WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Ut stiltme en stoarm cover

Ut stiltme en stoarm

Chapter 64: XVI.
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The collection gathers short lyric poems that move between contemplative calm and turbulent passion, using concise, musical lines and recurring images of sea, wind, seasons, and evening light. Many pieces voice longing, solitude, and consolation, often addressing a beloved or a singing presence while alternating hope and resignation. Natural phenomena—waves, storms, dawn, and autumn decay—serve as metaphors for inner states. Occasional sonnets and mythic or spiritual invocations broaden the formal range. Overall the poems emphasize sensory detail and melodic rhythm to explore memory, desire, and the search for solace amid change.

XVI.

’k Song, Lionel, dyn ljeafde; ik joech myn stim
Det dêryn tsjûgje mocht dyn geast, hweroan
It egen lûd ûntstoar. Ik naem dyn kroan,
En laei op ’t egen hier syn bleke glim.

Lang wier dyn ljeafde ek mines; hiel myn moarn
Wier, frjeonen fen myn siele, wijd oan jim,
’k Joech jim myn ljeafde en tocht aloan oan him
Dy’t lijde as ik, de kenings-ljeafde ûntstoarn.

Wyld, twingend ha ’k jim ljeave en ’t wier myn rjucht.
For kinstners is de skientme slachteleas,
En ik hie neat as ’t glânzgjen fen jim eagen.

En nou’t myn geast nei greater dagen tsjucht
Bliuw ’k seinjend jim, myn frjeonen, dy’t ik keas
Do’t ik to stjerren tocht yn hate en ljeagen.