Arthur Kalmeyer

Arthur Kalmeyer => Рассуждения => Тема начата: Arthur Kalmeyer от Июль 28, 2018, 11:09:52 pm

Название: 07/28/2018 РАЗМЫШЛЕНИЯ О ПЕРЕВОДАХ С АНГЛИЙСКОГО
Отправлено: Arthur Kalmeyer от Июль 28, 2018, 11:09:52 pm
В апрельском выпуске журнала THE NEW YORKER за этот год было опубликовано понравившееся мне стихотворение американской поэтессы Jane Shore под названием WHO KNOWS ONE. Текст представляет собой вариацию на тему еврейской пасхальной детской считалки Echad Mi Yodea.

Среди моих сетевых друзей есть несколько талантливых переводчиков, и я решил предложить им перевести это стихотворение на русский. Задача, надо признать, не из простых. Дело не в языковых трудностях, но в знаковых мемах, в культурном ареале, используемом автором и мало знакомом русскоязычному читателю.

Мне просто интересно: возможен ли в принципе перевод подобных стихов?...
 
Всё же, я надеюсь, кто-нибудь не робкого десятка возьмётся за эту задачку.

Это предложение не кажется мне праздной выдумкой, потому что в самом общем виде вопрос стоит о возможности поиска взаимопонимани я между людьми очень разных культур...
 
Вот текст оригинала:
 
WHO KNOWS ONE

I know One.
One is God for God is One—
The only One in Heaven and on earth.

Who knows two. I know two.
Two are the first two: Adam and Eve.
One is God for God is One—
It takes one to know one.

Who knows three. I know three.
Bad things always come in threes.
Two trees grew in the Garden of Eden.
One is God for God is One—
One rotten apple spoils the barrel.

Who knows four. I know four.
What were you doing on all fours?
Three’s the hearts in a ménage à trois.
Two’s the jump ropes in double Dutch.
One is God for God is One—
One good turn deserves another.

Who knows five. I know five.
Five is the five in “Slaughterhouse-Five.”
Four is Egypt’s plague of flies.
Three the Stooges on TV.
Two the two-faced lie he told.
One is God for God is One—
One hand washes the other.

Who knows six. I know six.
Six are the wives of Henry VIII.
Who? What? Where? When? Why?
Four the phases of the moon.
Three the bones inside the ear.
Two eyes—the better to see you with, my dear.
One is God for God is One—
There’s only one to a customer.

Who knows seven. I know seven.
Seven the year of the seven-year itch.
Six the paper anniversary.
Asked if he did it, he pleaded the Fifth.
Four are my absent wisdom teeth.
Three is the three in the third degree.
Two can play that game.
One is God for God is One—
Public Enemy No. 1.

Who knows eight. I know eight.
The Beatles’ “Eight Days a Week.”
Wrath is the seventh of the deadly sins.
Six of one, half a dozen of the other.
He lost it all in five-card stud.
Four bits in a nibble equals half a byte.
Three is the beginning, middle, and end.
Two are the graves in the family plot.
One is God for God is One—
The only one in a hole in one.

Who knows nine. I know nine.
Nine are the lives of an average cat.
Eight is the day of circumcision.
Seven the locks on Samson’s head.
Six the sense I wish I had.
Five the five in nickeled-and-dimed.
Four cold feet in the double bed.
Three’s a crowd.
Two’s company.
One is God for God is One—
The only one in a one-night stand.

Who knows ten. I know ten.
I wouldn’t touch that with a ten-foot pole.
She dressed to the nines.
Fellini’s “8½.”
Seven the times the bride circles the groom.
Six the number perfect in itself.
She daubed her wrists with Chanel No. 5.
Love is just a four-letter word.
Three is as phony as a three-dollar bill.
Two is the two in doubletalk.
One is God for God is One—
There’s one born every minute.

Who knows eleven. I know eleven.
Eleven are the stars in Joseph’s dream.
Ten is the Roman numeral X.
Possession is nine-tenths of the law.
Infinity’s a sideways figure eight.
Seven long years Jacob had to wait.
Six is the Lover’s Tarot card.
Five is indivisible.
Four, cruel April.
Three witches in “the Scottish play.”
Two is the two of “I and Thou.”
One is God for God is One—
One in the hand is worth two in the bush.

Who knows twelve. I know twelve.
Twelve are the face cards in a deck.
Eleven are the thieves in “Ocean’s Eleven.”
Take a deep breath and count to ten.
It takes nine tailors to make a man.
Eight are the people on Noah’s ark.
Seven are the hues in a rainbow’s arc.
Six is . . . I can’t remember what.
Five the rivers of the Underworld.
Four the rivers of Paradise.
Three on a match.
It takes two to tango.
One is God for God is One—
In one ear and out the other.

Who knows thirteen. I know thirteen.
Thirteen is the skyscraper’s missing floor.
Twelve are the men who walked on the moon.
At the eleventh hour, his life was spared.
Do not covet your neighbor’s ass.
Nine are the circles of Dante’s Hell.
Eight is the game of crazy eights.
The phone was busy 24/7.
They deep-sixed their love affair.
The five-o’clock shadow on your face.
Four is putting two and two together.
Three is the eternal triangle.
Two plays second fiddle.
Two minus one equals one.
One is one all alone.
You were my one and only one—
The only one whose number’s up.


Аудиозапись стихотворения, начитанного автором, можно послушать здесь: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/04/02/who-knows-one (https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/04/02/who-knows-one)


Tags: чужие стихи, переводы, культур-мультур, восток-запад