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World Poetry Translation Project


Submit Human Translation | Discuss Poem | Post Poetry | Listen McGill Live

Apollo Musagete, Poetry, And The Leader Of The Muses

by Delmore Schwartz

Nothing is given which is not taken.

Little or nothing is taken which is not freely desired,
freely, truly and fully.

"You would not seek me if you had not found me": this is
true of all that is supremely desired and admired...

"An enigma is an animal," said the hurried, harried
schoolboy:

And a horse divided against itself cannot stand;

And a moron is a man who believes in having too many
wives: what harm is there in that?

O the endless fecundity of poetry is equaled
By its endless inexhaustible freshness, as in the discovery
of America and of poetry.

Hence it is clear that the truth is not strait and narrow but infinite:
All roads lead to Rome and to poetry
and to poem, sweet poem
and from, away and towards are the same typography.

Hence the poet must be, in a way, stupid and naive and a
little child;

Unless ye be as a little child ye cannot enter the kingdom
of poetry.

Hence the poet must be able to become a tiger like Blake; a
carousel like Rilke.

Hence he must be all things to be free, for all impersonations
a doormat and a monument
to all situations possible or actual
The cuckold, the cuckoo, the conqueror, and the coxcomb.

It is to him in the zoo that the zoo cries out and the hyena:
"Hello, take off your hat, king of the beasts, and be seated,
Mr. Bones."

And hence the poet must seek to be essentially anonymous.
He must die a little death each morning.
He must swallow his toad and study his vomit
as Baudelaire studied la charogne of Jeanne Duval.

The poet must be or become both Keats and Renoir and
Keats as Renoir.
Mozart as Figaro and Edgar Allan Poe as Ophelia, stoned
out of her mind
drowning in the river called forever river and ever...

Keats as Mimi, Camille, and an aging gourmet.
He must also refuse the favors of the unattainable lady
(As Baudelaire refused Madame Sabatier when the fair
blonde summoned him,

For Jeanne Duval was enough and more than enough,
although she cuckolded him
With errand boys, servants, waiters; reality was Jeanne Duval.
Had he permitted Madame Sabatier to teach the poet a greater whiteness,
His devotion and conception of the divinity of Beauty
would have suffered an absolute diminution.)

The poet must be both Casanova and St. Anthony,

He must be Adonis, Nero, Hippolytus, Heathcliff, and
Phaedre,
Genghis Kahn, Genghis Cohen, and Gordon Martini
Dandy Ghandi and St. Francis,

Professor Tenure, and Dizzy the dean and Disraeli of Death.

He would have worn the horns of existence upon his head,
He would have perceived them regarding the looking-glass,
He would have needed them the way a moose needs a hatrack;
Above his heavy head and in his loaded eyes, black and scorched,
He would have seen the meaning of the hat-rack, above the glass
Looking in the dark foyer.

For the poet must become nothing but poetry,
He must be nothing but a poem when he is writing
Until he is absent-minded as the dead are
Forgetful as the nymphs of Lethe and a lobotomy...
("the fat weed that rots on Lethe wharf").


American Review | www.PaperLyon.com | McGill Live Radio | Publish
 

  Translations for this Poem
 English  Spanish  French  German
 Italian  Portuguese  Korean  Russian
 Chinese  Japanese    
 

  Poems by Delmore Schwartz
  1. Albert Einstein To Archibald Macl
  2. All Night All Night
  3. America America
  4. Apollo Musagete Poetry And The Le
  5. Archaic Bust Of Apollo
  6. At This Moment Of Time
  7. A Dream Of Whitman Paraphrased Re
  8. A Young Child And His Pregnant Mo
  9. By Circumstances Fed
  10. Calmly We Walk Through This April
  11. Cambridge Spring 1937
  12. Concerning The Synthetic Unity Of
  13. Far Rockaway
  14. Faust In Old Age
  15. For The One Who Would Not Take Hi
  16. For The One Who Would Take Mans L
  17. From A King Of Kings A King Among
  18. From The Graveyard By The Sea
  19. In The Naked Bed In Platos Cave
  20. In The Slight Ripple The Mind Per
  21. Late Autumn In Venice
  22. Love And Marilyn Monroe
  23. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
  24. News Of The Gold World Of May
  25. Now He Knows All There Is To Know
  26. Occasional Poems
  27. Out Of The Watercolored Window Wh
  28. O Love Sweet Animal
  29. Parlez-Vous Francais
  30. Philology Recapitulates Ontology
  31. Phoenix Lyrics
  32. Poem Faithful to your commands o
  33. Poem In the morning when it was r
  34. Prothalamion
  35. Poem Old man in the crystal morni
  36. Poem Remember midsummer the fragr
  37. Poem You my photographer you most
  38. Saint Revolutionist
  39. Socrates Ghost Must Haunt Me Now
  40. Someone Is Harshly Coughing As Be
  41. Sonnet On Famous And Familiar Son
  42. Sonnet O City City
  43. Sonnet Suggested By Homer Chaucer
  44. Sonnet The Ghosts Of James And Pe
  45. Spiders
  46. The Ballad Of The Children Of The
  47. The Ballet Of The Fifth Year
  48. The Beautiful American Word Sure
  49. The Choir And Music Of Solitude A
  50. The First Night Of Fall And Falli
  51. The Greatest Thing In North Ameri
  52. The Heavy Bear Who Goes With Me
  53. The Journey Of A Poem Compared To
  54. The Poet
  55. The Sin Of Hamlet
  56. The Spring
  57. This Is A Poem I Wrote At Night B
  58. Tired And Unhappy You Think Of Ho
  59. To Helen
  60. Two Lyrics From Kilroys Carnival
  61. What Curious Dresses All Men Wear
  62. What Is To Be Given
  63. Words For A Trumpet Chorale Celeb
  64. Yeats Died Saturday In France
 
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPRSTVWY[ALL] 
  D.H. Lawrence 
  Dame Edith Sitwell 
  Dante Alighieri 
  David Berman 
  David Ignatow 
  David Lehman 
  Delmore Schwartz 
  Denise Levertov 
  Derek Walcott 
  Diane Wakoski 
  Don Patterson 
  Donald Hall 
  Donald Justice 
  Dorothy Parker 
  Dylan Thomas 

Volunteers needed to translate poetry into different languages. Please help us correct the translation of these poems. We currently have 79,663 translations and are trying to create the largest and most accurate database of world poetry translations. We have started with machine translations which are very inaccurate. Please translate your favorite poem on this site. You will be given credit for your translation and a link to your site if desired. COPYRIGHT NOTICE: These poems have been gathered and submitted by many of people, and from many sources. Most have no copyright. However, some may may have copyrights. We have tried to collect poems that appear on many external sites where the author seems to want to disseminate. If you are an author and do not want your poetry translated into other languages then send a removal request and it will be promptly removed.
 



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