Holderlin

Jun 22, 2007 14:56


The following is a poem by Friedrich Holderlin, who is a famous German poet of Tubingen. The first part of his poem, "Bread and Wine", really describes my impressions of Tubingen. The following is translated, of course, but I hope it sets forth the mood:

Round about the city rests.  The illuminated streets grow
   Quiet,  and coaches rush along, adorned with torches.
Men go home to rest, filled with the day's pleasures;
   Busy minds weigh up profit and loss contentedly
At home.  The busy marketplace comes to rest,
   Vacant now of flowers and grapes and crafts.
But the music of strings sounds in distant gardens:
   Perhaps lovers play there, or a lonely man thinks
About distant friends, and about his own youth.
   Rushing fountains flow by fragrant flower beds,
Bells ring softly in the twilight air, and a watchman
   Calls out the hour, mindful of the time.
Now a breeze rises and touches the crest of the grove -
   Look how the moon, like the shadow of our earth,
Also rises stealthily!  Phantastical night comes,
   Full of stars, unconcerned probably about us -
Astonishing night shines, a stranger among humans,
   Sadly over the mountain tops, in splendor.
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