"C"

Les Ponts de Cé

Louis Aragon (1897-1982)

The poem dates from 1942, and was set to music by Poulenc in 1943. Les Ponts de Cé, on the Loire near Angers: a strategic crossing, scene of bloody fighting in 1432, 1620 and 1940. Crossing the Loire into the ‘Free Zone’ enabled Aragon to be a Resistance fighter. Lancelot crossed the perilous Pont de l’Épée for love of Guinevere. Lay: a poem of octosyllables, with a single rhyme, much favoured in the Middle Ages, about love (often impossible) and chivalry. The chief exponent was the mysterious 'Marie de France'.
Les Ponts de Cé
J’ai traversé les ponts de Cé C’est là que tout a commencé Une chanson des temps passés Parle d’un chevalier blessé D’une rose sur la chaussée Et d’un corsage délacé Du château d’un duc insensé Et des cygnes dans les fossés De la prairie où vient danser Une éternelle fiancée Et j’ai bu comme un lait glacé Le long lai des gloires faussées La Loire emporte mes pensées Avec les voitures versés Et les armes désamorcées Et les larmes mal effacées Ô ma France ô ma délaissée J’ai traversé les ponts de Cé
"C"
I’ve crossed the Loire at Cé (that’s "C"), the start of this whole tendency. A song of ancient minstrelsy, a knight, a nasty wound has he, a rose on roads of vagrancy, and breasts bereft of decency: castle of some duke’s lunacy, swans on the ditches’ buoyancy, meadow of dancing ecstasy, a bride’s eternal constancy. I drank chilled milk, fake fantasy: false glories, long lay’s poesy. The Loire sweeps all my thoughts to sea, trucks belly-up, sad sight to see, and weapons lacking potency, a smear of tears: despondency. Dear France, forlorn expectancy! I’ve crossed the bridge at Cé, or C.
Set by Poulenc, sung by Dame Felicity Lott: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OII1DFCz6oU

Translation: Copyright © Timothy Adès

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