Translation of masterpiece by Pablo Neruda: "Oda al Traje" (Ode to the Suit*).
Each morning you’re waiting
Suit, on a chair
For me to fill you
With my vanity, my love
My hope, my body
I just
Have gotten out of sleep
I say goodbye to the water
I enter into your sleeves
My legs look for
The hollowness of your legs
And so embraced
By your tireless faithfulness
I go out to walk in the grass
I enter into poetry
I look through windows
At things
Men, women,
Deeds and struggles
Keep forming me
Keep coming against me
Laboring with my hands
Opening my eyes
Using up my mouth
And so,
Suit,
I also keep forming you
Poking out your elbows
Snapping your threads
And so your life grows
Into the image of my live.
In the wind
You ripple and rustle
As if you were my soul.
In bad minutes
You stick
To my bones
Empty, through the night
Darkness, sleep
Populate with their fantasies
Your wings and mine.
I ask
If one day
A bullet
From the enemy
Might leave a spot of my blood on you
And then
You would die with me
Or maybe
It won’t all be
So dramatic
But simple
And you’ll just get feeble,
Suit,
Growing old
With me, with my body
And together
We will enter
The earth.
That’s why
Every day
I greet you
With reverence and then
You embrace me and I forget you
Because we are just one
And we’ll keep going on together
Against the wind, in the night
The streets, or the struggle
One single body
May be, may be, some time will be immobile.
*Many translations use Clothing for Traje, but the correct translation is Suit.
"Good clothes open all doors"
-Thomas Fuller
The Mole never heard a word he was saying. Absorbed in the new life he was entering upon, intoxicated with the sparkle, the ripple, the scents and sounds and the sunlight, he trailed a paw in the water and dreamt long waking dreams. The Water Rat, like the good little fellow he was, sculled steadily on and forbore to disturb him.
"I like your clothes awfully, old chap," he remarked after some half hour or so had passed. "I'm going to a get a black velvet smoking suit myself some day, as soon as I can afford it."
The Wind in the Willows--Kenneth Grahame
"He was a plump dark youngish man of medium height, broad through the jaws, narrow between the eyes. He wore a black derby hat, a black overcoat that fitted him very snigly, a dark suit, and black shoes, all looking as if he had bought them within the past fifteen minutes. The gun, a blunt black .38 calibre automatic, lay comfortably in his hand, not pointing at anything."
The Thin Man--Dashiell Hammett
"A young man in his early thirties, neither short nor tall, came into the room. His regular features, his short haircut, the cut of his suit, the pattern of his foulard necktie gave out no really final information. He might have been on the staff, or trying to get on the staff, of a news magazine. He might have just been in a play that closed in Philadelphia. He might have been with a law firm."
"Just Before the War with the Eskimos," Nine Stories--J.D. Salinger
Cruz: I've got mixed feelings about Pablo. But good one. Is that your translation, by the way? I've got most of his verse in bilingual translations. Also have his memoirs.
Bothhist: good to see you back. You've been hitting the books for your new profession I take it?
Last edited by Cruz Diez (2006-08-02 03:31:58)
I love this one:
"La perfezione non esiste, esiste l’armonia dell’imperfetto, quella che solo noi napoletani riusciamo a creare."
Perfection does not exist, rather the harmony of imperfection, that only us Neapolitans are successful at creating.
Patrizio Cappelli, bespoke tie maker, Napoli.
Edit: sorry, lacking English spell check on foreign computer.
Last edited by Cruz Diez (2006-08-02 12:59:42)
"It was about eleven o'clock in the morning, mid October, with the sun not shining and a look of hard wet rain in the clearness of the foothills. I was wearing my powder-blue suit, with dark blue shirt, tie, and display handkerchief, black brogues, black wool socks with dark blue clocks on them. I was neat, clean, shaved, and sober, and I didn't care who knew it. I was everything the well-dressed private detective ought to be. I was calling on four million dollars."
--- Raymond Chandler <<The Big Sleep>>
Last edited by Marc Grayson (2006-08-06 16:09:52)
Last edited by Marc Grayson (2006-08-07 19:54:32)
"A few days before leaving Los Angeles, as part of my program to assault the big town, I had purchased a new suit--the only one I owned. Out there the suit had seemed completely right, but I had only to walk two blocks up Park Avenue and watch the men nod approvingly at each other's snug-shouldered splendor (New York is the only city in the country where I have noticed this peculiar effeminacy) to see that it was unequivocally wrong, nearly diastrous. It was steel-gray--in the bright sun it had sheen--and California-cut, with those wide, dandified lapels that run all the way down to one's belly before a button can be detected; it had those monstrously padded shoulders, making my neck appear a lily shoot rising from a pile of papier-mache boulders. Its effect was unalterably wrong, and I was walking along smarting somewhat from this sartorial deficiency when, as I say, I suddenly experienced something more provocatively wrong."
A Fan's Notes by Frederick Exley (1968)
Last edited by bosthist (2006-08-08 05:17:14)
Bosthist: Exley's a good one. Wasn't Richard Yates a buddy of his?
Here's one. Plus ca change and whatnot....
A couple of days after this year’s bladdergame, an out-of-town visitor got a harsh opinion of present-day Yale undergraduates from one of the people who might be expected to find them most disturbing—a salesman in one of the expensive York Street clothing stores that used to be busy outfitting Yale undergraduate in painstakingly casual tweeds and are now ideal hangouts for any sensitive young man who craves six or eight hours of complete solitude in the middle of the working day. Although there are few Yale undergraduates who are truly devout freaks, the dominant style on campus owes more to St. Marks Place and the Sunset Strip than to York Street. The salesman muttered something about Yale filling up with coeds in bluejeans and hairy young hippies in old Army jackets. Then he lowered his voice to a conspiratorial tone. “I’ve been talking to some faculty members, and I can tell you that they’re going to something about it,” he said. “Ten years from now, Yale will have the kind of students who used to be here.”
--Calvin Trillin, The New Yorker, Nov. 21, 1970
"You notice these things on a gentleman - or I do. The way a suit fits exactly. You can never get that except by always having them made by the same tailor, someone who really knows your build. Not just how you stand but how you move, that's the trick. Especially across the shoulders. A very dark grey stripe and four buttons it was, under a cashmere overcoat. And his gloves; hardly anyone would wear yellow gloves in town now, and certainly not of that quality."
Mr Page meets Mr Clive on Jermyn Street one Saturday afternoon in the 1950's...
'Mr Clive & Mr Page'. Neil Bartlett. Serpent's Tail. 1996
M.
Glad I checked!
They met in the early 20's. Sometime between 1920 & 1924 - Not long before Christmas one year.
Last edited by Horace (2006-09-19 06:12:04)
One from IvyGuy -
There is an episode of the old B & W 'Munsters' TV prog. where Herman (Frankenstein-esq) complains to Lilly (Vampire-kinda-lady) that his sideburns are not cut straight & it will ruin his 'Ivy League image'.
Must be mid '60's, I guess.
He delivers the line ironically, I'm informed.
Last edited by Miles Away (2006-10-13 10:45:44)