Author: eklastic

Zu alt, um nur zu spielen. Zu jung, um ohne Wunsch zu sein.

Labour of Love

”To read a poem in January is as lovely as to go for a walk in June.”

Jean-Paul Sartre

Gone – done – yet never forgotten. / I set out. / Things which last are never loud.

Sartre‘s words are so true – particularly in this case, at least for me. I trawled through my archive and came upon this snippet of a longer poem by the early 20th century poet Joachim Ringelnatz known for his often absurd, often extremely funny but also satirical poems. I found this one on a gravestone, not on a real one, however, but part of an exhibition of modern cemetery arrangements featuring entries from all over Germany as part of the Bundesgartenschau (national horticulture show) in Brandenburg a few years back. I looked up the whole poem and it rushed me with a lot of memories as it used to be of my favourites (appropriately gone, done, yet never completely forgotten).

I found a few adaptations and a few literal translations, none of which I was really happy with. Here is my own attempt at rendering the poem in English:

I love you so!

I would give you
a tile from my stove without hesitation.
I did not hurt you.
Now I feel sad.
The railroad track elevation
Is ablaze with furze.
Gone - done - 
Yet never forgotten.
I set out.
Things which last
Are never loud.
Time defaces the living breed.
A dog barks.
He cannot read.
He cannot write.
We cannot stay tight.
I am laughing.
The holes are the most important 
parts of a sieve.
Ik hebb di leev.

Linked to Travel with Intent. For more posts inspired by the Sartre quote, click here.

Up in smoke

Athough in fairness, Cheech and Chong had more this kind of smoke in mind when they made the movie:

And just to round UP this post here is a somewhat misleading (or honest?) billboard. Of course, the German slogan for this iconic French cigarette translates as “so great, so grandiose, so Gauloises” but because they used UPper case only (and hence no “ß”) the association (at least for English speakers) is that smoking is something non-desirable. It’s simply gross.

UP Square #5.

Barely an inch

My cold start was delayed a bit – 1 and 2 January were so miserable (weatherwise) that I stayed home except for a short walk in the evening when it was already dark. But on 3 January we awoke to some white on the ground and grey up above us. But this wouldn’t be the CosPhoChal if I’d left it there if I’d left it there, would it now?

Linked to the Cosmic Photo Challenge: A Cold Start.

Hang ‘Em High

This film title hasn’t got an UP in it but the connection to UP is obvious, isn’t it? It was Clint Eastwood’s first leading role in a US movie, he was an upcoming star.

They strung people UP at the gallows of Beerfelden – the only completely preserved place of execution of this type still left in Germany

In 1597 the original timber gallows was replaced by the triangular construction still there today. More executions for the place of one!

The place itself is beautiful and commands gorgeous views of the surrounding area – apparently designed to show the delinquents what they were leaving behind. However, a grey day like this seems to suit the place better in my opinion.

It is said that the last execution here took place in 1804 – a woman was hanged for stealing a chicken and two loaves of bread. Since jurisdiction was liberal (for the time) in the area not many hangings were recorded – so why they saw the need for the possibility to have multiple executions at the same time remains unclear. Also unclear is why the two executive orders from 1788 and 1814 respectively to destroy the gallows were ignored in Beerfelden. Maybe they knew it was going to be a tourist attraction.

Up Square #4.