fortresses a summons tolling
    
      
    Caligula’s last hour beckons us
    
      
    Before he sees a vivid fate unrolling,
    
      
    He sees, in ribbons and in stars
    
      
    By poison and with wine befuddled,
    
      
    The secretive assassins huddled
    
      
    Insolent faces over fear filled hearts.
    
      
    
      
    And silence visits the disloyal watchman,
    
      
    To drop the drawbridge at midnight season,
    
      
    In secret gloom the gate unbarred
    
      
    By hired hands of mercenary treason.
    
      
    Oh, shame, Oh, horror lately found!
    
      
    The Janissaries thrust in, appalling
    
      
    Like beasts, irreverent blows befalling…
    
      
    Till butchered lies the miscreant crowned.
    
      
    
      
    Henceforth, oh, kings learn, and know this true:
    
      
    That neither flattery nor halters
    
      
    Make sturdy barricades for you,
    
      
    Neither prison walls, nor holy altars.
    
      
    Be ye first to bow your head down
    
      
    Beneath the canopy of Law eternal.
    
      
    The people joyous, their freedom vernal
    
      
    Will forever save the nation’s crown.
    
      
    
      
    Translation by 
    
      M.A. DuVernet
    
    
      
    
      
    
      
    
      
  
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    My blood is boiling with desire,
  
your heart is pounding next to mine.
Oh kiss me, kiss me more, your fire
is sweeter than perfume and wine.
    
      
    Lie next to me my love, my dearest
  
until the sun makes it’s appearance.
Our dreams will be so lush and sweet
‘til shadows of the night recede.
    
      
    Translation Josef Malkin
    
      
    
      
    
      
    Do not sing, my beauty, to me
  
    
      
    Oh beauty, please, don’t sing to me
  
the saddening melodies of Georgia:
they flood my soul with memory
of bygone days and their misfortune.
    
      
    Alas! They bring back to my mind
  
the gloomy pictures of departed:
the steppe, the moon and in the night
young lady, she looks heavy-hearted.
    
      
    I see her lovely tragic shape,
  
but you appear – she’s fading out.
You sing your song – she’s here again,
an image in the hazy cloud.
    
      
    Oh beauty, please, don’t sing to me
  
the saddening melodies of Georgia:
they flood my soul with memory
    of bygone days and their misfortune
    
      
    
      
    English translation: Josef Malkin
  
    
      
    
      
    
      
     
  
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               Передо мной явилась ты, Как мимолетное виденье, Как гений чистой красоты. 
            
               В тревогах шумной суеты, Звучал мне долго голос нежный, И снились милые черты. 
            
               Рассеял прежние мечты, И я забыл твой голос нежный, Твои небесные черты. 
            
               Тянулись тихо дни мои Без божества, без вдохновенья, Без слез, без жизни, без любви. 
            
               И вот опять явилась ты, Как мимолетное виденье, Как гений чистой красоты. 
            
               И для него воскресли вновь И божество, и вдохновенье, 
            И жизнь, и слезы, и любовь.
            
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               When you appeared before my eyes Like ghost, like fleeting apparition, Like genius of the purest grace. 
            
               In vanity and noisy fuss I’ve always heard your tender voice I saw your features in my dreams. 
            
               Have scattered all my previous dreams, And I forgot your tender voice, And holy features of your face. 
            
               My lonely days were slowly drawn: I had not faith, no inspiration, No tears, no life, no tender love. 
            
               And you again appeared to me Like ghost, like fleeting apparition, Like genius of the purest grace. 
            
               And everything arouse again: My former faith, and inspiration, 
            And tears, and life, and tender love.
            
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    I've lived to bury my desires
  
    
      
    I've lived to bury my desires
    
      
    and see my dreams corrode with rust
    
      
    now all that's left are fruitless fires
    
      
    that burn my empty heart to dust.
    
      
    
      
    Struck by the clouds of cruel fate
    
      
    My crown of Summer bloom is sere
    
      
    Alone and sad, I watch and wait
    
      
    And wonder if the end is near.
    
      
    
      
    As conquered by the last cold air
    
      
    When Winter whistles in the wind
    
      
    Alone upon a branch that's bare
    
      
    A trembling leaf is left behind.”
  
    
      
    
      
    
      
     
  
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               В душе моей угасла не совсем ; Но пусть она вас больше не тревожит ; Я не хочу печалить вас ничем . Я вас любил безмолвно , безнадежно , То робостью , то ревностью томим ; Я вас любил так искренно , так нежно , Как дай вам бог любимой быть другим . | 
            
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    When the loud day for men who sow and reap
  
Grows still, and on the silence of the town
The unsubstantial veils of night and sleep,
The meed of the day's labour, settle down,
Then for me in the stillness of the night
The wasting, watchful hours drag on their course,
And in the idle darkness comes the bite
Of all the burning serpents of remorse;
Dreams seethe; and fretful infelicities
Are swarming in my over-burdened soul,
And Memory before my wakeful eyes
    With noiseless hand unwinds her lengthy scroll.
    
      
    Then, as with loathing I peruse the years,
  
I tremble, and I curse my natal day,
Wail bitterly, and bitterly shed tears,
But cannot wash the woeful script away.
    
      
    
      
    
      An Elegy
    
    
      
    
      
    The senseless years' extinguished mirth and laughter
  
    Oppress me like some hazy morning-after.
    
      
    But sadness of days past, as alcohol -
  
    The more it age, the stronger grip the soul.
    
      
    My course is dull. The future's troubled ocean
    
      
    Forebodes me toil, misfortune and commotion.
    
      
    
      
    But no, my friends, I do not wish to leave;
  
I'd rather live, to ponder and to grieve -
And I shall have my share of delectation
Amid all care, distress and agitation:
Time and again I'll savor harmony,
Melt into tears about some fantasy,
And on my sad decline, to ease affliction,
May love yet show her smile of valediction.
    
      
    Not long ago, in a charming dream,
  
I saw myself -- a king with crown's treasure;
I was in love with you, it seemed,
    And heart was beating with a pleasure.
    
      
    
      
    I sang my passion's song by your enchanting knees.
    
      
    Why, dreams, you didn't prolong my happiness forever?
  
But gods deprived me not of whole their favor:
I only lost the kingdom of my dreams.
    
      
    
      
    The Bronze Horseman
  
    
      
    …..
  
    For now he seemed to see
    
      
    The awful Emperor, quietly,
    
      
    With momentary anger burning,
    
      
    His visage to Yevgeny turning!
    
      
    And rushing through the empty square,
    
      
    He hears behind him as it were
    
      
    Thunders that rattle in a chorus,
    
      
    A gallop ponderous, sonorous,
    
      
    That shakes the pavement. At full height,
    
      
    Illumined by the pale moonlight,
    
      
    With arm outflung, behind him riding
    
      
    See, the bronze horseman comes, bestriding
  
    The charger, clanging in his flight.
    
      
    All night the madman flees; no matter
  
    Where he may wander at his will,
    
      
    Hard on his track with heavy clatter
    
      
    There the bronze horseman gallops still.
    
      
    Thereafter, whensoever straying
    
      
    Across that square Yevgeny went
    
      
    By chance, his face was still betraying
    
      
    Disturtance and bewilderment.
    
      
    As though to ease a heart tormented
    
      
    His hand upon it he would clap
    
      
    In haste, put off his shabby cap,
    
      
    And never raise his eyes demented,
    
      
    And seek some byway unfrequented.
    
      
    A little island lies in view
  
    Along the shore; and here, belated,
    
      
    Sometimes with nets a fisher-crew
    
      
    Will moor and cook their long-awaited
    
      
    And meager supper. Hither too
    
      
    Some civil servant, idly floating,
    
      
    Will come upon a Sunday, boating.
    
      
    That isle is desolate and bare;
    
      
    No blade of grass springs anywhere.
    
      
    Once the great flood had sported, driving
    
      
    The frail hut thither. Long surviving,
    
      
    It floated on the water there
    
      
    Like some black bush. A vessel plying
    
      
    Bore it, last spring, upon her deck.
    
      
    They found it empty, all a wreck;
    
      
    And also, cold and dead and lying
    
      
    Upon the threshold, they had found
  
    My crazy hero. In the ground
    
      
    His poor cold body there they hurried,
    
      
    And left it to God’s mercy, buried.
  
…..
    
      
    
      
    For shores of home...
  
    
      
    For shores of home, so sweet but distant,
  
you were to leave the alien place;
the hour was sad and instant,
and tears were running on my face.
With chilly hands, with bitter passion,
I vainly tried to keep you up;
the awful pain of separation
I prayed you to not interrupt.
But you, from the distressing kissing,
betook away your gentle lips,
from lands of sad exile and missing
you called me for another sweeps.
You told me, "in a day of meeting,
under the sky that ever blue,
in shade of olive-trees the kissing
we shall, my friend, begin anew."
But there, alas!, where sky grew hotter
and bluer in a sunny beam,
where olive-trees cast shade on water,
you lay asleep with your last dream.
Your beauty, suffering, your anguish
had vanished in the gravest urn;
with them, the promised kiss had vanished ...
still I am waiting for your turn ...
    
      
    
      
    The drowned man
  
    
      
    Children running into izba,
    
      
    Calling father, dripping sweat:
    
      
    'Daddy, daddy! come - there is a
    
      
    Deadman caught inside our net.'
    
      
    'Fancy, fancy fabrication...'
    
      
    Grumbled off their weary Pa,
    
      
    'Have these imps imagination! 
    
      
    Deadman, really! ya-ha-ha...
    
      
    
      
    'Well... the court may come to bother -
    
      
    What'll I say before the judge? 
    
      
    Hey you brats, go have your mother
    
      
    Bring my coat; I better trudge...
    
      
    Show me, where? ' - 'Right there, Dad, farther! '
    
      
    On the sand where netting ropes
    
      
    Lay spread out, the peasant father
    
      
    Saw the veritable corpse.
    
      
    
      
    Badly mangled, ugly, frightening,
    
      
    Blue and swollen on each side...
    
      
    Has he fished in storm and lightning,
    
      
    Or committed suicide? 
    
      
    Could this be a careless drunkard,
    
      
    Or a mermaid-seeking monk,
    
      
    Or a merchandizer, conquered
    
      
    By some bandits, robbed and sunk? 
    
      
    
      
    To the peasant, what's it matter! 
    
      
    Quick: he grabs the dead man's hair,
    
      
    Drags his body to the water,
    
      
    Looks around: nobody's there:
    
      
    Good... relieved of the concern he
    
      
    Shoves his paddle at a loss,
    
      
    While the stiff resumes his journey
    
      
    Down the stream for grave and cross.
    
      
    
      
    Long the dead man as one living
    
      
    Rocked on waves amid the foam...
    
      
    Surly as he watched him leaving,
    
      
    Soon our peasant headed home.
    
      
    'Come you pups! let's go, don't scatter.
    
      
    Each of you will get his bun.
  
    But remember: just you chatter - 
    
      
    And I'll whip you, every one.'
    
      
    
      
    Dark and stormy it was turning.
    
      
    High the river ran in gloom.
    
      
    Now the torch has finished burning
    
      
    In the peasant's smoky room.
    
      
    Kids asleep, the wife aslumber,
    
      
    He lies listening to the rain...
    
      
    Bang! he hears a sudden comer
    
      
    Knocking on the window-pane.
    
      
    
      
    'What the...' - 'Let me in there, master! '
    
      
    'Damn, you found the time to roam! 
    
      
    Well, what is it, your disaster? 
    
      
    Let you in? It's dark at home,
    
      
    Dark and crowded... What a pest you are! 
    
      
    Where'd I put you in my cot...'
    
      
    Slowly, with a lazy gesture,
    
      
    He lifts up the pane and - what? 
    
      
    
      
    Through the clouds, the moon was showing...
    
      
    Well? the naked man was there,
    
      
    Down his hair the water flowing,
    
      
    Wide his eyes, unmoved the stare; 
    
      
    Numb the dreadful-looking body,
    
      
    Arms were hanging feeble, thin; 
    
      
    Crabs and cancers, black and bloody,
    
      
    Sucked into the swollen skin.
    
      
    
      
    As the peasant slammed the shutter
    
      
    (Recognized his visitant) 
    
      
    Horror-struck he could but mutter
    
      
    'Blast you! ' and began to pant.
    
      
    He was shuddering, awful chaos
    
      
    All night through stirred in his brain,
    
      
    While the knocking shook the house
    
      
    By the gates and at the pane.
    
      
    
      
    People tell a dreadful rumor:
    
      
    Every year the peasant, say,
    
      
    Waiting in the worst of humor
    
      
    For his visitor that day; 
    
      
    As the rainstorm is increasing,
    
      
    Nightfall brings a hurricane -
    
      
    And the drowned man knocks, unceasing,
    
      
    By the gates and at the pane.
    
      
    
      
    Translated by: Genia Gurarie, 
  
    
      
    
      
    
      
    Op Arakcheev
  
    
      
    Hij, die Rusland laat creperen
  
Gouverneurs loopt te schofferen
En de staatsraad te beleren,
Voor de tsaar een vriend en broer,
Imbeciel en nijdas beide,
Die zijn ziel aan vuiligheid wijdde,
‘Immer diende, nimmer vleide’,
Huist bij een driestuiverhoer.
    
      
    Vertaling:
     Hans BOLLAND