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[Mar. 25th, 2012|06:44 pm] |
To the Nightingale
Out of what secret English summer evening or night on the incalculable Rhine, lost among all the nights of my long night, could it have come to my unknowing ear, your song, encrusted with mythology, nightingale of Virgil and the Persians? Perhaps I never heard you, but my life is bound up with your life, inseparably. The symbol for you was a wandering spirit in a book of enigmas. The poet, El Marino, nicknamed you the “siren of the forest”; you sing throughout the night of Juliet and through the intricate pages of the Latin and from his pinewoods, Heine, that other nightingale of Germany and Judea, called you mockingbird, firebird, bird of mourning. Keats heard your song for everyone, forever. There is not one among the shimmering names people have given you across the earth that does not seek to match your own music, nightingale of the dark. The Muslim dreamed you in the delirium of ecstasy, his breast pierced by the thorn of the sung rose you redden with your blood. Assiduously in the black evening I contrive this poem, nightingale of the sands and all the seas, that in exultation, memory, and fable, you burn with love and die in liquid song. (translated by Alastair Reid) |
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