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  • The Faithless Wife
    BY
    Federico Garcia Lorca


    So I took her to the river
    believing she was a maiden,
    but she already had a husband.
    It was on St. James night
    and almost as if I was obliged to.
    The lanterns went out
    and the crickets lighted up.
    In the farthest street corners
    I touched her sleeping breasts
    and they opened to me suddenly
    like spikes of hyacinth.
    The starch of her petticoat
    sounded in my ears
    like a piece of silk
    rent by ten knives.
    Without silver light on their foliage
    the trees had grown larger
    and a horizon of dogs
    barked very far from the river.

    Past the blackberries,
    the reeds and the hawthorne
    underneath her cluster of hair
    I made a hollow in the earth
    I took off my tie,
    she too off her dress.
    I, my belt with the revolver,
    She, her four bodices.
    Nor nard nor mother-o’-pearl
    have skin so fine,
    nor does glass with silver
    shine with such brilliance.
    Her thighs slipped away from me
    like startled fish,
    half full of fire,
    half full of cold.
    That night I ran
    on the best of roads
    mounted on a nacre mare
    without bridle stirrups.

    As a man, I won’t repeat
    the things she said to me.
    The light of understanding
    has made me more discreet.
    Smeared with sand and kisses
    I took her away from the river.
    The swords of the lilies
    battled with the air.

    I behaved like what I am,
    like a proper gypsy.
    I gave her a large sewing basket,
    of straw-colored satin,
    but I did not fall in love
    for although she had a husband
    she told me she was a maiden
    when I took her to the river.

       
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