Nicole Callihan. Translations by Pavel Krichevsky

Also in Translations:

2. Interesting photo for my journal 45. From Neo Noir. (2)
Nicole Callihan. Translations by Pavel Krichevsky

THE END OF THE PIER

I walked to the end of the pier
and threw your name into the sea,
and when you flew back to me—
a silver fish—I devoured you,
cleaned you to the bone. I was through.
But then you came back again:
as sun on water. I reached for you,
skimmed my hands over the light of you.
And when the sky darkened,
again, I thought it was over, but then,
you became water. I closed my eyes
and lay on top of you, swallowed you,
let you swallow me too. And when
you carried my body back to shore—
as I trusted that you would do—
well, then, you became shore too,
and I knew, finally, I would never be through.
 

КОНЕЦ ПИРСА

Я подошла к концу пирса
и швырнула твое имя в море,
и когда ты снова прилетел ко мне –
серебристой рыбой – я жадно впилась в тебя зубами,
очистила от тебя твои же кости.
И с меня было достаточно.
Но потом ты снова вернулся:
солнечной дорожкой на воде. Я дотянулась до тебя,
скользила ладонями по твоему свету.
А когда небо потемнело,
Я опять решила, что все кончено.
Но ты стал водой. Я закрыла глаза
и легла на тебя, глотала тебя,
позволяла тебе глотать меня. И когда
ты отнес мое тело обратно к берегу –
а я ждала этого –
так вот – тогда ты стал берегом тоже,
и я поняла – с меня никогда не будет достаточно.

 

* * *

THE ORIGIN OF BIRDS

For hours, the flowers were enough.
Before the flowers, Adam had been enough.
Before Adam, just being a rib was enough.
Just being inside Adam’s body, near his heart, enough.
Enough to be so near his heart, enough
to feel that sweet steady rhythm, enough
to be a part of something bigger was enough.
And before the rib, being clay was enough.
And before clay, just being earth was enough.
And before earth, being nothing was enough.
But then enough was no longer enough.
The flowers bowed their heads, as if to say, enough,
and so Eve, surrounded by peonies, and alone enough,
wished very hard for something, and the wish was enough
to make the pinecone grow wings; the wish was enough
to point to the sky, say bird, and wait for something to sing.
 

ПРОИСХОЖДЕНИЕ ПТИЦ

В течение многих часов цветов было достаточно.
Еще до цветов Адама было достаточно.
Еще до Адама быть ребром было достаточно.
Только бы – внутри его тела, возле сердца – достаточно.
Достаточно быть так близко к его сердцу, достаточно
чувствовать нежный постоянный ритм, достаточно
быть частью чего-то большего. Этого было достаточно.
Еще до ребра быть глиной было достаточно.
А еще до глины быть землей было достаточно.
А еще до земли быть ничем было достаточно.
Но потом достаточно больше не было достаточно.
Цветы склонили головы, словно говоря – достаточно,
и у Евы, окруженной пионами и достаточно
одинокой возникло непреодолимое желание чего-то неизведанного. Достаточно
было этого желания чтобы и у шишки выросли крылья. Достаточно
было этого желания, чтобы указать на небо, сказать
птица
и ждать песни
 

Translated into Russian by Pavel Krichevsky

The End of the Pier: Copyright © 2016 by Nicole Callihan. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on June 16, 2016, by the Academy of American Poets. Reprinted with permission of the author.

The Origin of Birds: Copyright © 2016 by Nicole Callihan. “The Origin of Birds” was originally published in Rise Up Review. Reprinted with permission of the author.

About the Author:

nicolecallihannewbioimage2018_photocredit_a
Nicole Callihan
New York, USA

Nicole Callihan is the author of Henry River Mill Village (Arcadia Publishing, 2012), co-authored with Ruby Young Kellar; the poetry collection SuperLoop (Sock Monkey Press, 2014); and the poetry chapbooks: A Study in Spring (Rabbit Catastrophe Press, 2015), co-authored with Zoë Ryder White and winner of the Baltic Writing Residency Chapbook Contest Award; The Deeply Flawed Human (Deadly Chaps Press, 2016); Downtown (Finishing Line Press 2017); and Aging (Yes, Poetry, 2018). Callihan is assistant director and senior language lecturer at the New York University Tandon School of Engineering, and lives in Brooklyn.

About the Translator:

Pavel Krichevsky photo (1)
Pavel Krichevsky
Turovo, Russia

Pavel Krichevsky is a poet and translator of poetry. He was born in 1961 in Romny, Ukraine. He moved to Russia in 1993 and has lived there ever since. His poems and translations from English and Ukrainian were published in many Russian literary journals. He has authored 10 books of poetry and translations, including Over the Shoulders of Minutes (2021) and Peripheral Vision of the Sky, which he considers his best book. His poems have beeen translated into Kazakh, and his book of poems “Requiem kodasy” (translated into Kazakh) was published in Kazakhstan. He lives in Turovo, Moscow region.

Nicole Callihan
Bookshelf
1. Dislocation
by Julia Nemirovskaya and Anna Krushelnitskaya, editors

This collection focuses on the war between Russia and Ukraine as seen by Russophone poets from all over the world.

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“Monkey’s Defense” is a collection of short stories and parables by Nina Kossman.

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by Boris Kokotov

This collection includes poems written in 2020-2023.  (Russian edition)

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by Marina Eskin (Eskina)

“The Lingering Twilight” (“Сумерки”) is Marina Eskin’s fifth book of poems. (Russian edition)

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