Tag: #quotations

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.

Roses are red, rosehips are sweet

“God gave us memory so that we might have roses in December.”

James M. Barrie

And he also turned the roses into rosehips so we might eat rosehip jam all year round.

Linked to Travel with Intent. More posts inspired by James M. Barry‘s quote are linked here.

And wine not?

“Photography is pretty simple stuff. You just react to what you see, and take many, many pictures.”

Elliott Erwitt

Linked to Travel with Intent. For more posts inspired by the quotation from Elliott Erwitt, click here .

Schdolz bin isch uf Schriese,

uf soin gude Woi. = I’m proud of Schriesheim and its good wine.

Autumn is the mellower season, and what we lose in flowers we more than gain in fruits.”

Samuel Butler, The Way of all Flesh

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

It remains a balancing act

The optimist thinks this is the best of all possible worlds. The pessimist fears it is true.

J. Robert Oppenheimer

This is a monument to honour the victims of violence, war, and persecution by Hubertus von der Goltz. That their precarious position is threatened can be seen by the spikes on either side (I have to go back and get a better photo).

Linked to Travel with Intent. More photos inspired by J. Robert Oppenheimer, can be found here.

Seasons

“The world is wide.
No two days are alike, nor even two hours, neither were there ever two leaves of a tree alike since the creation of all the world; and the genuine productions of art, like those of nature, are all distinct from each other.”

John Constable

I’ve never yet managed to catch those apple trees in bloom; I’m worried that since they are so ancient that I will never do. So there are only three seasons on display.

Linked to Travel with Intent. For more photos inspired by the quote from John Constable, click here.

With a little help

“Everywhere is within walking distance if you have the time.”

Steven Wright

But sometimes you need to be pointed in the right direction.

In case you are not quite sure what you are looking at: the Wachenburg is about 20km in linear distance, 30km to travel by car, and quite a bit more walking through dales and over hills. It was as if the sunbeam wanted to guide us home.

From a closer vantage point, more or less pictured from the same side.

Linked to Travel with Intent. More photos inspired by Steven Wright’s quote, click here.