from Part I - Neue Gedichte / New Poems
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2016
Béguinage-Sainte Elisabeth, Bruges
I.
These high gates do not seem to guard or hold
(the bridge goes gladly in and out the same),
and yet they're all secure inside this old
and high-elmed, open close. The only time
they leave their house is when they walk this strip
of grass to church, to get a better grip
on why there's so much love inside them here.
All veiled in spotless linen, there they kneel,
alike as if one image made them real
a thousand times in chorus. Deep and clear,
the sound comes off the patterned pillars ringing.
The voices go on mounting higher, singing
higher always, casting their last words
high up from where no words could go on, towards
the angels who will not return them. Down
below, when they un-kneel without a sound
(crossing themselves first with the sign of God),
they leave in silence, reaching, with a nod
toward waiting holy water. Fingers dip;
the water chills the brow and pales the lip.
And then they go, subdued and calmly-souled.
They walk back down that strip the way they came
(the young are steady, but behind the fold,
an agèd nun comes straggling up, half-lame),
back to their house where quickly they're concealed.
and through the elms, from time to time, one may
perceive pure loneliness — the slightest ray.
In one small pane, it flares and is revealed.
II.
The window of this church: what is projected
from it to the courtyard through each pane
(a thousand)? Silence passes through the stain;
quenched sunshine blurs, fantastically reflected,
distended, mixed, and ageing like old wine.
Dort legt sich, keiner weiß von welcher Seite,
Außen auf Inneres und Ewigkeit
auf Immer-Hingehn, Weite über Weite,
erblindend, finster, unbenutzt, verbleit.
Dort bleibt, unter dem schwankenden Dekor
des Sommertags, das Graue alter Winter:
als stünde regungslos ein sanftgesinnter
langmütig lange Wartender dahinter
und eine weinend Wartende davor.
They're lying there, though on which side, none knows:
the Outer, Inner, and Eternity;
the Endless and all Vastness, great and wide
and leaded; blinded; dark; ready to be.
Beneath the wavering colors, summer keeps
the old, gray winter. It's as if some kind
of patient man, with his long-suffering mind,
were standing stock-still, waiting there behind;
before, a patient, waiting woman weeps.
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