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Translation - French-English - Mon Mistigri, mon infidèle, Tu dois venir quand...

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Category Poetry - Arts / Creativity / Imagination

Title
Mon Mistigri, mon infidèle, Tu dois venir quand...
Text
Submitted by Francky5591
Source language: French

Mon Mistigri, mon infidèle,
Tu dois venir quand je t'appelle,
Au lieu de courir la souris
Tout le jour et encor la nuit.
Je n'aime pas cette manière
De te sauver dans les jardins
Quand je t'ai préparé du pain,
Et de la sauce et du gruyère...
Tu en connais, toi, des maîtresses
Aussi patientes que je suis,
Et qui vous font milles caresses
Après qu'on s'est si mal conduit ?

Remarks about the translation
I understand the text, but I want it to be translated in a "poetic" way! And I am not good at poetry.

(Title of this poetry from Jean Desmeuzes is : "semonce à Mistigri")

Title
My Mistigri, my infidel, you shall come when,,,
Translation
English

Translated by swe27
Target language: English

My Mistigri, my infidel
You must come when I yell,
Instead of running after mice,
all day and all of the night.
You have one habit that I dread
Of sneaking out to the trees
When I have made you some bread
With sauce and gruyère cheese
You're lucky to have a mistress
As patient as I am
Ready to give you a caress
For a behaviour I should condemn
Remarks about the translation
Slight changes to make it rhyme,,
Since it's poetic I agree that it's a bit tricky,,
No straight translation.
Last validated or edited by Tantine - 3 March 2008 23:58





Latest messages

Author
Message

24 February 2008 14:06

Francky5591
Number of messages: 12396
Hello swe27, "se sauver" means "to run away", "to escape", not "to save"

25 February 2008 01:11

Tantine
Number of messages: 2747
Hi swe27

Wow, I'm impressed, you got this to rhyme

I think you should use "have to" rather than shall, as the original is quite imperative.

I wonder whether we could shorten the second line, which is a bit "clumsy". I thought we might be able to put "you should obey me when I yell" (so as it rhymes with "infidel".

Third line - what about "Instead of running after mice". "Mice" and "night" are close enough rhymes.

Then "You have one habit that I dread
Of sneaking out to the trees
When I have made you some bread
With sauce and gruyère cheese
You're lucky to have a mistress
As patient as I am
And ready to give you a caress
For behaviour I should condemn"

This is only a suggestion, you seem to know how difficult poetry can be.

Let me know what you think

Bises
Tantine

25 February 2008 08:24

Francky5591
Number of messages: 12396
I agree with Tantine, about lines #2 and #3 that have to be edited, as line #2 suggested by her is closer in rythm to the original, then at line#3 "running after mice" is the correct meaning.

Good work though, as it isn't that obvious translating poetries into a language that isn't the one you speak fluent, swe27

25 February 2008 13:30

swe27
Number of messages: 33
Thank you!


25 February 2008 14:08

Tantine
Number of messages: 2747
I agree with Francky, you've done a great job with this

It would still make for better reading in English if we change from "shall" to "have to" or "ought to" or "must".

Bises
Tantine