Saturday 19 October 2024

Klaus Høeck: 'In Nomine' (études australes, pp.347-351)

 




‘études australes’

 

 

and behind me stars

of glass and soda sparkle

behind my shoulder

 

that’s smoking with salt

behind my bedhead while i

am dreaming the stars

 

sparkle like crayfish

on the sea-bed of båring 

vig the stars sparkle

 

like lightships there up

in the springtime night while i

am falling asleep

 

 

 

i have gathered the

dead around me in a cir

cle as around a

 

maypole for a dance

and a conversation they

cannot take part in

 

all the dead members

of my family around

me like statues that

 

move almost imper

ceptibly whenever i

do not gaze at them

 

 

 

and behind me the

stars sparkle like electric

welding over fun

 

en from the lindø

shipyards behind me the stars

toll for my ears out

 

from the spit ene

bærodde as if strangers

were going to be

 

evening guests or an

unexpected word in my

most recent poem

 

 

 

the dead also look

at me (at any rate from

their carbonised pho

 

tographs turned pale by

purgatory) or maybe

it is the other

 

way around that i

only move (am moved) when the 

dead gaze at me and 

 

that i otherwise 

come to a complete standstill

in my memories?

 

 

 

and behind me the

stars plummet down cold and a

lien with sili

 

con from their orang

eries and from their enorm

ous celestial map

 

plunge into the realm

of my poems where they strike

my left foot or leave

 

behind them such words

as ‘carina’ or ‘puppis’

or as ‘canopus’

 

 

 

and behind me the

stars fall down from their winter

gardens fall down in

 

to ‘études australes’

from one star chart to anoth

er one and that is

 

the way the stars sound

then even harder and wild

er than emerald

 

that is the way the 

stars sound in grete sultan’s

interpretation

 

 

 

nobody becomes

a good person just by dy

ing it is unfor

 

tunately not that

simple just as nobody

becomes an evil

 

person just by liv

ing it is not that simple

everyone has to

 

do it by themselves

both parts of their own free will

it’s that difficult

 

 

 

and behind me the

stars cast out dice over the 

sky’s rough glass surface

 

like ice-cubes like the

coins in an I-ching throw

like the notes coming

 

from a steinway grand

piano like the sparks from

john cage’s pitu

 

itary gland like

crocodile tears like the last

words in the bible

 

 

 

i have gathered the

dead around me for life’s sake

(also the dead chaf

 

finches that flew in

to the window pane yester

day) life cannot un

 

equivocally 

determine itself as life

the dead define us

 

in a way they are

what makes us living without

death there is no life

 

 

 

and behind me the

stars chime with death and necess

ity behind me

 

the stars ring out for

god – what if i were not to

turn around would i

 

then not be transformed

into a pillar of salt

or into a stone

 

plinth would my poem then

not be transformed into a

mourning cherry-tree?


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