National Poetry Month continues, and this poem honors Rainer Maria Rilke.
Photo: Vincent Delsuc/Pexels
INITIATION
Whoever you are, go out into the evening,
leaving your room, of which you know each bit;
your house is the last before the infinite,
whoever you are.
Then with your eyes that wearily
scarce lift themselves from the worn-out door-stone
slowly you raise a shadowy black tree
and fix it on the sky: slender, alone.
And you have made the world (and it shall grow
and ripen as a word, unspoken, still).
When you have grasped its meaning with your will,
then tenderly your eyes will let it go …
~ Rainer Maria Rilke, 1906

Beautiful! I love Rilke. Thank you!
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Thanks, Kitty. I learned, in my comparing his poems from my books vs. online, there is a wide variation of translation. I like this one. 😊
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