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The Collected Poems of Bertolt Brecht

Page 96

by Tom Kuhn


  Dialectical ode

  [Dialektische Ode]

  BFA 15, 313; 1956; P1993; T.K.

  After Ważyk’s ‘Ode dialektyczna.’

  First was joy . . .

  [Erst liess Freude]

  BFA 15, 315; 1956; P1967; T.K.

  Probably for Ruth Berlau.

  She went into the hills

  [Sie stieg hinauf]

  BFA 15, 315; 1956; P1993; T.K.

  An adaptation of a poem by the Brazilian modernist poet Domingos Carvalho da Silva.

  How it was

  [Wie es war]

  BFA 15, 315; 1956; P1965; T.K.

  Probably for Ruth Berlau.

  And I always thought . . .

  [Und ich dachte immer]

  BFA 15, 295; c. 1955; P1965; D.C.

  When in my hospital ward . . .

  [Als ich in meinem Krankenzimmer der Charité]

  BFA 15, 300; 1956; P1964; T.K.

  The Charité was (and is) a big Berlin hospital where Brecht was treated for influenza in May 1956. The lines about the fear of death take up a passage in Lucretius’s De rerum natura which Brecht had reflected on before. For years it was thought that the opening line referred to a “white” ward (the BFA has “Als ich in weissem Krankenzimmer . . .”) but this appears to be a misreading of the manuscript.

  INDEX OF ENGLISH TITLES AND FIRST LINES

  Page numbers listed correspond to the print edition of this book. You can use your device’s search function to locate particular terms in the text.

  1. Cover your tracks, 310

  First calendar song, 1026

  1st Epistle to the Hettenbachers, 403

  The 1st psalm, 67

  The first sonnet, 573

  2. Fifth wheel, 311

  The second beat, 615

  Second calendar song, 1026

  Second poem of the dead brickie, 642

  Second poem of the Unknown Soldier under the triumphal arch, 346

  The 2nd Psalm, 68. See also Psalm 2

  Second song of the Soldier of the Revolution, 588

  The second sonnet, 574

  3. To Chronos, 312

  The 3rd Psalm, 69

  The third sonnet, 575

  4. I know what I need . . . , 313

  4th Epistle to the Hettenbachers, 404

  The 4th Psalm, 69

  The fourth sonnet, 575

  5. I am scum . . . , 314

  The fifth sonnet, 576

  6. He strolled down the street . . . , 316

  6th Psalm, 56

  The sixth sonnet, 577

  7. Don’t talk of danger . . . , 317

  The seventh psalm, 57

  The seventh sonnet, 577

  8. Let go of your dreams . . . , 318

  The eighth sonnet, 581

  The ninth sonnet, 578

  10. When I speak to you . . . , 319

  10th Psalm, 60

  The tenth sonnet (The name I most like . . .), 578

  The tenth sonnet (The world loves me or not . . .), 362

  The eleventh psalm, 61

  The eleventh sonnet, 579

  12th Psalm, 62

  The twelfth sonnet. On Dante’s poems to Beatrice, 580

  The thirteenth sonnet, 580

  19th Sonnet. Encounter with the ivory guardians, 584

  The 21st sonnet, 818

  700 intellectuals worship an oil tank, 330

  (1940) 1, 789

  (1940) 2, 790

  (1940) 3, 790

  (1940) 4, 790

  (1940) 5, 791

  (1940) 6, 791

  (1940) 7, 792

  (1940) 8, 792

  1941. The door, see (1940) 8

  1954, first half, 1038

  A bad morning, 1014

  A ballad for Article 218, 376

  A bitter love song, 50

  A brow of brass, 453

  A curtain-lecture, 108

  A film by Charlie Chaplin, 902

  A glass of water for Comrade Alfred!, 566

  A happy encounter, 1006

  A happy occurrence, 1007

  A lesson in sabotage, 435

  A man of sense . . . , 324

  A martyr has his say, 35

  A modern legend, 12

  A new house, 955

  A painter, 33

  A prediction, 621

  A prohibition on theatre criticism, 728

  A proletarian mother’s speech to her sons at the outbreak of war, 756

  A protest in the sixth year of Ch’ien Fu, 869

  A question, 764

  A realization, 955

  A report, 475

  A short epistle alluding to some disagreements, 152

  A soldier’s grave, 19

  A song for the gentlemen on Ward D, 51

  A song of praise (after ‘Commit thou all thy griefs . . . ’), 84

  A thinking man soon knows . . . , 284

  A whore who’s so inclined, sir . . . , 370

  A worker’s speech to a doctor, 700

  Above the four cities they circle . . . , 876

  Absalom, 89

  Absent mind, 616

  An account of the tick, 182

  The actress in exile, 614

  Address, 329

  Address of the dying poet to the young, 761

  Address to a dead soldier of Marshal Chiang Kai-shek, 869

  Address to Comrade Dimitrov, in the fight before the fascist tribunal in Leipzig, 477

  Address to the characters of the first two volumes, 624

  Advice to Tretyakov to get well, 389

  Advice to visual artists concerning the fate of their works in the coming wars, 697

  After the death of my collaborator M.S., 823

  After the tune of ‘Oh my Baby,’ 384

  Again and again . . . (In struggles forever . . .), 395

  Again and again . . . (When I look at this man . . .), 326

  Again and again there were red evenings . . . , 106

  Against seduction, 247

  The age of my prosperity, 541

  Ah, how shall we account . . . , 1040

  Alabama song, 233

  Also I saw a city . . . , 963

  Always one step at a time . . . , 482

  American airmen, 964

  An account of the tick, 182

  And I always thought . . . , 1070

  And I observed a race . . . , 962

  And I saw fields greening . . . , 834

  And I saw how they lied . . . , 439

  And I set the sentences . . . , 557

  And in your country?, 732

  And now step out . . . , 953

  And so that a moon would light him while he croaked . . . , 399

  And that is good, 387

  And the appearance of the houses and cities . . . , 558

  And the seventeen-year-olds were carried in . . . , 648

  And the smile once meant for me . . . , 1044

  And there came our comrade Liebknecht . . . , 439

  And we after so long a time . . . , 269

  And what did the soldier’s wife get?, 851

  And when the tree hung full of pears . . . , 967

  Ane Smith relates the conquest of America, 155

  The angels of Los Angeles . . . , 875

  Anna Schreiber’s last letter, 158

  Anna speaks ill of Biti, 119

  Anna’s vigil by Paule’s corpse, 257

  Answer of the practitioner of dialectics when reproached that his prediction of the defeat of Hitler’s armies in the East had not come to pass, 857

  The answer, see (1940) 6

  Antigone, 942

  Apfelböck or the lily of the field, 166

  The apocalyptic horsemen, 522

  Ardens sed virens, 612

  Are the people infallible?, 754

  Are you a king?, 338

  The army cook’s song, 1001

  Around this table here . . . , 972

  Article 1, 392

  Article 111, 394<
br />
  Article 115, 394

  As I dressed for my wedding . . . , 369

  As one who comes . . . , 560

  As the Fascists grew ever stronger in Germany . . . , 443

  Ash Wednesday, 10

  Assertion, 277

  At Potsdam under the oak trees, 347

  At the sight of a severed tree root looking like a fallen man, 833

  Augsburg Sonnets, 294

  Aurora, 878

  Autumn in California, 837

  Awaiting the second plan, 481

  Baal’s song, 47

  A bad morning, 1014

  Bad teeth, 248

  Bad time for poetry, 750

  Bad time for youth, 768

  Bad times, 960

  Balaam Lai in his thirtieth year . . . , 124

  Balaam Lai in July, 130

  Ballad (Already he saw them bowing and already . . .), 98

  Ballad (And when she lay on her deathbed . . .), 138

  A ballad for Article 218, 376

  Ballad for the finale, 442

  Ballad in the hour of despondency, 93

  Ballad of any man’s secrets, 201

  Ballad of Cortez’s men, 211

  Ballad of friendship, 223

  The ballad of Hannah Cash, 218

  The ballad of knowledge, 630

  Ballad of Mazeppa, 221

  Ballad of the adventurers, 205

  Ballad of the button, 503

  Ballad of the Captain of Köpenik, 127

  Ballad of the dance, 18

  Ballad of the death of Anna Cloudface, 134

  Ballad of the drop in the ocean, 407

  Ballad of the Emperor, 1032

  Ballad of the faithless women, 272

  Ballad of the Jew’s whore Marie Sanders, 661

  Ballad of the man on the street, 398

  Ballad of the old woman, 141

  Ballad of the pirates, 213

  The ballad of the Reichstag Fire, 464

  Ballad of the soldier, 227

  Ballad of the virgins, 370

  The ballad of the waterwheel, 504

  Ballad of the widows of Osek, 662

  Ballad of those who help themselves, 195

  Ballad on many ships, 206

  The bandit and his knave, 550

  The beam, 834

  Beds for the night, 433

  The beggar, 7

  The beginning of war, 590

  Behold the ease . . . , 924

  Belgian fields, 16

  Benares song, 235

  Beneath the green pepper trees . . . , 875

  Berlin 1948, 946

  Bertolt Brecht’s Domestic Breviary, 161

  Biddi and the sons of the suburbs, 635

  Bidi’s view of the great cities, 259

  The big blanket, 866

  The bird of death, see (Spring 1938) 3

  The birth in the tree . . . , 94

  A bitter love song, 50

  Bitterly you think of the past . . . , 1032

  Bivvy, 613

  The black woods go upwards . . . , 105

  Blasphemy, 327

  Bonnie Mac Sorel courted . . . , 19

  The book burnings, 709

  The Bosses say: peace and war, 654

  The brass, 655

  The bread and the little children, 165

  The bread of the hungry has been eaten, 652

  The bread of the people, 1028

  The breaking up of the ship, the Oskawa, by her crew, 687

  The broken rope . . . , 776

  Brother horse . . . , 1003

  Brother, now’s the time . . . , 856. See also The Koloman Wallisch Cantata

  A brow of brass, 453

  Buckow Elegies, 1011

  The Buddha’s parable of the burning house, 682

  The bull is strong . . . , 107

  Burial of the actor, 780

  The burning tree, 9

  But I who’ve seen how roses fade . . . , 1047

  But in the cold of the night . . . , 88

  But now stop hoping . . . , 424

  But once we were resolved at last . . . , 1005

  But she who remains the same yet ever changes . . . , 480

  But the cities packed with meat. . . . , 280

  But the lowly grass . . . , 479

  But when he walked to the block . . . , 899

  Buying oranges, 582

  By ship, in cars, on foot, by plane or train . . . , 596

  By the sea, the oil derricks. In the canyons . . . , 875

  The Caledonian Market, 494

  Calendar poem, 139

  Call to a sick Communist, 701

  Call to arms, 701

  Call to the doctors and nurses, 703

  Cantata for the anniversary of Lenin’s death, 705

  Cantata for the first of May, 546

  Carefully I test . . . , 438

  The cares of the Chancellor, 723

  The carpet weavers of Kujan-Bulak honour Lenin, 683

  Caspar Neher, the set designer, presents the elements of his Antigone-Model to the actors of the town of Chur, 943

  Caspar’s song with the lone refrain, 25

  The cattle march, 497

  The chalk cross, 509

  The Chancellor’s economics, 631

  The Chancellor’s gravel drive, 873

  Change, but for the worse, 1052

  Changing the wheel, 1014

  The cherry thief, 789

  The child that wouldn’t wash, 665

  Children’s Crusade 1939, 824

  Children’s song, 354

  Chinese Poems, 865

  Chorale of the man Baal, 237

  Chorus, 378

  Chorus of the Poor from The Rich Man and the Poor Man, 285

  Christmas legend, 148

  Chronicle, 1065

  The cities, 288

  The cities are built for you . . . , 332

  The cities, the black-pox cities . . . , 279

  Citizenship exam, 862

  City landscape, 890

  The city, 953

  Coals for Mike, 686

  Come with me to Georgia, 265

  Comfort from the Chancellor, 725

  Coming from the crowded tenements . . . , 410

  Communism is the middle way, 432

  Concerning man’s dependency on nature, 367

  Concerning the cities 2, 288

  Concerning the Uncle, 320

  The condemnation of classical ideals, 884

  The conquest of Austria, 638

  The consequences of playing safe, 759

  Contrary song, 1050

  1. Cover your tracks, 310

  Critique of Michelangelo’s Creation, 644

  The crooked bow . . . , 772

  Crooked cross and Double-cross, 903

  Crossing the frontier of the Soviet Union . . . , 443

  The crushing impact of the cities, 268

  The cultivation of millet, see Tschaganak Bersijew, or The cultivation of millet

  A curtain-lecture, 108

  The dam, 519

  Dance song, 996

  Dances, 989

  Dannebrog, 542

  The days of all your bitternesses . . . , 74

  The dead colonial soldier, 262

  Death in the woods, 208

  Deliberation 1, 615

  The Department of Literature, 1027

  Description of H.W.’s acting, 615

  Dialectical ode, 1069

  Did I not sniff danger . . . , 864

  Difficult times, 1048

  The difficulty of governing, 711

  Directive for the authorities, 328

  The discontents who acted . . . , 888

  Discovery about a young woman, 303

  The dispatched, 620

  The dispute Anno Domini 1938, 801

  Ditty, 42

  Do not throw into the battle . . . , 1041

  Do not too readily fall for the plan . . . , 391

  Do not trust your hearing
. . . , 456

  Do you fear death? Look on it here!, 472

  The doctor, 510

  The dog, 1023

  Dolly Little, the layer-out, 33

  Don’t say too often . . . , 1031

  7. Don’t talk of danger . . . , 317

  Don’t waste a thought on . . . , 447

  Doomed to die, 510

  The door, see (1940) 8

  The doubter, 627

  Down in the willow grove . . . , 86

  Downfall of the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, 518

  The dragon of the muddy black pond, 867

  The draughtsmen hunker . . . , see (1940) 3

  Dream of a great bellyache, 709

  Driven out with good reason, 733

  Driving along in a comfortable car . . . , 622

  The drowned girl, 239

  The duration of the Third Reich, 727

  E.P. The selection of his gravestone, 1043

  Economical performance by the Master Players, 934

  Egyptian peasant song, 640

  Eight thousand poor people come before the city, 271

  Eight years ago, 1017

  The eighth sonnet, 581

  The eleventh psalm, 61

  The eleventh sonnet, 579

  Embarrassing incident, 883

  The emigrant’s lament, 757

  The emigration of the poets, 523

  Empedocles’ shoe, 676

  The Emperor Napoleon and my friend the carpenter, 514

  Encounter with the ivory guardians, 584

  Encounter with the poet Auden, 990

  Envoi, 910

  Epistle, 123

  Epistle on suicide, 114

  Epistle to the Augsburgers (1945), 910

  Epistles to the Chicago people, 145

  Epitaph, 929

  Epitaph 1919, 364

  Epitaph for Gorky, 708

  Epitaph for Mayakovsky, 930

  Essay no. 1 on The Mother, 990

  Eulenspiegel survives the War, 941

  Even as a child they said it was disgraceful . . . , 365

  Even in the mouths of infants, 1053

  Even the bravest man . . . , 927

  Evening in the menagerie, 143

  Every morning, to earn my bread . . . , 876

  Every year in September . . . , 624

  Everyone knows that the solitary mistrustful man . . . , 336

  Everything changes . . . , 905

  Everything new is better than everything old, 382

  Everywhere so much to see, 802

  Except this star, there is nothing . . . , 958

  Exclusively because of the increasing disorder . . . , 634

  Exemplary conversion of a purveyor of brandy, 188

  Exercise for actors, 784

  Fairground song, 32

  The farmer looks after his fields, 474

  The farmer ploughs the field, 591

  The farmer’s address to his ox, 699

  Fatzer chorus 1, 360

  Fatzer chorus 7, 360

  The FDJ’s Song of rebuilding, 947

 

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