Thursday, January 10, 2008

A Selection of 3 Poems, Rainer Maria Rilke


The Inner Rose


Where is there for this inner

an outer? Upon which hurt

does one lay such fine linen?

And which heavens are reflected within them,

upon the interior seas

of these open roses, these carefree ones, see:

how loose in looseness

they lie, as if a trembling hand

could never tip them over.

They can hardly hold themselves

erect; many allow themselves

be filled all too full and flow

over from inner space

into the days, which, ever

more and more full, close in upon themselves,

until the entire summer becomes

a chamber, a chamber in a dream.



Archaic Torso of Apollo

We do not know his unheard of head,

in which the seeing of his eyes ripened. But

his trunk still glows like a thousand candles,

in which his looking, only turned down slightly,


continues to shine. Otherwise the thrust of the

breast wouldn't blind you, and from the light twist

of the loins a smile wouldn't flow into

that center where the generative power thrived.


Otherwise this stone would stand half disfigured

under the transparent fall of the shoulders,

and wouldn't shimmer like the skin of a wild animal;

it wouldn't be breaking out, like a star, on
all its sides: for there is no place on this stone,

that does not see you. You must change your life.



The Island I The North Sea ("The Shallows")

The next tide will erase the way through the mudflats,

and everything will be again equal on all sides;

but the small, far-out island already has its

eyes closed; bewildered, the dike draws a circle


around its inhabitants who were born

into a sleep in which many worlds

are silently confused, for they rarely speak,

and every phrase is like an epitaph

for something washed up on shore, unknown,
that inexplicably comes to them and remains.
And so it is, from childhood on, with everything

described in their gaze: things not applying to them,
too big, too merciless, sent back too many times,

which exaggerates even more their aloneness.


Rainer Maria Rilke


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