Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
The Great Mirror of Same-Sex Love - Poetry - 32. Oden an meinen Freund Behrisch
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Odes for my Friend, Behrisch
First.
Transplant this lovely tree,
Gardener, as he yammers to me;
So thrice happier the soil be
To receive a trunk such as he.
Still, his nature has the strength
To withstand the earth's sucking envy,
Along with the air's corrupting rot,
By resistance of remedy.
See how he bursts in spring
With pale green armor-like foliage;
Their orange-oil fragrance repelling well,
Like poison to his predators.
Lady Caterpillar's tooth
Becomes dull on them; useless her tricks,
To tarnish his shiny brilliance
Flashing argentine in the sun.
From his canopy's blooms
The bridesmaid imagines she's dowered
For a sumptuous wreath of wedding;
Intends to pluck the young man's fruits.
But look, autumn comes so soon,
And sooner yet flees Caterpillar,
Complaining to sage Madame Spider
Of his incorruptibility.
Dragging a silken thread
From her yew wood tree home entangled,
The arachnid, insect queen of hosts,
Tries to smirch the innocent tree.
With harmless attempts veiling,
She weaves in bestial artistry –
Draping sticky tangles of her webs
To hoar-frost his glittery leaves.
Then she looks with triumph
As the bridesmaid shudders and departs,
And the young man who was once verdant
Bemoans his youth's passing along.
Transplant this lovely tree, do,
Gardener, he's yammering all through.
So Tree, thank the arborist man too,
For he'll save by uprooting you.
Second.
You leave; I grumble –
Go then! Leave me grumbling.
Openhearted man,
Free yourself from this place.
Stagnant quagmires,
Choking October fog,
Inseparable malaise,
Weaving around this place.
Here is the homeland
Of noxious swarms of bugs,
Dens of murderers
And their plots so fiendish.
On the sea of reeds
Slither voluptuous
Serpents of the flames,
Fondled in open light.
But also leave gentle strolls at night,
Where in the moon's twilight waning
Harmless toads gather expectantly
At crossroads for their meetings unseen.
Do no harm to them
For they will be frightened –
Openhearted man,
Free yourself from this place.
Third.
Be callous!
A heart unmoved lightly
Is fitting tribute
To the uncaring ways of the Earth.
But Behrisch, your shining features
Need not be lit by the smile of spring,
Nor darkened by tempestuous
Frowns from wintertime.
Therefore do not lean upon
The anxiety-ridden breast of the girls,
Or within the moody arms of your brother
Who might bring you nothing but grief.
Already congregated
Upon their self-appointed heights,
You are tracked as prey
By a jealous, lynx-like gaze,
Then with claws outstretched,
They hurl themselves upon you,
Insidiously digging in to drag you
By the shoulders.
Preternaturally strong are those lank limbs
Most like the gripping paws of a panther,
Meant to shake you away.
But he's ripping you apart.
Death is parting;
A threefold death
Is parting without hope
Of reunion.
I know you’d gladly leave
This detested country,
If not for my friendship’s bond
In chains of blossoming links.
Tear them apart! And I'll take no action,
For no worthy mate
Keeps his fellow back a prisoner
When he can still escape.
The releasing concept
Of a companion's freedom
Sets too the captor free
Even from within his dungeon.
You leave, I stay.
Yet still rotates this great wheel
Around our calendar spokes,
Upon its smoking axis.
I'll count the turning markers
With their thundering peals,
Knowing the last one will bless
To spring the bars, and let me be free as you.
— Johann Wolfgang von Goethe,[i]
1767
[i] “Odes for my Friend, Behrisch” Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, translation of Oden an meinen Freund Behrisch written in 1767 – and therefore amongst the poet’s oldest works – but not published until after Goethe’s death.
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Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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