David will be reading at two 'Poetry After Kafka' events: 27 Nov in Oxford and 3 Dec in London. The joint online launch for A Bird Called Elaeus is now on YouTube.
Once there were gods on earth, with people, the heavenly muses
And Apollo, the youth, healing, inspiring like you.
And you are like them to me, as though one of the blessed
Sent me out into life, where I go my comrade’s
Image goes with me wherever I suffer and build, with love
Unto death; for I learned this and have this from her.
Let us live, oh you who are with me in sorrow, with me in faith
And heart and loyalty struggling for better times!
For such we are! And if ever in the coming years they knew
Of us two when the spirit matters again
They would say: lovers in those days, alone, they created
Their secret world that only the gods knew. For who
Cares only for things that will die the earth will have them, but
Nearer the light, into the clarities come
Those keeping faith with the heart’s love and holy spirit who were
Hopeful, patient, still, and got the better of fate.
*
The sun goes down… ‘Geh unter, schöne Sonne…’)
The sun goes down. Beautiful, they have paid you
Scant attention; holy, they knew you not
Who without toil and in quietness
Have risen over them, the toilers.
Me you are a friend to going down and rising
And my eyes know you, o my sovereign light,
For I learned a quiet reverence
When Diotima made my senses whole.
My go-between with heaven, how I listened
For you, love, Diotima, and how these eyes
From you to the golden light of day
Lifted, shining and thankful. Then the streams
Rushed with a greater life and blossom of the earth,
Of our black earth, breathed on me lovingly
And smiling above silver clouds
Inclined to me with blessings the pure blue.
Contents List
9 Introduction
16 Acknowledgements
19 Greece
21 The oak trees
22 To Diotima (‘Come and look at the happiness…’)
23 Diotima (‘Heavenly Muse of Delight…’)
24 ‘The peoples were silent…’
25 Empedocles
26 To the Fates
27 To her good angel
28 Plea for forgiveness
29 To the Sun God
30 Hyperion’s Song of Fate
31 ‘When I was a boy…’
33 Achilles
34 ‘Once there were gods…’
35 ‘If I heeded them warning me now…’
36 Parting
37 The Zeitgeist
38 Evening fantasy
39 Morning
40 The Main
42 That which is mine
44 ‘Another day…’
45 ‘The sun goes down…’
46 Peace
48 Heidelberg
50 The Gods
51 The Neckar
53 Home
54 Love
55 Course of life
56 Parting, second version
58 Diotima (‘You are silent, you suffer it…’)
59 Return to the homeland
60 Encouragement, second version
61 Sung under the Alps
62 The calling of poetry
65 Voice of the people, second version
68 The blind singer
70 Poetic courage, first version
71 Poetic courage, second version
72 The fettered river
73 Chiron
75 Tears
76 To Hope
77 Vulcan
78 Timidity
79 Ganymede
80 Half of life
81 Ages of life
82 Hahrdt Nook
83 Menon’s lament for Diotima
88 A walk into the country
90 Stuttgart
94 Bread and Wine
99 Homecoming
103 The Archipelago
112 Those sleeping now
113 As when on a holiday…
116 To Mother Earth
119 At the source of the Danube
123 Celebration of Peace, first version
126 Celebration of Peace, final version
131 The journey
135 The Rhine
142 Germania
146 The only one, first version
149 The only one, ll. 50-97 of the second version
151 The only one, third version
154 Patmos
161 Patmos, fragments of a later version
165 Patmos, ll. 136-195 of work on a final version
167 Remembrance
169 The Ister
172 Mnemosyne, second version
174 Mnemosyne, third version
176 ‘As birds slowly pass over…’
177 ‘As upon seacoasts…’
178 Home
179 ‘For when the juice of the vine…’
180 ‘On pale leaves…’
181 ‘When over the vineyard…’
182 To the Madonna
188 The Titans
191 ‘Once I asked the Muse…’
193 ‘But when the heavenly powers…’
196 ‘But formerly, Father Zeus…’
197 The eagle
199 Nearest and best, third version
201 Tinian
203 ‘And to feel the lives…’
204 ‘Where we began…’
206 …the Vatican…
208 Greece, first version
209 Greece, ll. 13-21 of the second version
210 Greece, third version
212 ‘Severed and at a distance now…’
214 ‘I have enjoyed…’
215 ‘When out of heaven…’
216 Spring (‘When new joy quickens…’)
217 A happy life
219 The walk
220 The churchyard
221 Not all days…
222 Spring (‘How blessed to see again…’)
223 Autumn (‘The stories that are leaving earth…’)
224 Spring (‘The new day comes…’)
225 View (‘To us with images…’)
226 ‘In a lovely blue…’
TRANSLATIONS FROM THE GREEK
231 Chorus from Sophocles’ Oedipus at Colonus
232 From Euripides’ Bacchae
233 Chorus from Sophocles’ Antigone
234 From Sophocles’ Oedipus at Colonus
236 From Sophocles’ Ajax
240 Pindar Fragments
HÖLDERLIN’S SOPHOCLES
249 Introduction
257 Sophocles’ Oedipus the King
319 Sophocles’ Antigone