This will have been the first
entry encountered in this pub-
lication after its millionth
reading. If a lot has changed,
a lot has continued as it all
began; and this is an occasion
for recalling a couple of the
strands one likes the best. I
like discovering resemblances.
I like the surprise of mastery,
the triumph of the fair.
Worn out, the young ones drag themselves home far into
night,
legs thick with thyme. They feast on arbutes all around,
on grey-green willows, on cassia and red-flecked crocus,
on the sappy linden and dusky hyacinths.
Together their rest from labour, together their labour:
at dawn they rush out their gates, no dilly-dally; and when
at last
the evening star exhorts them quit their forage
afield, then they head for their hutches, then restore their
bodies.
A buzzing: they murmur around the doors and on the
doorsteps.
Later, when they've tucked themselves into their chambers,
hushed
is the night, well-earned sleep overtakes their tuckered
limbs
..
but on all sides, safe beneath the city's ramparts, siphon up
water
which,
as a skiff unsteady on the tossing wave takes on ballast,
they balance themselves through flimsy cloud.
Virgil
70 - 19 BC
Georgics
Book iv, 176 - 195
[Bees]
Kimberly Johnson
translation
Penguin Classics, 2010©
Otto Umbehr
Night in a Small Town
1930
Princeton University Museum of Art
The Life and Death of Buildings
23 July - 16 November, 2011©
:) have a GOOD weekend!
ReplyDeleteI accept the suggestion, most gratefully, and encourage all to heed it. :)
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