Wednesday, January 17, 2018

GALINA SEDOVA. A CHAPTER ON BULGAKOV. DXXX



The Bard. Genesis.
M. A. Berlioz.
Posting #13.


“…Having ridden his horse all around the head,
He starts tickling its nostrils with the tip of his spear.
Wrinkling its face, the head yawned,
Opened its eyes, and sneezed…

A. S. Pushkin. Ruslan and Lyudmila.

…Having approached the mound, Ruslan discovers that this is not a mound at all, but an enormous head without a body. –

...Ruslan sees it as a threatening enormity.
Baffled, he wants to dispel the mysterious dream.
Having ridden his horse all around the head,
He starts tickling its nostrils with the tip of his spear.
Wrinkling its face, the head yawned,
Opened its eyes, and sneezed…
A windstorm started… from the eyelashes and moustache,
And from the eyebrows flew off a flock of owls…

A feisty exchange ensues between the Head and Ruslan. The Head is doing whatever it can to thwart the hero’s advance.

…With all its strength, the head
Started to blow its breath at the prince [Ruslan]…

Nevertheless, Ruslan manages to stick his spear into the “audacious tongue” of the head who is mocking the hero:

…Ai, warrior! Ai, hero!
Where are you going?
Slow down, slow down, stop!
Hey, warrior, you’ll break your neck for nothing!..

Ruslan uses an opportune moment and approaches the Head again. The Head is utterly confused and embarrassed. Badly wounded by Ruslan’s spear, with blood pouring out profusely, it can no longer withstand the hero’s assault, as he hits the Head’s cheek with his heavy glove, causing the Head to turn over, its iron helmet falling off with clattering noise.
And here yet another miracle occurs. –

…Then on the emptied spot
A hero’s sword sparkled.
Ruslan clutches it and rushes
Over the bloodstained grass
Toward the Head with the cruel intent
Of cutting off its nose and ears…

But the Head acknowledges its defeat and tells Ruslan the story of the sword. This Head used to be part of a glorious knight, but its younger brother became its deadliest rival. The knight was a giant, whereas his brother was a dwarf. Clever like a devil… and awfully evil.
The dwarf had a magic beard which contained fateful power. –

As long as the beard remains intact,
No harm can come to the traitor…

This dwarf, practitioner of black magic, learned that on a quiet seashore, in a deep cellar under locks a sword was hidden, which was destined to be the end of both brothers: cutting off the beard of the dwarf and cutting off the head of the giant…
And so it came to pass. First the dwarf persuaded his giant brother to set off on a long trip. Beyond distant mountains we found the fateful cellar; I demolished it with my bare hands and pulled out the hidden sword…
Having quarreled as to who would keep the magic sword, the sly dwarf made a suggestion:

Both of them will lie down with the ear to the ground,
And whoever is the first to hear the first ringing
Will own the sword until the grave…
He said this and lay down first…
I was the fool to do the same.
The villain approached me from the back.
The sharp sword whistled [sic!] like a whirlwind…
And before I could look back,
My head fell off my shoulders…

The giant’s body was left to rot where it fell down, but the dwarf took the giant’s head to a deserted and desolate place, where he made the Head guard forever the sword that was now in Ruslan’s possession.
Before they parted, the Head asked Ruslan to avenge the betrayal on the magician dwarf.

Bravely, Ruslan continues on his journey…
Each day brings him new obstacles:
Now he is fighting a mighty warrior,
Now a witch, now a giant…

And at last:

He sees, flying right over his head
With a raised frightful mace,
The evil dwarf Chernomor…

The dwarf attacks Ruslan from the air, but the hero’s agility makes Chernomor miss and fall down, but he quickly sits up. Not quick enough, though, as Ruslan promptly dismounts, runs to the dwarf, and clutches his magic beard. Chernomor whirls up into the air, but Ruslan firmly holds his beard and does not fall for any of the magician’s ruses. –

You can fly even until the star of the night,
But you will surely be left without your beard!
Resign, submit to the Russian might,
Take me to my Lyudmila!..

Comparing the two fairytales, the reader can see that Pushkin’s is optimistic: the Russian might representing goodness triumphs over evil. Wagner’s German tale is pessimistic: both the fearless Siegfried and his ex-Valkyrie Brunhilde perish.

The subdued Chernomor listens humbly…
He flies, and in a moment arrives
In the midst of his terrible mountains…
[Then] Ruslan, having clutched the sword with one hand
And grasping the [dwarf’s] beard with the other,
Cut it off like a handful of grass.
Here’s one for you, he said cruelly,
How about that, predator? Where’s your splendor?
Now, where’s your might? And he ties
The white hair to his tall helmet…

To be continued…

***



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