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The Collected Poems of Bertolt Brecht

Page 10

by Tom Kuhn


  Every day one of the friends went under

  Soul by soul, the wind in their sails

  They faded and floated down like fish but rendered

  Pestilential the air, the beloved azure, over the canals.

  The houses with their leprous brows spewed out

  The starry nights which had seized their throats

  Very suddenly over the beds in the casemates

  The stars stood in person like the early firn, ice-white.

  Let the grass too have meaning . . .

  Let the grass too have meaning

  O Lord when your wind blows

  When the bells have rung for vespers

  And the fields lie in repose.

  When the birds among the branches

  Have ceased their screaming, then

  Suddenly sleep comes over

  The loud man and the deaf man.

  My neck in the grass, the blue grass

  Feels how the warmth leaves

  Your earth. And now the stars

  Come home to me in droves.

  Reason

  It’s nearly evening and he has not come.

  In this light would I even recognize him?

  Soon, very soon, I’ll be an old woman

  Unless of course I top myself before then.

  No doubt I’m ugly but one thing I’ve understood:

  Not for nothing are we flesh and blood.

  Germany, you blonde pale land . . .

  Germany, you blonde pale land

  With your wild clouds and your gentle brow

  What happened in your silent heavens?

  Now you are the carrion pit of Europe.

  Vultures over you!

  Beasts tear your poor body to pieces

  The dying defile you with their excrement

  And their water

  Wets your fields. Fields!

  How gentle your rivers used to be

  That now are poisoned by purple aniline.

  With their teeth the children

  Rip out the corn

  In hunger

  But the harvest drifts

  Down the stinking waters.

  Germany, you blonde pale

  Never-never land. Full of

  The blessed. Full of dead.

  Never never again

  Will your heart beat that has

  Rotted, that you have sold

  Pickled in Chile saltpetre

  And got for it

  Flags.

  O carrion land, O pit of tribulations!

  Shame throttles the memory

  And in the young

  Whom you have not corrupted

  America awakes.

  Our earth, undoing . . .

  1

  Our earth, undoing, rolls nonetheless onwards

  The beast bewitched by the crimson sun!

  And from Europe, the carrion crater, arises

  Extends and increases in freedom a new generation.

  2

  Under the feverish red sunsets of downfall

  Swarms of a new human being are heading our way

  Over the globe they roll like a youthful singing

  Over the black terra firma and the oily yellow sea.

  3

  He spits on the houses and rooftops with fever

  The heavens suffice him, Orion, the Bear

  On rotten wooden crates he would rather chase after

  The sharks, the man-eaters, hungry for him though they are.

  4

  He is terrible in loving: she hated the weakling!

  They wrap themselves up together, in skin

  For the children he left her only his laughter

  Which she sees in white teeth as the daylight comes in.

  5

  And now in a woman who once in the darkness—

  And he was young—had bitten the skin off his throat

  He knew himself and it smote his conscience

  And out of the twilight his mother and father approached.

  6

  Mother and father were white-toothed creatures.

  As never his tables, he knew them well.

  With their cries in his throat, all four sets of claws

  A nose for the wind and their enemy’s smell

  7

  From that day forth he is cast from the cities

  In flight, distraught, towards what he might seize . . .

  Oh from now on he sees his own hunting for quiet

  In the chase of the pallors and reds of the skies.

  8

  And suns rise each time he raises his eyelids

  And for him, for him, the sunsets are red!

  Trees as youthful as he is deject him

  And falling he sees: there are new lands ahead!

  9

  His soul is shy and the heavens turn paler

  Whenever he must think with his brain not his knees

  He weighs every word like a murky water

  Is it shallow and warm enough for his needs?

  10

  And he still has the bitter night in his joints

  Fear of the light in the folds of his skin

  Blindly at night he finds the black potions

  Goes to sleep with the owl as the grey dawn comes in.

  11

  But already there’s laughter, oh a mocking laughter

  In him the lascivious child-in-a-man

  But still brazen his face, all you feel are the thousand

  Breaths of the wind that in fear passes over and on.

  The black woods go upwards . . .

  1

  The black woods go upwards

  Into the evil naked stone

  Up into the cold sky

  Black woods have grown.

  2

  Destroyed by frost and the east wind

  The woods scream in pain—

  But we down here have heard

  The words said in an undertone.

  3

  The streams that come from there

  Are colder than any can bear

  But we have lain in beds

  Colder still, down here.

  4

  They say you see nothing but darkness

  Up there: firs block the light:

  But we down here have observed

  The play of the world’s plight.

  5

  They say also: above the forests

  Nothing comes below in the stone

  But we are the ones to pass over

  Into the stone, serene.

  Again and again there were red evenings . . .

  1

  Again and again there were red evenings

  The smell of asphalt and the smell of thyme

  They lived always expecting He would kill them

  But He was lax and that was not His game.

  2

  The heavens radiant like the enormous lies

  Made fools of them. It held them up, all that.

  He wished to know just how long they could bear it

  But they were clueless and never thought of that.

  3

  And when they asked was it His wish that they

  Renounce, then too He did not speak

  And left them standing in a dark wood

  Without a word and veiled Himself in smoke.

  4

  But they said yes into the uncertainty

  Gave up and fell upon their knees. That way

  Quite soon their bitternesses ceased to be

  (And somewhat sooner so did they.)

  They have gone by . . .

  They have gone by. In the red of evening.

  With large crosses. Many ran after them.

  I was left alone. Later the night

  The rising moon knew nothing more about it.

  Later, the cool night with the green moon . . .

  Left alone, I had not gone with them . . .

  I was rather cold, later towards morning . . .

/>   Earth pleased me, of course, but the torment in my throat . . .

  By now they are a long way off, with their

  Large crosses. Doubtless they walked through the night.

  Nothing detained them. Now nobody who forgot to follow them

  Could catch them up. It will be better now

  Will it not?

  When she was done for . . .

  When she was done for we let her go down in the earth

  And grow flowers. Butterflies flutter above and away . . .

  She, so light, weighed scarcely at all on the earth

  How much pain it took till she was as light as that!

  The bull is strong . . .

  The bull is strong. He does not see the heavens. He walks in the sun and flattens the grass.

  Ha, let there be laughter

  in Judah and the clapping of hands, for the bull is strong!

  The bull is strong but the grass he flattens is stronger. It knows the heavens and lifts itself up again.

  Ha, let there be laughter in Judah and the clapping of hands, for the grass is stronger!

  One contemplating the clouds is like the stone that sits tight. But the stone does not have to move nor go to the watering place.

  Ha, let there be laughter in Judah and the clapping of hands, for the stone does not have to move!

  The stone does not have to move but a blind man does not see the clouds. Is it not lovely to have the mouth full?

  Ha, let there be laughter in Judah and the clapping of hands, for you are not blind!

  And the waters swell when the moon is full and they do not become more water. But the lion dies of hunger if he continues lying where he is.

  They are strong who do what they have to do and stronger are they to whom it does not matter.

  For the hail does not strike them and whosoever does strike them does not strike them dead.

  Ha, oh indeed let there be laughter and clapping in Judah, laughter and the clapping of hands, for you are still able to laugh!

  A curtain-lecture

  Be nice to me for once, will you

  And kinder to your poor lungs too.

  And show some manners, be better-bred

  Don’t read the newspaper in bed.

  Don’t drag me down with you in the mire

  And don’t drink schnapps in the rocking-chair

  I lose out, you know full well, and when

  Might you wash your feet again?

  Another man would blush to use

  “The words” and fish between his toes

  And wipe himself off on the sheet

  But you think all that’s quite all right.

  Shaved like a pig again and stubble

  Worse even than usual.

  And do you have to smoke so many

  Virginias when we’ve no money?

  Your breath stinks of them—and one more

  Thing I had to say: come here

  Be nice to me now, don’t be mean

  Push your tongue in under mine.

  Memories

  My mother used to say: the Lord loves the simple, child

  And would forever lay the Bible on the table before me

  I read and I read till my eyelids wouldn’t hold

  Then next morning I was bright and breezy.

  I always liked spending a long time in the toilet

  And my mother was ashamed in company because of this

  And often I heard from her mouth the dictum that

  The drones will be eaten up by the bees.

  I did not understand the deeper sense back then

  And now my mother lies under the sod

  I can still hear her speaking the text at my confirmation

  It is a good thing that the heart be established . . .

  I am beginning to speak about death . . .

  1

  I am beginning to speak about death

  There are many misconceptions

  But if we separate wishes from dread

  We get a faint sense of what threatens

  He gains the world who forgets that death

  Is half a breath

  2

  For it’s not one breath and the other

  Half coming after it

  And not the enough but rather

  The too little that makes us sweat

  The deluded man is wise

  Who thinks he’ll not want as he dies

  3

  Things are as they are and will be

  Throat’s a throat and thumb is a thumb

  But gasping your last, believe me

  A whirlwind couldn’t help you, chum

  Your throat’s half sawn through, you squeak

  Your last bit of wind out the leak

  4

  The waxen sepulchre light

  Stiff fingers on your sheet

  Cold mourners who eat and eat

  Don’t suppose you’ll be spared that sight

  Standing round you there tearfully

  Was Man, was your enemy

  5

  You’ll never feed on him again

  Your teeth are as long as a rake’s

  But this very night they will break

  You’ll hunger from this night on

  Interim reports to the mission stations

  1

  This depraved bare-knuckle orangutan family

  That squats omnisciently on every shore nowadays

  And infects the heavens

  Thinks

  It is the midpoint of the planet

  And that something or other

  Moves in orbit around it.

  But they were scarcely noticed in the small space

  Between one ice-age and the next

  When they had dealings with orangutans

  Ate carrion meat

  Drank water that was impure

  Kicked one another’s faces in and

  Copulated before they went to sleep.

  Only five

  Between one ice-age and the next

  Sat on their fat arses

  Smoked from the mouth

  And

  Stuck together.

  Karl Hollmann’s Song

  Smoking the yellow tobacco

  By the shoals, fine weather, there’s still

  Air in my lungs, and tobacco

  In the bag, and newspapers as well.

  Till night then I think of Jack, oh

  He was my friend and I’m here

  Smoking yellow tobacco

  And Jack was yellower.

  His face in the lacquered wood:

  I nearly legged it, you know!

  And it did not a blind bit of good

  Me slugging five schnapps in a row.

  God in heaven, they gave him the last

  Rites. Fat lot of use that’ll be

  Against the worms. No he’ll bust

  Like a rotten banana, softly.

  But it’s all one in the end

  Life is no fun and that’s that.

  The world is a shithouse, my friend

  Jack, you’re well out of it.

  I’m not being superior

  Nor saying I envy you

  But what you can’t cure, endure!

  Jack, you were the man of us two.

  Empty as yesterday’s news

  Kippered in holy smoke

  You’ve paid the Devil his dues

  But Jack, it’s the worms I can’t take.

  Oh Jack, I’d like to be sure

  Nothing hurts you anymore. Really?

  All in all I’m happy here:

  The flies still piss in my coffee.

  Oh Jack, such a green sky today!

  And the flies! Often quite a swarm.

  Yes, the pond, Jack, the pond anyway

  Meanwhile is often quite warm.

  When it’s chillier off I’ll go

  Home with some breath in hand. Still

  Alive and a home to go to!

  Four walls
and a roof as well.

  Report on an unsuccessful expedition

  After we had not flown over Mont Cenis

  Sadness came over us and we

  Begrudged ourselves food.

  Since by now it was winter

  We slept a good deal.

  The question we were asked by the common people hereabouts

  Whether we intended to remain among them

  Caused us sorrow.

  Only the noise of great storms over the mountain

  Cheered us somewhat. Then we said:

  It would have been impossible.

  From the third month onwards we felt afraid

  To step over the low threshold and

  Over all the time of our defeat

  Outside our door

  The mountain was growing.

  Thoughts before the photograph of Therese Meier

  At home, on the flea-yellowish wallpaper, below

  The much-by-moths-tormented lammergeier

  Whether the last tenant forgot it or meant me to have it now

  Hangs the portrait of the departed spinster Therese Meier.

  True, it is only a photograph and a very faded one at that

  And I don’t know is it really a good likeness or not

 

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