I loved you,
you loved me more.
I loved you,
you loved me not.
I needed you,
you ran from me.
Go, enjoy the peaks and abysses.
For you I was too level land.
---------------------------------
"Send Lazarus over here to dip the tip of his finger
in water and cool my tongue" - Luke 16:24
The angels' tender touch
The water's cool caress -
these are the devils' most cunning torments.
Man can acclimate to anything
but momentary mercy.
----------------------------------
A secret grief
sleeps fitfully, hibernates erratically
in its chosen cave
waking now and then
to stretch, sigh, yawn, and defecate
to scratch its back against
the cavern's jutting stones
to look bleary-eyed out
at the pale morning light
and gauge the day -
to sniff the chill air with expectant malice
deciding whether today
or tomorrow
or perhaps next month
to slouch towards Bethlehem -
to disdain the present
and turn in place a few times,
curling its dense bulk into an opaque ball,
and to sleep once more, furiously sleep
till tomorrow's expectant dawn.
Man can acclimate to anything
ReplyDeletebut momentary mercy.
Or ...
The hope from a moment's sweet relief
No, it's the triple M of "momentary mercy" and the assonance of men/mer...
ReplyDeleteI prefer the starkness of the three concluding words "but momentary mercy."
The poem as I read it is in any case not actually about hell (despite the epigram)...it's about a relationship gone hellish in which vestigial tenderness is more painful than any conflict.
So it's not about hope.
ReplyDeleteWenn ich in deine Augen seh',
dan schwindet All' mein Leid und Weh.
Und wenn ich ku"sse deinen Mund
so bin ich ganz und gar gesund.
Wenn ich mich lehn an deiner Brust
kommt's uber mich wie Himmelslust.
Doch wenn du sprichst "Ich liebe dich" -
So muss ich weinen bitterlich.
When I gaze into your eyes,
then vanish all my cares and woes.
And when I kiss your lips,
then I am whole and fully healed.
When I lie upon your breast
I feel the joys of heaven.
But when you say "I love you" -
Then I must cry bitterly.
-Heine
You probably know the Schumann setting - it's in Dichterliebe.