Autumn Poems
Autumn Day
(Translation of Rilke's Herbstag)
Lord, it is time. The summer was so great. Let fall your shadow on the sundials, Let loose the winds through spaces.
Command the last fruits to ripen: Give them two more southerly days Drive them to completion and chase The final sweetness into heavy wine.
Who has no house will not build now Who is alone, alone will stay Will wake and read, write long letters And wander restless in the avenues Where leaves are drifting.
The following poem emerged after reading Autumn Day above.
Song of the Unborn
I
Leafsmoke and drifting rain:
Who has no house, will not build now; Who is alone, alone shall stay, Sleep, wake, write long letters And when the aimless leaves are blown, Pause on the bridge, and wander restless Across the winter into Spring.
II
Across the winter into Spring How shall we live? Lovers beneath the willows cry Farewell: sunlight slipping Through leaves and fingers, Flashed away on rippled water; The banks glided. A fish leapt, Turning silver out of time.
Sometimes I awake and know That I am here, and almost The reins seem in my grasp, But mostly I sleepwalk my days Too much in time, not hearing Red creepers, conkers, dahlias singing, But taken and turned, by A letter, a smile, an invitation Received or withheld, and feeling: It rains for me. I am not here, But elsewhere, or undiscovered; But seeing how I am, I yet Make no move Across the winter into Spring.
Tilo Ulbricht – 1958
Foundations for a new building