Take This Waltz by Federico García Lorca
The hyacinth wild on my shoulder, My mouth on the dew of your thighs
Take This Waltz
Now in Vienna there’s ten pretty women There’s a shoulder where Death comes to cry There’s a lobby with nine hundred windows There’s a tree where the doves go to die There’s a piece that was torn from the morning And it hangs in the Gallery of Frost Ay, Ay, Ay, Ay Take this waltz, take this waltz Take this waltz with the clamp on its jaws Oh I want you, I want you, I want you On a chair with a dead magazine In the cave at the tip of the lily In some hallways where love’s never been On a bed where the moon has been sweating In a cry filled with footsteps and sand Ay, Ay, Ay, Ay Take this waltz, take this waltz Take its broken waist in your hand This waltz, this waltz, this waltz, this waltz With its very own breath of brandy and Death Dragging its tail in the sea There’s a concert hall in Vienna Where your mouth had a thousand reviews There’s a bar where the boys have stopped talking They’ve been sentenced to death by the blues Ah, but who is it climbs to your picture With a garland of freshly cut tears? Ay, Ay, Ay, Ay Take this waltz, take this waltz Take this waltz it’s been dying for years There’s an attic where children are playing Where I’ve got to lie down with you soon In a dream of Hungarian lanterns In the mist of some sweet afternoon And I’ll see what you’ve chained to your sorrow All your sheep and your lilies of snow Ay, Ay, Ay, Ay Take this waltz, take this waltz With its “I’ll never forget you, you know!” This waltz, this waltz, this waltz, this waltz ... And I’ll dance with you in Vienna I’ll be wearing a river’s disguise The hyacinth wild on my shoulder, My mouth on the dew of your thighs And I’ll bury my soul in a scrapbook, With the photographs there, and the moss And I’ll yield to the flood of your beauty My cheap violin and my cross And you’ll carry me down on your dancing To the pools that you lift on your wrist Oh my love, Oh my love Take this waltz, take this waltz It’s yours now. It’s all that there is
Original poem first published in Lorca’s Poeta en Nueva York (1940, Editorial Losada). Translated by Leonard Cohen and made into song on Enrique Morente’s album, Omega, 1996.
In the words of Leonard Cohen, in his acceptance speech for the Prince of Asturias Award for Literature 2011:
“I could say that when I was a young man, an adolescent, and I hungered for a voice, I studied the English poets and I knew their work well, and I copied their styles, but I could not find a voice. It was only when I read, even in translation, the works of Lorca that I understood that there was a voice. It is not that I copied his voice; I would not dare. But he gave me permission to find a voice, to locate a voice, that is to locate a self, a self that is not fixed, a self that struggles for its own existence. As I grew older, I understood that instructions came with this voice. What were these instructions? The instructions were never to lament casually. And if one is to express the great inevitable defeat that awaits us all, it must be done within the strict confines of dignity and beauty.”





I really do think the Wandering Shade of Lorca haunts everyting good.
Lorca, there’s a reason his work is so legendary. such a gorgeous poem. I agree with you Gary Dault, “haunts everything good.” As well, the comments from the translator, Leonard Cohen, such an insight into his own brilliant work. Thank you ONLY POEMS, what a moving/ teaching/ /inspirational post.