Poetry |

“I Built A Wall,” “Dead Branches,” “Always a Cradle” & “Via dei Cappellari”

I Built a Wall

 

It’s my fault. Stone by stone

by stone I built a wall

walled myself off from the world.

No way out now.

Even if I wanted to

feel your hand, one

step and I’d crack

my head on that wall.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

Dead Branches

 

Each gust of wind

with growing force

throws down a cascade

of dead branches:

oak, poplar, elm.

No trees around.

It’s in me they fall

dead weight and all.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

Always a Cradle

 

Always, always a cradle

rocking within me.

As the swarm of thoughts swells

and sleep slips away

I sing, “rock-a-bye,”

and right next to you

I fall asleep, too.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

Via dei Cappellari

 

The sun comes out and the street

is a carnival of sheets, the wind

right behind. At first leap

it lands in a pillowcase

and falls asleep.

 

/  /  /

 

Mario dell’Arco is the pen name of Mario Fagiolo (Rome, 1905-1996). Dell’Arco wrote in romanesco, the dialect of the Roman people, and was perhaps the last great poet in a lineage that includes Giuseppe Gioachino Belli, Trilussa and Crescenzo Del Monte. Dell’Arco’s poetry is epigrammatic in style, intensely personal and abounding in rhyme and wit. His work, translated into many languages, has been largely unavailable in English. I am currently working on a book-length selection of his poetry for an American publisher. — Marc Alan Di Martino

Original poems copyright Mario dell’Arco, Tutte le Poesie Romanesche, Gangemi Editore, 2005.

Translations copyright Marc Alan Di Martino, 2021.

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