Australian poet Peter Nicholson sent me a link to Blesok, a bilingual online literary magazine from Macedonia (I assume the title is the Macedonian equivalent of Serbo-Croatian bl(ij)esak 'flash of light'); if you click on the македонски link at the upper right, you get the journal in Macedonian. And among the many writings on his site I found a reference to Gwen Harwood, of whom, despite the fact that (according to Wikipedia) she "is regarded as one of Australia's finest poets" and "her work is commonly studied in schools and university courses," with typical Yank ignorance of the Australian poetic scene I knew nothing. There doesn't seem to be much by her online, but I found "Barn Owl," which I like a lot:
Daybreak: the household slept.Its music reminds me of Theodore Roethke, a poet I've never lost my fondness for. (Compare the start of Roethke's "The Voice": "One feather is a bird,/ I claim, one tree, a wood;/ In her low voice I heard/ More than a mortal should;/ And so I stood apart,/ Hidden in my own heart.") Posted by languagehat at September 21, 2008 09:02 PM
I rose, blessed by the sun.
A horny fiend, I crept
out with my father's gun.
Let him dream of a child
obedient, angel-mind-old no-sayer, robbed of power
by sleep. I knew my prize
who swooped home at this hour
with day-light riddled eyes
to his place on a high beam
in our old stables, to dreamlight's useless time away...
Re: typical Yank ignorance of the Australian poetic scene
As opposed to typical Australian ignorance of the Australian poetic scene, you mean? There might be some demographics within Australia among whom she is well-known, but claims that her (or anyone else's) work is commonly studied in schools should be taken with a pinch of salt.
Posted by: Adrian Morgan at September 21, 2008 10:47 PMGwen Harwood was one of the set authors in the New South Wales Higher School Certificate's English course, in the unit 'Change'.
Many high school students would have had to study her work whether they liked it or not, since English was a mandatory subject in NSW high schools.
Posted by: jogloran at September 22, 2008 01:20 AM"I assume the title is the Macedonian equivalent of Serbo-Croatian bl(ij)esak 'flash of light'"
You have to assume on the basis of Serbo-Croat? The Polish cognate is błysk, isn't there a Russian one?
Posted by: michael farris at September 22, 2008 03:04 AMOh, sure, but SCr is closer to Macedonian. It's Russian blesk.
Posted by: language hat at September 22, 2008 07:36 AMGreat poem, thanks!
(I think you have a stray apostrophe in the last paragraph...)
Posted by: slawkenbergius at September 22, 2008 11:34 AMFixed! And thanks; it doesn't look good for a copyeditor to have stray apostrophes lying around...
Posted by: language hat at September 22, 2008 01:20 PMDon't the other copyeditors swarm him and peck him to death if they see that? It's a good thing that you're among friends.
Posted by: John J Emerson at September 24, 2008 09:51 PMI once had to hold off half a dozen feral editors with nothing but my bare hands and a battered copy of Words into Type. Sure, I can laugh about it now, but my life flashed before my eyes. And I kept looking for misprints in it, which distracted me from my life-and-death struggle.
Posted by: language hat at September 25, 2008 09:04 AMThe poem or the lyrics lines are very touching and it has a inner meaning which can't be understood if we read leisurely. So, read it again to get the meaning.
______________
mousami
Macedonian is basically a dialect of Bulgarian (however much this idea infuriates Macedonians). I don't have a Macedonian dictionary but my ancient Anglo-Balgarski Rechnik gives as one of the definitions of "flash" blesak (with the Old Bulgarian e which is now pronounced as 'a before a back vowel; the a in the second syllable -- should be written with a circumflex, but this comment format doesn't allow diacritics -- is the conventional way of Romanizing the soft yer, pronounced in Bulgarian as schwa).
Posted by: Charles Perry at September 26, 2008 12:56 PMI once tried to obtain a basic language primer or even a phrasebook in Macedonian for a trip that never came off. There hadn't been one published recently, and none was available, I suspect because of the political disagreements over the language--in that region apparently language is a factor in determining ethnicity and therefore political borders.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_views_on_the_Macedonian_language
should be written with a circumflex, but this comment format doesn't allow diacritics
Nonsense. What you talked about is â, and what you actually mean is ǎ.
Macedonian is basically a dialect
Not just one!
in that region apparently language is a factor in determining ethnicity and therefore political borders.
Not just apparently, and not just in that region.
Posted by: David Marjanović at September 27, 2008 04:50 PMDavid, much as I hate to reveal my ignorance how should your name be pronounced? Is it (in Brit. Eng.) Mar-yah-no-fich? Is the ć common in S. German and Austrian names?
Posted by: A.J.P. Crown at September 28, 2008 01:07 PMI too am curious as to how you pronounce your name, and am grateful to Kron for asking.
Posted by: language hat at September 28, 2008 01:11 PMI for one would say "mar-ja-no-vitch", with a soft -j, but what do I know about names from the Austro-Hungarian Empire, eh? I just live down under the sea, in a octopus' garden in the shade.
Posted by: Siganus Sutor at September 28, 2008 01:34 PMDavid, I have seen the Bulgarian er gol'am spelled with a circumflex a (e.g. David Meladenov, Balgarski Talkoven Recnik), but I am not surprised to hear that a micron is also used. For that matter, Daniels and Bright's "The World's Writing Systems" (Oxford, 1996) uses a tilde, p. 703. Which sort of splits the difference, or straddles the fence.
Posted by: Charles Perry at September 28, 2008 07:24 PMAs usual, I'm not sure how we got on to the Hapsburgs in under fifteen comments when the original topic was Australia (i.e. not Austria).
Posted by: A.J.P. Crown at September 29, 2008 06:55 AMI mean the connection is obviously Macedonia, but the Hapsburg Empire takes up a lot of space here in relation to its...I don't know: something or other, political influence probably. Not that I'm complaining, you understand. Would life be worth living without the croissant, the Sachertorte, the Linzertorte Wittgenstein, the Hungarian sausage and so on? I think not. Not to mention Karl Kraus, Freud, Adolf Loos, Otto Wagner, music. Then there's Orson Welles as Harry Lime, am I getting carried away, perhaps? He's not strictly Hapsburg.
Posted by: A.J.P. Crown at September 29, 2008 07:27 AMBy the way the Linzertorte Wittgenstein is not an old Viennese confection, it's just missing a comma.
Posted by: A.J.P. Crown at September 29, 2008 11:05 AM