Old courtyards with tubs of laundry: ‘Go to the washerwoman and do your own washing’ I whisper to you, and the wild apricot trees all turn suddenly white, the sky pales, the world is ****** in a drenching buzz. There΄s a smell of bluebags and a sulphurous bubbling. You΄d hardly believe it — so much steam rises that only dirt is left in the copper. The wild apricots petrify into coral. It΄s so easy — easy in a woman΄s way — to wash your soul, to rejoice in the spring wind shaking the scales on its dragon-tail so that you΄re looking at soap-bubbles it blows for you between your fingers. Two children pass by, holding on a string a balloon transparent as a bubble. For a moment we are crouched inside it.
Grete Tartler
[Translated into English by Fleur Adcock]
New Europe Writers Bucharest Tales, Contemporary Literature Press, Bucharest, 2014
Grete Tartler (b. 1948, Romania) has published 12 volumes of poetry in Romanian and German, and literature for children. She lives in Bucharest.