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Helian

In the spirit’s solitary

It is lovely to walk in the

Along the yellow walls of summer.

Quietly whisper the steps in the grass; yet always

The son of Pan in the grey marble.

At eventide on the terrace we got drunk on brown

The red peach glows under the foliage.

Tender sonata, joyous laughter.

Lovely is this silence of the night.

On the dark

We gather with shepherds and the white stars.

When autumn

The grove is a sight of sober clarity.

Along the red walls we loiter at

And the round eyes follow the flight of birds.

In the evening pale water gathers in the dregs of burial urns.

Heaven celebrates, sitting in bare branches.

In hallowed hands the yeoman carries bread and

And fruit ripens in the peace of a sunny chamber.

Oh how stern is the face of the beloved who have taken their passage.

Yet the soul is comforted in righteous meditation.

Overwhelming is the desolated garden‘s secrecy,

As the young novice has wreathed his brow with brown leaves,

His breath inhales icy gold.

The hands touch the antiquity of blueish water Or in a cold night the sisters’ white cheeks.

In quiet and harmony we walk along a suite of hospitable

Into solitude and the rustling of maple trees,

Where, perhaps, the thrush still sings.

Beautiful is man and emerging from the

He marvels as he moves his arms and legs,

And his eyes quietly roll in purple cavities.

At suppertime a stranger loses himself in November’s black destitution;

Under brittle branches he follows a wall covered under leprosy.

Once the holy brother went here,

Engrossed in the tender music of his madness.

Oh how lonely settles the evening-wind.

Dying away a man‘s head droops in the dark of the olive tree.

How shattering is the decline of a family.

This is the hour when the seer’s eyes are

With gold as he beholds the stars.

The evening’s descend has muffled the belfry‘s knell in silence;

Among black walls in the public place,

A dead soldier calls for a prayer.

Like a pale

The son enters his ancestor’s empty house.

The sisters have traveled far to the pale ancients.

At night, returned from their mournful pilgrimage,

He found them asleep under the columns of the hallway.

Oh hair stained with dung and

As his silver feet stepped on

And on those who died in echoing rooms.

Oh you palms under midnight’s burning rain,

When the servants flogged those tender eyes with nettles,

The hollyhock’s early

Beheld your empty grave in wonder.

Fading moons sail

Over the sheets of the feverish lad,

Into the silence of winter.

At the bank of Kidron a great mind is lost in musing,

Under a tree, the tender cedar,

Stretched out under the father’s blue eyebrows,

Where a shepherd drives his flock to pastures at night.

Or there are screams which escape the sleep;

When an iron angel approaches man in the grove,

The holy man’s flesh melts over burning coals.

Purple wine climbs about the mud-cottage,

Sheaves of faded corn sing;

The buzz of bees; the crane’s flight.

In the evening the souls of the resurrected gather on rocky paths.

Lepers behold their image in dark water;

Or they lift the hemp of their dung soiled attire,

And weep to the soothing wind, as it drifts down from the rosy hill.

Slender maidens grope their way through the narrow lanes of night;

They hope for the gracious shepherd.

Tenderly, songs ring out from the huts on weekend.

Let the song pay homage to the boy,

To his madness to his white eyebrows and to his passage,

To the decaying corpse, who opened his blue eyes.

Oh how sad is this reunion.

The stairs of madness in black apartments –The matriarch’s shadow emerged under the open

When Helian’s soul beheld his image in a rosy mirror;

And from his brow bled snow and leprosy.

The walls extinguished the

And the white effigies of light.

From the carpet rise skeletons, escaping their graves,

Fallen crosses sit silent on the hill,

The night’s purple wind is sweet with frankincense.

Oh ye broken eyes over black gaping jaws,

When the grandson in the

Of his tender madness muses over a darker ending,

The blue eyelids of the silent god sink upon him.

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Georg Trakl

Georg Trakl (3 February 1887 – 3 November 1914) was an Austrian poet and brother of the pianist Grete Trakl. He is considered one of the most im…

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