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    Isla Negra

    Page 3
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      snow of stone,

      snow of mad and solitary stone,

      then

      the cactus of the Pacific

      deposited its nests,

      its electric hair of thorns.

      And the wind loved this immovable

      ship and flying swiftly

      it granted its treasures:

      the beard of the islands,

      a cold whisper,

      changed into a honeycomb for eagles,

      and asked for its sails

      so that the sea could feel

      the pure stone passing from wave to wave.

      The Creation

      That happened in the great silence

      when grass was born,

      when light had just detached itself

      and created the vermilion and the statues,

      then

      in the great solitude

      a howl began,

      something rolled crying,

      the shadows half-opened, rising alone

      as if the planets sobbed

      and then the echo

      rolled, tumbling and tumbling

      until what was born was silent.

      But stone preserved the memory.

      It guarded the opened snout of the shadows,

      the trembling sword of the howl,

      and there is in the stone an animal without name

      that still howls without voice toward the emptiness.

      The Tomb of Victor Hugo on Isla Negra

      One stone among all,

      smooth gravestone,

      undisturbed like the proportion

      of a planet

      here in the solitudes

      it was ordained,

      and the waves lap at it,

      the seafoam washes it,

      but it emerges

      smooth, imposing, clear,

      among the rugged and hard rocks,

      round and serene,

      oval, resolute

      by majestic dead

      and no one knows who sleeps surrounded

      by the unfathomable coastal fury,

      no one knows, only

      the albatross moon,

      the cross of the cormorant, the firm leg

      of the pelican, only the

      sea knows it, only the

      sad green thunder of dawn.

      Silence, sea! Hushed

      the seafoam recites the lord’s prayer,

      extends its long seaweed hair,

      its humid cry

      extinguishes

      the seagull:

      here lies the grave,

      here finally woven

      for a craggy mounument hurling

      its song to cover itself with whiteness

      of the incessant sea and its labors,

      and buried in the earth,

      in the fragrance

      of France cool and subtle

      sailing its matter,

      surrendering to the sea its submerged beard,

      crossing latitudes,

      searching among the currents,

      passing through typhoons and hips

      of pure archipelagoes,

      until the torrential doves

      of the South Sea of Chile,

      attracted the tricolored steps

      of the snowy phantom

      and here it rests, alone

      and liberated:

      entering the turbulent light,

      kissed by salt and storm,

      and father of its own eternity

      sleeping finally, outstretched,

      reclining in the intermittent thunder,

      at the end of the sea and its cascades,

      in the sails of its own power.

      The Three Ducklings

      A thousand

      times

      a thousand

      years ago

      plus one

      a bright duckling flew

      over the sea.

      He went to discover the islands.

      He wanted to talk

      with the fan

      of the palm tree,

      with the leaves of the banana, to eat

      the tricolored seeds

      of the archipelago,

      to be married

      and establish

      hemispheres populated

      by ducks.

      In the wild springs

      he wanted

      to establish lagoons

      dignified with day lilies.

      He was an exotic duck

      to be

      lost

      in the middle

      of the foamy

      thickets of Chile.

      When

      he flew

      like an arrow

      his two brothers

      cried

      tears

      of stone.

      He heard them

      fall

      in his flight,

      in the middle of the circle

      of water,

      in the central

      navel

      of the great ocean

      and he returned.

      But

      his brothers

      were

      now

      only

      two obscure

      stones

      of granite,

      since

      each tear turned

      into stone:

      the weeping

      without measure

      petrified

      the pain

      into a monument.

      Then, the wandering

      repentant

      huddled together his wings

      and his dreams,

      slept with his

      brothers

      and slowly the sea,

      salt,

      and sky,

      imprisoned him in his shivering

      until he was again

      a duck of stone.

      And now

      like

      three

      ships

      sailing,

      three ducks

      in time.

      The Turtle

      The turtle that

      has walked

      so long

      and seen so much

      with

      his

      ancient

      eyes,

      the turtle

      that fed on

      olives

      of the deep

      sea,

      the turtle that has swum

      for seven centuries

      and known

      seven

      thousand

      springs,

      the turtle

      shielded

      against

      the heat

      and cold,

      against

      the rays and waves,

      the turtle

      of yellow

      and silver,

      with stern

      amber

      spots

      and rapine feet,

      the turtle

      remains

      here

      asleep,

      and doesn’t know it.

      The old man

      assumed

      a hardness,

      abandoned

      the love of waves

      and became rigid

      as an iron plate.

      Closing

      the eyes that

      have dared

      so much

      ocean, sky, time and earth,

      and now, he sleeps

      among the other

      rocks.

      The Heart of Stone

      Look,

      this

      was the heart

      of a siren.

      Helplessly

      hard

      she came to the shores

      to comb her hair

      and play a game of cards.

      Swearing

      and spitting

      among the seaweed.

      She was the image

      herself

      of those

      hellish

      barmaids

      that

      in st
    ories

      murdered

      the weary traveler.

      She killed her lovers

      and danced

      in the waves.

      And so,

      time passed in

      the wicked

      life of the siren

      until

      her fierce

      lover, the sailor

      pursued her

      with harpoon and guitar

      through all the seafoam,

      farther

      than the most

      distant archipelagoes,

      and when

      she reclined

      in his arms,

      the sailor

      gave her

      his beveled point,

      a final kiss

      and a justified death.

      Then, from the ship

      the dead

      commanders

      descended,

      beheaded

      by

      that

      treacherous

      siren,

      and with cutlass,

      sword,

      fork

      and knife,

      pulled out

      the heart of stone

      from her chest,

      and, near the sea,

      it was allowed

      to anchor,

      in order that

      it could teach

      the little

      sirens

      to learn

      to behave

      properly

      with

      the

      enamored

      sailors.

      Air in the Stone

      On the naked cliff

      and in the hair

      air

      of rock and wave.

      All changing skin hour by hour.

      The salt becomes brine-soaked light,

      the sea opens

      its clouds,

      and the sky

      hurls green foam.

      The brilliant day

      is like a flower

      driven into

      a golden lance.

      All

      is

      bell, cup,

      emptiness, raising

      the transparent heart

      of stone

      and

      water.

      To a Wrinkled Boulder

      A wrinkled stone

      polished

      by sea, by air,

      by time.

      A giant rock, shaken

      by a cyclone, by a volcano,

      by a night

      of seafoam and black guitars.

      Only a

      royal

      stone

      in the middle

      of time and earth,

      triumph

      of immovability, of harshness,

      majestic like the stars

      facing

      all

      that stirs,

      alone

      profound, dense and pure.

      Oh solitary statue

      rising

      from the sand!

      Oh naked bulk

      where ash-colored

      lizards climb,

      that drink

      a goblet

      of dew

      in the dawn,

      stone

      against seafoam,

      against changing sky,

      against spring.

      Infinite stone erected by

      the pure hands of solitude

      in the middle of the sand!

      The Stones and the Birds

      Birds of the South Sea,

      resting,

      it is the hour

      of great solitude, the hour of stone.

      I knew every nest,

      the unsociable lodging

      of the nomadic,

      I loved your Antarctic flight,

      the somber accuracy of the remote birds.

      Now, rest

      in the amphitheater

      of the islands:

      no longer can I

      talk with you,

      there are no

      letters, there is no

      telegraph

      between poet and bird:

      there is secret music,

      only hidden wings,

      plumage and power.

      How much distance and greed

      awaited the cruel gold eyes

      of the silver fugitive!

      With closed wings

      a meteor descended,

      exploding in your seafoam light,

      and the flight again ascended,

      climbing to the heights with a bloody fish.

      From the Chilean Archipelago,

      there, where rain

      established its home,

      great black wings

      came cutting the sky,

      and dominating

      the territories and distances

      of winter,

      here on the continent

      of solitary stone,

      love, manure, life,

      all that is left,

      adventurous birds

      of stone, sea and impossible sky.

      To the Traveler

      These stones aren’t sad.

      Within them lives gold,

      they have the seeds of planets,

      they have bells in their depths,

      gloves of iron, marriages

      of time with the amethysts:

      on the inside laughing with rubies,

      nourishing themselves from lightning.

      Because of this, traveler, pay attention

      to the hardships of the road,

      to mysteries on the walls.

      I know this at great cost,

      that all life is not outward

      nor all death within,

      and that the age writes letters

      with water and stone for no one,

      so that no one knows,

      so that no one understands anything.

      The Tender Bulk

      Don’t be frightened by the relentless face

      that earthquakes and bad weather

      have carved, sea grasses,

      small plants the color of a

      star

      raised by the stubborn neck

      of the defiant mountain.

      The impulse, the ecstasy, the anger,

      stayed within the stone,

      and when the form exploded

      into the planets,

      earthly plants flowered

      in its wrinkles of granite

      and a tenderness remained.

      Bird

      The bird, bird, bird:

      bird, flying, bird,

      escape to your nest, climb to the sky,

      peck the clouds of water,

      cross the full moon,

      the brilliant sun and the distances

      with your plumage of basalt

      and your abdomen of stone feathers.

      Stones for Maria

      The pure pebbles,

      oval olives,

      were once

      inhabitants

      of the ocean’s

      vines,

      clusters

      of grapes

      in submerged honeycombs:

      The waves picked them,

      felled by wind,

      rolling in the abyss

      among slow-moving fish

      and sleepwalking jellyfish,

      tails of lacerated sharks,

      eels like bullets!

      Transparent stones,

      smooth stones,

      pebbles,

      sliding toward

      the bottom of humid regions,

      far below, near where

      the sky reemerges

      and the sea dies above its artichokes.

      Rolling and rolling

      among the fingers and lips underwater

      down to the smooth interminable,

      until they were only touch,

      curve of the smooth cup,

      petal of the hip.

      Then the surf grew stronger

      and a beat of hard wave,


      a hand of stone

      winnowed cobbles

      sifted them along the coast

      and then disappeared in silence:

      small amber teeth,

      raisins of honey and salt, beans of water,

      blue olives of the wave,

      forgotten almonds in the sand.

      Stones for Maria!

      Stones of honor for her labyrinth!

      She, like a spider

      of transparent stone,

      will weave her embroidery,

      make her banner of pure stone,

      fabricate, with silvery stones,

      the structure of the day;

      with sulfurous stones,

      the root of a lost lightning flash,

      and one by one will climb to her wall,

      to the pattern, to the honesty, to the motion,

      the fugitive stone,

      the grape of the sea has returned to the clusters

      wearing the light of her seafoam full of wonder.

      Stones for Maria!

      Wrinkled agates of Isla Negra,

      sulfurous stones

      of Tocopilla, like shattered stars,

      decending from hellish mineral,

      stones of La Serenta that the ocean

      smoothed and then settled in the heights,

      and from Coquimbo the black power,

      the rolling basalt

      of Maitencillo, of Tolten, of Niebla,

      the wet dress

      of the Chiloe seashore,

      round stones, stones like eggs

      of southern birds, translucent fingers

      of the secret salt, of frozen

      quartz, or enduring heritage

      of the Andes, boats

      and monasteries

      of granite.

      Praise

      the stones

      of Maria,

      those that she arranged like a crystal bee

      in the honeycomb of her wisdom:

      the stones

      of its walls,

      of the book that is built

      letter by letter,

      leaf by leaf,

      and stone by stone!

      It is necessary to see and read this beauty

      and I love its hands

      from whose power

      appears, gently,

      a

      lesson

      of stone.

      Antarctic Stones

      There all ends

      and doesn’t end:

      there all begins:

      rivers and ice part,

      air is married to snow,

      there are no streets or horses

      and the only building

      stone built.

      No one inhabits the castle

      not even the lost souls

      that the cold and frigid wind

      frightened:

      the solitude of the world alone is there

      and so the stone

      became music,

      lifting its slender heights,

      raising itself to cry or sing

      but it remained silent.

      Only the wind, the whip

      of the South Pole, whistled,

      only the white void

      and a noise of rain birds

      around the castle of solitude.

      Nothing More

     


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