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- From: scarr@kean.ucs.mun.ca
- Subject: Musical setting of Pangur Ban
- Message-ID: <1992Nov20.140132.1@kean.ucs.mun.ca>
- Lines: 110
- Sender: usenet@news.ucs.mun.ca (NNTP server account)
- Organization: Memorial University. St.John's Nfld, Canada
- References: <1992Nov16.171017.20198@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU> <1992Nov19.123815.4146@memstvx1.memst.edu>
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 1992 16:31:32 GMT
-
- In article <1992Nov19.123815.4146@memstvx1.memst.edu>, nvonstein@memstvx1.memst.edu writes:
- > In article <1992Nov16.171017.20198@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU>, daj8m@poe.acc.Virginia.EDU (Deirdre A. Johnson) writes:
- >> Hi, everyone! I hope my header isn't confusing - The thread about
- >> black kitten names made me remember a poem by Yeats, which I thought
- >> you might enjoy if you don't already know it. And I thought while
- >> I was at it, I'd post another Irish poem, written by a monk in the
- >> ninth century, in the margin of the manuscript he was "really" writing,
- >> as a tribute to his cat. I got the second poem out of a book my sister
- >> gave me for my birthday, and, since it makes a great present for
- >> cat-lovers, I thought I'd tell you how to get hold of it at the end
- >> of my post. So, here goes (hope this isn't too long)
- >>
- >> The Cat and the Moon
- >>
- >> The cat went here and there
- >> And the moon spun round like a top,
- >> And the nearest kin of the moon,
- >> The creeping cat looked up.
- >> Black Minnaloushe stared at the moon,
- >> For, wonder and wail as he would,
- >> The pure cold light in the sky
- >> Troubled his animal blood.
- >> Minnaloushe runs in the grass
- >> Lifting his delicate feet.
- >> Do you dance, Minnaloushe, do you dance?
- >> When two close kindred meet,
- >> What better than call a dance?
- >> Maybe the moon may learn,
- >> Tired of that courtly fashion,
- >> A new dance turn.
- >> Minnaloushe creeps through the grass
- >> From moonlit place to place,
- >> The sacred moon overhead
- >> Has taken a new phase.
- >> Does Minnaloushe know that his pupils
- >> Will pass from change to change,
- >> And that from round to crescent,
- >> From crescent to round they range?
- >> Minnaloushe creeps through the grass
- >> Alone, important and wise,
- >> And lifts to the changing moon
- >> His changing eyes.
- >> -W. B. Yeats
- >>
- >> Pangur Bawn
- >>
- >> Me and Pangur Bawn my cat
- >> Each has his aspiration;
- >> Pangur's mind is set on mice
- >> And mine on education.
- >>
- >> More than any fame I love
- >> My books, pursuing learning;
- >> Nor does my friend envy me-
- >> Mice are Pangur's yearning.
- >>
- >> In our cell and all alone,
- >> Both of us have endless fun;
- >> Nobody is ever bored,
- >> Skillfully the work gets done.
- >>
- >> Often, with a furious pounce,
- >> In his net he snares a mouse;
- >> I, too, net, with mind intent
- >> Philosophic argument.
- >>
- >> Eagerly he'll watch the wall,
- >> His beady bright eye burning;
- >> I fix mine, weak as it is,
- >> On the light of learning.
- >>
- >> Joyfully he'll dash about,
- >> A mouse caught in his sure claws;
- >> I am every bit as pleased,
- >> Skewering obscure laws.
- >>
- >> Happily we spend long hours,
- >> Pangur Bawn, my cat and I;
- >> Each of us loves what he does,
- >> Peacefully time passes by.
- >>
- >> The work Pangur does each day,
- >> For a cat is fit and right;
- >> So it goes with my work too,
- >> Bringing darkness up to light.
- >>
- >> -Anon., 9th century
- >> Translated from the Old Irish by Malachi McCormick
- >>
- >> This poem is in "Other Cats", a small (3" by 4.5") handmade boxed set of
- >> cat poems and stories from all over the world, put out by the Stone Street
- >> Press. Their address is: The Stone Street Press, 1 Stone St., S.1.,
- >> N.Y. 10304 USA
- >> Telephone: (212) 447-1436.
- >>
- >> -That's it for this post. I hope you enjoyed the poems!
- >
- > VERY MUCH! THANK YOU FOR POSTING!
- > Nancy
- >
- >>
- >> -Deirdre at Virginia (daj8m@virginia.edu)
-
- Anyone who enjoys the poem about Pangur Ban should look for a musical
- setting of the same, by Samuel Barber (of "Adagio for String" / 'Platoon'
- fame), entitled, "Songs from Hermitage". There's a delightful older
- recording with Barber accompanying Leontyne Price on the piano., issued on
- Columbia.
-
- Steve (on behalf of Jennet Jourdemayne and Cat Morgan)
-