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portrait of the rain
Launch Audio in a New Window
BY JAN WAGNER TRANSLATED BY DAV ID KE PLI NGER
it appears as a hand-kiss, gentle nudge,
spray of memory: remember where you came from, frog.
or galloping, as a thundering horde,
to tender unto caesar what is caesar’s, until everything flees into the entryways under the cover of newspapers and briefcases: whoever listens at the open window senses that he may be dry, but the weather has long since been inside him.
or how the gutters become musical,
when laundry lifts off the lines and rivers flow out of their beds, and the secret scent of earth and asphalt unveils itself; when mushrooms, mosses, vineyard snails run rampant; it makes the outlines visible: where rain ends, we begin.
it treks across the landscape like a circus,
the spectacle and curtain at the same time: scenery loft of the great weather- and wandering theaters; bestows upon blonds darker hair, and on the bald the radiance of billiard balls; to the hens it is a cage that doesn’t imprison them. so often divined, yet no church is founded on it.
good ears can still hear,
if you bend low enough, the songs of humpback whales, glacier calving— one geyser over north america inspires umbrellas to blossom from shanghai to rome. each drop contains the whole book, water, particles, pollen, all the dirt of the world. resurrection—the easiest exercise. meanwhile it slumbers in car tires and from puddles and cisterns stares back toward its own origin, while the trees for hours and hours are immersed in their soliloquies.
the soothing swoosh between the radio transmitters.
the wind in the forests yet to come.
portrait of the rain
Launch Audio in a New Window BY JAN WAGNER TRANSLATED BY DAV ID KE PLI NGER
it appears as a hand-kiss, gentle nudge,
spray of memory: remember where you came from, frog.
or galloping, as a thundering horde,
to tender unto caesar what is caesar’s, until everything flees into the entryways under the cover of newspapers and briefcases: whoever listens at the open window senses that he may be dry, but the weather has long since been inside him.
or how the gutters become musical,
when laundry lifts off the lines and rivers flow out of their beds, and the secret scent of earth and asphalt unveils itself; when mushrooms, mosses, vineyard snails run rampant; it makes the outlines visible: where rain ends, we begin.
it treks across the landscape like a circus,
the spectacle and curtain at the same time: scenery loft of the great weather- and wandering theaters; bestows upon blonds darker hair, and on the bald the radiance of billiard balls; to the hens it is a cage that doesn’t imprison them. so often divined, yet no church is founded on it.
good ears can still hear,
if you bend low enough, the songs of humpback whales, glacier calving— one geyser over north america inspires umbrellas to blossom from shanghai to rome. each drop contains the whole book, water, particles, pollen, all the dirt of the world.
resurrection—the easiest exercise.
meanwhile it slumbers in car tires and from puddles and cisterns stares back toward its own origin, while the trees for hours and hours are immersed in their soliloquies.
the soothing swoosh between the radio transmitters.
the wind in the forests yet to come.
portrait of the rain
Launch Audio in a New Window BY JAN WAGNER TRANSLATED BY DAV ID KE PLI NGER
it appears as a hand-kiss, gentle nudge,
spray of memory: remember where you came from, frog.
or galloping, as a thundering horde,
to tender unto caesar what is caesar’s, until everything flees into the entryways under the cover of newspapers and briefcases: whoever listens at the open window senses that he may be dry, but the weather has long since been inside him.
or how the gutters become musical,
when laundry lifts off the lines and rivers flow out of their beds, and the secret scent of earth and asphalt unveils itself; when mushrooms, mosses, vineyard snails run rampant; it makes the outlines visible: where rain ends, we begin.
it treks across the landscape like a circus,
the spectacle and curtain at the same time: scenery loft of the great weather- and wandering theaters; bestows upon blonds darker hair, and on the bald the radiance of billiard balls; to the hens it is a cage that doesn’t imprison them. so often divined, yet no church is founded on it.
good ears can still hear,
if you bend low enough, the songs of humpback whales, glacier calving— one geyser over north america inspires umbrellas to blossom from shanghai to rome. each drop contains the whole book, water, particles, pollen, all the dirt of the world.
resurrection—the easiest exercise.
meanwhile it slumbers in car tires and from puddles and cisterns stares back toward its own origin, while the trees for hours and hours are immersed in their soliloquies.
the soothing swoosh between the radio transmitters.
the wind in the forests yet to come.
portrait of the rain
Launch Audio in a New Window BY JAN WAGNER TRANSLATED BY DAV ID KE PLI NGER
it appears as a hand-kiss, gentle nudge,
spray of memory: remember where you came from, frog.
or galloping, as a thundering horde,
to tender unto caesar what is caesar’s, until everything flees into the entryways under the cover of newspapers and briefcases: whoever listens at the open window senses that he may be dry, but the weather has long since been inside him.
or how the gutters become musical,
when laundry lifts off the lines and rivers flow out of their beds, and the secret scent of earth and asphalt unveils itself; when mushrooms, mosses, vineyard snails run rampant; it makes the outlines visible: where rain ends, we begin.
it treks across the landscape like a circus,
the spectacle and curtain at the same time: scenery loft of the great weather- and wandering theaters; bestows upon blonds darker hair, and on the bald the radiance of billiard balls; to the hens it is a cage that doesn’t imprison them. so often divined, yet no church is founded on it.
good ears can still hear,
if you bend low enough, the songs of humpback whales, glacier calving— one geyser over north america inspires umbrellas to blossom from shanghai to rome. each drop contains the whole book, water, particles, pollen, all the dirt of the world.
resurrection—the easiest exercise.
meanwhile it slumbers in car tires and from puddles and cisterns stares back toward its own origin, while the trees for hours and hours are immersed in their soliloquies.
the soothing swoosh between the radio transmitters.
the wind in the forests yet to come.
portrait of the rain
Launch Audio in a New Window BY JAN WAGNER TRANSLATED BY DAV ID KE PLI NGER
it appears as a hand-kiss, gentle nudge,
spray of memory: remember where you came from, frog.
or galloping, as a thundering horde,
to tender unto caesar what is caesar’s, until everything flees into the entryways under the cover of newspapers and briefcases: whoever listens at the open window senses that he may be dry, but the weather has long since been inside him.
or how the gutters become musical,
when laundry lifts off the lines and rivers flow out of their beds, and the secret scent of earth and asphalt unveils itself; when mushrooms, mosses, vineyard snails run rampant; it makes the outlines visible: where rain ends, we begin.
it treks across the landscape like a circus,
the spectacle and curtain at the same time: scenery loft of the great weather- and wandering theaters; bestows upon blonds darker hair, and on the bald the radiance of billiard balls; to the hens it is a cage that doesn’t imprison them. so often divined, yet no church is founded on it.
good ears can still hear,
if you bend low enough, the songs of humpback whales, glacier calving— one geyser over north america inspires umbrellas to blossom from shanghai to rome. each drop contains the whole book, water, particles, pollen, all the dirt of the world.
resurrection—the easiest exercise.
meanwhile it slumbers in car tires and from puddles and cisterns stares back toward its own origin, while the trees for hours and hours are immersed in their soliloquies.
the soothing swoosh between the radio transmitters.
the wind in the forests yet to come.
portrait of the rain
Launch Audio in a New Window BY JAN WAGNER TRANSLATED BY DAV ID KE PLI NGER
it appears as a hand-kiss, gentle nudge,
spray of memory: remember where you came from, frog.
or galloping, as a thundering horde,
to tender unto caesar what is caesar’s, until everything flees into the entryways under the cover of newspapers and briefcases: whoever listens at the open window senses that he may be dry, but the weather has long since been inside him.
or how the gutters become musical,
when laundry lifts off the lines and rivers flow out of their beds, and the secret scent of earth and asphalt unveils itself; when mushrooms, mosses, vineyard snails run rampant; it makes the outlines visible: where rain ends, we begin.
it treks across the landscape like a circus,
the spectacle and curtain at the same time: scenery loft of the great weather- and wandering theaters; bestows upon blonds darker hair, and on the bald the radiance of billiard balls; to the hens it is a cage that doesn’t imprison them. so often divined, yet no church is founded on it.
good ears can still hear,
if you bend low enough, the songs of humpback whales, glacier calving— one geyser over north america inspires umbrellas to blossom from shanghai to rome. each drop contains the whole book, water, particles, pollen, all the dirt of the world.
resurrection—the easiest exercise.
meanwhile it slumbers in car tires and from puddles and cisterns stares back toward its own origin, while the trees for hours and hours are immersed in their soliloquies.
the soothing swoosh between the radio transmitters.
the wind in the forests yet to come.
portrait of the rain
Launch Audio in a New Window BY JAN WAGNER TRANSLATED BY DAV ID KE PLI NGER
it appears as a hand-kiss, gentle nudge,
spray of memory: remember where you came from, frog.
or galloping, as a thundering horde,
to tender unto caesar what is caesar’s, until everything flees into the entryways under the cover of newspapers and briefcases: whoever listens at the open window senses that he may be dry, but the weather has long since been inside him.
or how the gutters become musical,
when laundry lifts off the lines and rivers flow out of their beds, and the secret scent of earth and asphalt unveils itself; when mushrooms, mosses, vineyard snails run rampant; it makes the outlines visible: where rain ends, we begin. it treks across the landscape like a circus, the spectacle and curtain at the same time: scenery loft of the great weather- and wandering theaters; bestows upon blonds darker hair, and on the bald the radiance of billiard balls; to the hens it is a cage that doesn’t imprison them. so often divined, yet no church is founded on it.
good ears can still hear,
if you bend low enough, the songs of humpback whales, glacier calving— one geyser over north america inspires umbrellas to blossom from shanghai to rome. each drop contains the whole book, water, particles, pollen, all the dirt of the world.
resurrection—the easiest exercise.
meanwhile it slumbers in car tires and from puddles and cisterns stares back toward its own origin, while the trees for hours and hours are immersed in their soliloquies.
the soothing swoosh between the radio transmitters.
the wind in the forests yet to come.
portrait of the rain
Launch Audio in a New Window BY JAN WAGNER TRANSLATED BY DAV ID KE PLI NGER
it appears as a hand-kiss, gentle nudge,
spray of memory: remember where you came from, frog.
or galloping, as a thundering horde,
to tender unto caesar what is caesar’s, until everything flees into the entryways under the cover of newspapers and briefcases: whoever listens at the open window senses that he may be dry, but the weather has long since been inside him. or how the gutters become musical, when laundry lifts off the lines and rivers flow out of their beds, and the secret scent of earth and asphalt unveils itself; when mushrooms, mosses, vineyard snails run rampant; it makes the outlines visible: where rain ends, we begin.
it treks across the landscape like a circus,
the spectacle and curtain at the same time: scenery loft of the great weather- and wandering theaters; bestows upon blonds darker hair, and on the bald the radiance of billiard balls; to the hens it is a cage that doesn’t imprison them. so often divined, yet no church is founded on it.
good ears can still hear,
if you bend low enough, the songs of humpback whales, glacier calving— one geyser over north america inspires umbrellas to blossom from shanghai to rome. each drop contains the whole book, water, particles, pollen, all the dirt of the world.
resurrection—the easiest exercise.
meanwhile it slumbers in car tires and from puddles and cisterns stares back toward its own origin, while the trees for hours and hours are immersed in their soliloquies.
the soothing swoosh between the radio transmitters.
the wind in the forests yet to come.
portrait of the rain
Launch Audio in a New Window BY JAN WAGNER TRANSLATED BY DAV ID KE PLI NGER
it appears as a hand-kiss, gentle nudge,
spray of memory: remember where you came from, frog.
or galloping, as a thundering horde,
to tender unto caesar what is caesar’s, until everything flees into the entryways under the cover of newspapers and briefcases: whoever listens at the open window senses that he may be dry, but the weather has long since been inside him.
or how the gutters become musical,
when laundry lifts off the lines and rivers flow out of their beds, and the secret scent of earth and asphalt unveils itself; when mushrooms, mosses, vineyard snails run rampant; it makes the outlines visible: where rain ends, we begin.
it treks across the landscape like a circus,
the spectacle and curtain at the same time: scenery loft of the great weather- and wandering theaters; bestows upon blonds darker hair, and on the bald the radiance of billiard balls; to the hens it is a cage that doesn’t imprison them. so often divined, yet no church is founded on it.
good ears can still hear,
if you bend low enough, the songs of humpback whales, glacier calving— one geyser over north america inspires umbrellas to blossom from shanghai to rome. each drop contains the whole book, water, particles, pollen, all the dirt of the world.
resurrection—the easiest exercise.
meanwhile it slumbers in car tires and from puddles and cisterns stares back toward its own origin, while the trees for hours and hours are immersed in their soliloquies.
the soothing swoosh between the radio transmitters.