Sunday, November 24, 2019

Mimosa Pudica – How a Poem by João Cabral de Melo Neto Embarked Me on Time Travel






I am not a fan of João Cabral de Melo Neto, the Brazilian poet and diplomat who redefined Brazilian modernism. He is most of the most influential writers of modern Brazil, based on the use of simple language to turn poetry into a structural edifice of deliberate and meticulous attention. Yes, he is a most influential poet, but somehow not the sensual expresser of words that touch me in the most unexpected moment. Poetry for me has to give the feeling of effortless allure or destructive pain, rather than the oblique reality of straight lines.

Well, the reason I started this essay with De Melo Neto is because a friend sent me a poem of the late poet, translated by Djelal Kadir of the University of Oklahoma, saying:

“You and I do not talk about our previous lives as researchers anymore. Perhaps it is pudor, perhaps a deliberate dissociation. But you may see that the poet you sometimes talked about has also had such struggles.”

I met my friend in Saō Paulo decades ago. We were doing a study of the prevalence of Caesarean section  deliveries in Brazil, and he was one of the local expert obstetricians. Years later, we have both retired from that life and now we correspond about arts and our one-way journey left ahead of us.

I was pleased he sent the bilingual version of the poem as while I can manage reading the Portuguese used in Portugal, I am hopeless in trying to guess how it is used in Brazil.
So, here is the poem and its translation:


I have always avoided speaking of me,                                                        Sempre evitei falar de mim,
Speaking myself. I wanted to speak of things.                                              falar-me. Quis falar de coisas,
But, in the selection of those things,                                                            Mas na seleḉão dessas coisas
Might there not be a speaking of me?                                                          não haverá um falar de mim?

Might that modesty of speaking myself                                                        Não haverá nesse pidor
Not contain a confession,                                                                             de falar-me uma confissão
An oblique confession,                                                                                  uma indireta confissão,
In reverse and ever immodest?                                                                      pelo avesso, e sempre impudor?

How pure or impure                                                                                      A coisa de que se falar
Is the thing spoken of?                                                                                  até onde está pura ou impura?
Or does it always impose itself, impurely                                                     ou sempre se impōe, mesmo impura-
Even, on anyone wishing to speak of it?                                                       mente, a quem dela quer falar?

How is one to know, with so many things                                                     Como saber, se há tanta coisa
To speak or not to speak of?                                                                         de que falar ou não falar?
And if the avoidance of speech                                                                     E se o evitá-la, o não falar,
Itself be a way of speaking of things?                                                           é forma de falar da coisa?                  

My friend explained why he was sending this poem:

“You recall the often capricious non-medical reasons we were given for the frequent use of Caesaren section in Brazil, yes? Well, one of them was that there will be no need for a pudendal bloc to anesthetize the area around the vagina helping the passage of the baby’s head.  This poem uses the word pidor  or pudic which is the origin of pudendal. It is Latin for genitalia, but also means shameful.”

Ha! Pudic is an archaic word now but immediately made me think of Mimosa Pudica, a plant that closes itself (in shyness and modesty?) when touched.  I smiled as I thought about that reaction and the name given to it by Carl Linnaeus during his sexual taxonomy of plants.  Upon external stimuli like touch, the cells of the plant which are filled with water proceed to an exchange of ions that leads to loss of hydrostatic pressure and the collapse of the leaves. Hence the pudic behavior of the plant. With time the ionic balance is restored and the leaves re-acquire turgidity (turgor pressure) and reopen.

So, when touched the plant become flaccid. Of course in the animal kingdom, when genitalia are touched they become turgid and fluid filled.

Which one is the pudic or shy behavior?

Of course that is not what the poem of De Melo Neto is all about. It is about the modesty of an introvert asking questions that are linear and require linear answers. That is why his use of language is compared to an architect’s work. And for that very reason he stated that:

“A poesia não é fruto de inspiração em razão do sentimento”, mas o “fruto do trabalho paciente e lúcido do poeta”
(Poetry is not the product of inspiration triggered by feeling, but the product of the poet's patient and lucid work.)

Perhaps that is why I understand Fernando Pessoa most effortlessly when reading poetry in Portuguese…

November 24, 2019
© Vahé A. Kazandjian, 2019

Tuesday, November 19, 2019

Dendrophobia and La Diritta Via







I have been reading Dante lately, again. The Inferno is a returning point when life speeds up its journey. I have read The Divine Comedy a few times, coincidental with stages of my life. I find it calming in its introspective facility.

The Dark Forest. The Underworld from where Orpheus tried to rescue his dead lover Eurydice. For the Greek, it is also Hades to where Odysseus traveled to learn his fate from Teiresias, the blind prophet. And for the Buddhist, the Underworld is a continuum from Yama, the judging King of the Underworld to Nakara, or hell, during the cycle of life passed through Dante’s Dark Forest.

In the Bible, the forest is neutral. No fear of trees (dendrophobia). No fear, except that which results from new knowledge. Yet that happened when the serpent talked, not the tree.  However we fear the tree because it did not talk. Because it let us learn without being taught. Because we knew already.

Sartre wrote the novel Nausea (La Nauseé) where the roots of a chestnut tree under a bench in the park caused nausea to the main character. The tree was there, just like existence, and it encroached upon man’s freedom.  It was the antithesis of existentialism.  In opposition, when William Blake wrote his Poison Tree, it was in the context of “nature being imagination itself.”  Nature, the forest and trees were the source and embodiment to human imagination, not an encroachment upon his existence as proposed Sartre.

La Diritta Via. The straight, perhaps rightful path.  Was it lost in the forest or we ended up in that dark place because we lost that path? But why does it matter when the Divine Comedy is already written for us? Why pursue a path that takes us away or out of that dark forest when we know that the last act of that comedy is a return to existentialist fervor? When the tree never talks yet we know the story. When Nakara is just a stop in that endless cycle. When a French existentialist would use the roots of a chestnut tree to question his freedom from the environment and nature.

… I will read Dante again. But today, when the sun goes down I will also listen to Hilary Hahn play Paganini’s Caprice 24.

And then I will go for a long walk, in the dark, with my dog.

November 19, 2019
© Vahé A. Kazandjian, 2019

Thursday, November 14, 2019

Les Feuilles Mortes









The comfort of nature
Abandons in me
The spaces where once
I ran without fear

Trees with carved names
Paths covered in fallen leaves
I enter to stay
And I stay so I can leave

Again

To finish my search
Of that name
Where nature lost all comfort
But left a promise

Carved on a tree
That stopped growing
Since

November 14, 2019
© Vahé A. Kazandjian, 2019