from Part II - Der neuen Gedichte anderer Teil / The New Poems: The Other Part
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2016
St. Petersburg
That time when we were drawn by trotters (sleek
black horses out of Orloff's stud): behind
tall street lamps, stone facades caught dawn's first streak.
That night, those city fronts stood mute and blind,
not right for any hour of the day,
and so we drove — no, flew — around the heavy
palaces, arching into winds the Neva
sent bolting in off every quay.
Throughout the watchful night we were … transported —
a night that had no earth or firmament,
while rank, untended gardens that exhorted
rose from the Letney-Sad the way we went.
And all the statues dwindled in their stone,
fading till they were only form alone.
Then, falling fast behind us, they were gone.
That city, its existence spent,
had never been — it suddenly confessed —
but pleaded for no more than peace and rest,
the way a madman, when chaotic pain
loosens the coiled betrayal that began it,
suddenly feels the thought he could not mend
(a sickening thought he thought would never end, but need not ever think again — granite —)
fall freely from his vacant, reeling brain,
until he sees he can no longer scan it.
Papageienpark
Jardin des Plantes, Paris
Unter türkischen Linden, die blühen, an Rasenrändern,
in leise von ihrem Heimweh geschaukelten Ständern
atmen die Ara und wissen von ihren Ländern,
die sich, auch wenn sie nicht hinsehn, nicht verändern.
Fremd im beschäftigten Grünen wie eine Parade,
zieren sie sich und fühlen sich selber zu schade,
und mit den kostbaren Schnäbeln aus Jaspis und Jade
kauen sie Graues, verschleudern es, finden es fade.
Unten klauben die duffen Tauben, was sie nicht mögen,
während sich oben die höhnischen Vögel verbeugen
zwischen den beiden fast leeren vergeudeten Trögen.
Aber dann wiegen sie wieder und schläfern und äugen,
spielen mit dunkelen Zungen, die gerne lögen,
zerstreut an den Fußfesselringen. Warten auf Zeugen.
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