from Part I - Neue Gedichte / New Poems
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2016
I.
Humanity: a name unsurely owned
and always fickle in its happiness.
Is it inhuman that two eyes were honed
down to this lace, this small, tight bit of lace —
two eyes you might wish once more to possess?
Lacemaker long since gone (and finally blind):
did you infuse this thing with your devotion;
tree-like, press through the bole and bark, to find
the way in with your fine, unchanged emotion?
For through a loophole — through a rent — in fate,
you drew your soul straight out of history.
Now in this little lace it is so great,
it makes one smile at all utility.
II.
And if sometimes our work and all that we
experience and do appear to turn
out trivial, alien — something we don't earn;
the reason why such burdens grew to be
extracted from our childhood? If this bit
of tight-knit lace — this lace now yellowed, old,
and flowered — is not strong enough to hold
us here? But look: someone perfected it.
Perhaps a life was scorned. What can we know?
A joy was there, and then allowed to die,
till it became at last this thing — although
at what great price? Not less than life, a sigh.
And yet so lovely — made — as if to show
it is no more too soon to smile; to fly.
Ein Frauen-Schicksal
So wie der König auf der Jagd ein Glas
ergreift, daraus zu trinken, irgendeines, —
und wie hernach der welcher es besaß
es fortstellt und verwahrt als wär es keines:
so hob vielleicht das Schicksal, durstig auch,
bisweilen Eine an den Mund und trank,
die dann ein kleines Leben, viel zu bang
sie zu zerbrechen, abseits vom Gebrauch
hinstellte in die ängstliche Vitrine,
in welcher seine Kostbarkeiten sind
(oder die Dinge, die für kostbar gelten).
Da stand sie fremd wie eine Fortgeliehne
und wurde einfach alt und wurde blind
und war nicht kostbar und war niemals selten.
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