
Saint Jerome, patron saint of translators, by Bellini
“A Prayer for My Daughter” by W.B. Yeats
(Spanish translation by James Mansfield Nichols)
https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/poems/14635/a-prayer-for-my-daughter
A Prayer for My Daughter (4)
Helen, being chosen, found life flat and dull,
And later had much trouble from a fool;
While that great Queen that rose out of the spray,
Being fatherless, could have her way,
Yet chose a bandy-leggèd smith for man.
It’s certain that fine women eat
A crazy salad with their meat
Whereby the Horn of Plenty is undone.
Una Oración para mi Hija (4)
Helena, siendo escogida, encontró monótona y aburrida la vida,
Y más tarde tuvo mucho problema de un necio;
Mientras aquella gran Reina que surgió de la espuma,
No teniendo padre, podía hacer lo que quisiera,
Sin embargo tomó a un herrero estevado de marido.
Es cierto que las mujeres hermosas comen
Una ensalada loca con su carne
Por lo cual se deshace el Cuerno de la Abundancia.
[Copyright (c) 2018 James Mansfield Nichols. All rights reserved.]





Ear Fatigue Syndrome and Recovery
Cello Player.
The wireless speakers strewn about The Shed burble from their niches most of the day.
Some days I think I’ve divined the secret of much jazz that I listen to: Play only the notes that are not hummable. I say “listen” with temerity because I’m not always paying attention to the sounds, but they’re there.
I know it’s the whining of a music sissy on my part to pine occasionally for a predictable interval, or a chord that I could finger if I wanted to, but it reflects a certain saturation point from which I must recover.
That point slips up on me, and usually comes after several hours of play from my Pandora radio station based on, say, John Abercrombie, or Tom Harrell, or Christian Scott.
When I realize I’ve crossed the line into improvisation-induced irritability, I usually fall back on a playlist of folk or pop tunes that I can pay little attention to until my ears recharge and jazz-love returns.
The folk and pop lists don’t include just songs I’ve heard a lot; but, even in the unfamiliar ones, when a musical phrase starts I can usually finish or at least add to it predictively. Is that what “tuneful” means? Is there such a word?
If there were a heaven, mine would consist of a gathering of friendly, articulate experts in various fields — in this case music — whose brains I could pick to repair the yawning gaps in my understanding of virtually everything.
[Copyright (c) 2018 James Mansfield Nichols. All rights reserved.]