Gedicht
David Malouf
To Be Written in Another Tongue
To Be Written in Another Tongue
To Be Written in Another Tongue
As for example, the language in which my grandfatherdreams now he is dead, or living,
muttered in his sleep. Clouds
flow to a different breath, daylight moons hatch from the stillness
of a different dark,
where owls drop from the sun, dirt-coloured starlings
by other names than we know them gather
the dusk, grain by grain let fall the shadow of their bodies.
Such ordinary events
are poems in another tongue and no translation
possible. Owl
with its heavy blood and vowel an open mouth
too slow to snatch the heads off
dustmotes. Humming-birds
like Giotto’s tear-stained kamikaze angels
sorrow, having learned
their name in a dead language
is entrée to a steel-meshed aviary or Table of Contents,
some grey Jardin des Plantes. Grandfather mumbles
our names in the earth. We come
to light out of his mouth, oracular bubbles.
I range through the thesaurus
for a word: homesickness, yearning
of grandsons for a language
the dead still speak, the dying in their sleep still
mutter, the advent
of common objects, strange upon the tongue.
© 1992, David Malouf
From: Poems 1959-1989
Publisher: University Queensland Press, St Lucia
From: Poems 1959-1989
Publisher: University Queensland Press, St Lucia
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To Be Written in Another Tongue
As for example, the language in which my grandfatherdreams now he is dead, or living,
muttered in his sleep. Clouds
flow to a different breath, daylight moons hatch from the stillness
of a different dark,
where owls drop from the sun, dirt-coloured starlings
by other names than we know them gather
the dusk, grain by grain let fall the shadow of their bodies.
Such ordinary events
are poems in another tongue and no translation
possible. Owl
with its heavy blood and vowel an open mouth
too slow to snatch the heads off
dustmotes. Humming-birds
like Giotto’s tear-stained kamikaze angels
sorrow, having learned
their name in a dead language
is entrée to a steel-meshed aviary or Table of Contents,
some grey Jardin des Plantes. Grandfather mumbles
our names in the earth. We come
to light out of his mouth, oracular bubbles.
I range through the thesaurus
for a word: homesickness, yearning
of grandsons for a language
the dead still speak, the dying in their sleep still
mutter, the advent
of common objects, strange upon the tongue.
From: Poems 1959-1989
To Be Written in Another Tongue
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