Vysotsky Vladimir :
другие произведения.
Collection of Poems (Songs)
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Школа кожевенного мастерства: сумки, ремни своими руками
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Vysotsky Vladimir
(перевод: Vagapov Alec) (
vagalec@rambler.ru
)
Размещен: 10/09/2007, изменен: 18/06/2014. 182k.
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Аннотация:
Vladimir Vysotsky. Collection of Poems. 1962-1979. Translated from the Russian by Alec Vagapov
Vladimir Vysotsky
Collection Of Poems
Translated from the Russian by Alec Vagapov
1961-1968
--
What The Hell, You Viper...
--
I Am On The Job
--
The City Romance
--
I Need Changes 'Cause For Years
--
I Was Fond Of Nasty Tricks And Women
--
The Letter
--
We Were To Meet. I Waited For The Day
--
The Song Of The Criminal Code
--
It's
No Use To Talk To You...
--
The Stars
--
The Informer
--
The Common Graves
--
Both The Pets And The Wild Beasts Of Prey
--
My Sorrow Won't Fade
--
The Tale Of The Wild Mammal
--
The Reincarnation Song
--
Saying Good-Bye To The Mountains
--
The Ships
--
There Is The Entrance But, You Know
--
The Song Of Clairvoyant Cassandra
--
The Icy World
--
Suddenly Our Trodden Ways Must Part
--
In My Soul
--
My Heart Aches, So Does My Head...
--
Well, Now, My Hands Don't Shake At All ...
--
I Have Two Selves In Me
...
--
He Hasn't Returned From The Fighting
--
If You Are In A Strange Land At Night
...
--
Up To The Mountain Height
--
The Birds Are Alarmed Here...
--
My Own Island
--
The Ballad Of A
Bath-House
--
I'll Answer All Your Questions
--
The Masks
--
I Love You Now
--
Make A Bridge On The Occasion
--
The One Who
Didn't
Shoot
--
Execution Of Mountain Echo
--
The Song Of The White Elephant
--
I Honour Dorian Gray And Faustus...
--
The Fords Are Deep. The Bridges Have Burnt Down
...
--
When By The Rhymes And Poems I Get Bored
...
--
In The Beginning There Was A Word
...
--
The Ballad Of The Time
--
The Story Of The Truth And The Lie
--
The Song Of The New Times
--
Apples From The Garden Of Eden
--
I Am Fated To Argue To Very Last Day...
--
The Silly Dream
--
I'm Feeling Shivery Again...
WHAT THE HELL, YOU VIPER...
Tell me, why you, viper, have your eye-brows pencilled,
And what the hell you've put on your blue beret for.
You are going out for a dance, I sense it,
You have got two tickets to the club, I know.
You should have no doubt that I dote upon you,
I can do the stealing for you night and day,
But you are unfaithful, and I want to warn you,
I will put you down if you go astray.
I have no objections if it's Nick or Slavka,
I don't mind you going out with my friends,
But if it is Victor from Pereyaslavka
I shall crush you, stinker, tear you to threads!
Listen to me, hussy, I'll be frank and solid:
You had better get that beret off your head;
If you don't, I'll have you buried in my soul, and
You will not be found, -- coated with cement.
When you come back, maybe, later in the summer,
I'll have found a woman, -- a real bit of jam,
Then you'll burst with envy, like a dirty bummer,
Saying: "Please forgive me", -
I won't give a damn.
1961
I AM ON THE JOB
I am on the job, I've got a knife,
Don't hurt me, or you'll lose your life.
And then I go to have a drink.
No matter what the rumors say,
What I have earned I drink away.
I'll always act that way, I think.
A man comes up to me and says:
"Life isn't easy nowadays,
And men like you I want to kill".
But I have outdone the boy,
I do not talk, but I destroy,
I kill my foes and always will.
And if you care for a chat,
Let's have a drink, sit down, lad.
We'll work it out anyway.
But if you are like that young ass,
There is one law for all of us,
And it will always be that way.
1962
The City Romance
Am E7 Am
I happened to be walking around
Am G7 C(A7)
And
I hurt two people by chance,
A7 Dm Am
They took me to militia grounds
Am E7 Am
Where I saw her... and broke down at once.
.
I knew not what on earth she was doing there,
She was probably getting a pass.
She was beautiful, lovely and fair...
I decided to search out the lass.
I just followed her, walking behind her,
She wouldn't talk to a bully, I thought.
Then I made up my mind to invite her
To the nearest restaurant. Why not?
As we walked people smiled at my pretty one,
I was furious, my mind on the blink!
I just smote the face of a weird man
'Cause he dared to give her a wink.
She found the caviar delicious,
And I didn't grudge the expense,
I ordered smash hits to musicians,
And the last tune they played was "The Cranes".
I made promises, showing my feeling,
I repeated one thing the whole night:
"For five days I haven't been stealing,
Believe me, my love at first sight."
I said that my life had been ruined,
Blew my nose and wiped tears from my eyes,
And she said: "I believe you, yours truly,
You can take me at a reasonable price."
I slapped her on the face in despair,
I was boiling like crazy inside.
Now I knew what she really was doing there,
In militia, my love at first sight.
1962
* * *
I need changes `cause for years
there have not been many.
There's no money, and no girls,
and there can't be any.
I have filched for many years,
and have not been lazy, --
should have saved a heavy purse,
but I drank like crazy.
I'm as poor as a mouse,
haven't got a penny,
got no friends and got no house,
and I can't have any.
I have filched for many years,
and have not been lazy,
should have saved a heavy purse,
but I drank like crazy.
Somehow, I still get along
playing cards and drinking.
All I ever did was wrong,
not just the beginning...
1962
* * *
I was fond of nasty tricks and women,
And at changing them I didn't draw the line.
There were stories about my demeanor
And the numerous love-affairs of mine.
Way down south near the sea -- I mean it --
I was walking once along the road,
And I encountered one of those women
That in my life I came upon a lot.
She was kind, a very generous creature,
And as open-hearted as could be,
She was nicely shaped, and had fine features,
While I didn't have a coin about me.
What she wanted were little presents,
Such as
brandy
, golden rings, perfume.
In return she'd grant the little pleasure
Of her dubious service, I presume.
"If it comes to that, I'll give you, honey,
The most precious thing I have," she said.
"I agree, -- I said, -- to pay ye a hundred,
Otherwise, I'll pool it with my friend."
Women are like very angry horses,
Bit between their teeth, they'll wheeze and chafe...
I might've got her wrong, she was ferocious,
Made her farewell and left.
Later on the passions had calmed down.
She turned up, her anger shaken off.
My impression was that now she found
The price I'd offered suitable enough.
1964
THE LETTER
I couldn't bear my first term in the camp,
So they will add a year or two (Don't argue with them!
Please write me, dear fellows, if you can:
"How goes it there in the world of freedom?"
What do you drink ? We don't drink anything,
All we have got is snow in sunny weather.
Please write to me about everything,
It's boring here, and I need your letter.
I miss you all, and it's been years on end,
I'd like to see your dear smiling faces,
How is my sweetheart? Has she got a friend?
No? Tell her she must write me a few phrases.
It is as dreadful as the Trial of Ordeal.
Your letter is a thread which mustn't fail us.
They will not forward it to me, I feel,
But write me anyway, my dear fellows.
1964
* * *
We were to meet. I waited for the day.
It felt like waiting for a terrible disaster,
But we began to live together right away,
Without fearing what might come after.
I got you out of gutter, dressed you, and
I cut the number of your doubtful connections,
You had a trail behind, without end,
A long-long trail of casual relations.
I battered, I recall, your so called friends,
I don't know why, but I just didn't like them,
Although there might have been, I sense,
Nice fellows, genuine friends, among them.
I'd do whatever you would ask me to.
I wanted every hour to be night of wedding.
One day I nearly killed myself for you,
but my attempt, thank God, was unavailing.
And if you'd waited for me on the year
When I was driven to the "country-house",
I would have stolen skies for you, my dear,
and in addition stars from Kremlin towers.
I'll give you anything, or I'll be damned!
Don't drink, don't lie, and I'll forgive you, sinner!
I'll give you Opera and Ballet and
The smaller building of the Sports Arena.
I'm not inclined to meet you now, my dove,
I'm scared of our act of love occurring,
The way the Japanese are scared of
the horror of Hiroshima recurring.
1964
THE SONG OF THE CRIMINAL CODE
We don't need novels, stories and inventions.
We keep ourselves enlightened all the time.
The best of books to me is the collection
Of laws that deal with punishment and crime.