Spleen
I stood where my life’s slopes had reached
their summit,
Where watercourses strain and would untwine
And with their foaming wave would downwards
plummet;
There it was clear, and standing there was
fine.
I gazed towards the sun and all its planets
Which, after setting, in the sky did shine;
I looked down at the earth, so green and
fair,
And God was good and man was honest there.
An evil spleen-filled elf appeared, who
merely
Bit without warning deep into my heart;
Lo, all at once the world was void and
dreary,
And sun and stars quite suddenly went dark;
My once gay landscape lay autumnal, weary,
Each grove grew dun, each flower stem broke
apart,
All vigour died within my frozen mind,
All joy, all courage shrivelled up and
pined.
What’s it to me, reality’s dead matter,
So dull, oppressive and so coarsely raw?
How hope’s once rosy hue has, ah, grown
flatter!
How memory once blue, ah, clouded o’er!
And poetry itself! Its idle patter,
Its tight-rope saltos I would have no more.
Its vain illusions none can satisfy,
But skimmed from surfaces of things nearby.
For you, mankind, I should be praises
saying,
You in God’s image made, how apt, how true!
Two lies though you are guilty of
displaying,
Woman is one and, by her, man makes two.
Of faith and honour the old song needs
praying,
Best sung when we deception would pursue.
You heaven’s child! What’s true, I would
maintain,
Is, branded on your brow, the mark of Cain!
So legible a mark, writ by God’s finger,
Why did I fail to notice such a sign?
Through human life a corpse-like stench
does linger
Which poisons spring’s air, summer’s pomp
maligns.
That smell comes from the grave and seeks
to injure;
Graves are walled up, by marble guarded
fine.
Alas, though, foul decay is on life’s
breath,
No guard shuts out its constant reek of
death.
Tell me, you watchman, how the night
progresses!
Is it unceasing, will it never end?
The moon, half-eaten, through the sky’s
still presses,
The tearful stars still through the heavens
wend.
My pulse beats fast as in my youth’s
successes,
Hours of affliction though it cannot mend.
Each pulse beat’s pain, how endless and how
raw!
Oh, my poor heart, devoured and bleeding
sore!
My heart? Within my breast I none discover,
’Tis but an urn wherein life’s ashes lie.
Show pity on me, Hertha, you green mother,
Oh, let that urn be buried by and by;
In air earth’s pain erodes but still will
smother,
In earth, though, surely it must cease its
cry,
Perhaps time’s orphan, when earth’s school
is done,
Will see its father – far beyond the sun.
To see the original poem, go to here
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