Tags
God, Jewish poetry, longing, love, mystic poetry, Nelly Sachs, the Holocaust
But perhaps God needs the longing, wherever else should it dwell,
Which with kisses and tears and sighs fills mysterious spaces of air –
And perhaps is invisible soil from which roots of stars grow and swell –
And the radiant voice across fields of parting which calls to reunion there?
O my beloved, perhaps in the sky of longing worlds have been born of our love –
Just as our breathing, in and out, builds a cradle for life and death?
We are grains of sand, dark with farewell, lost in births’ secret treasure trove,
Around us already perhaps future moons, suns, and stars blaze in a fiery wreath.
(translated by Ruth & Matthew Mead)
Nelly Sachs (1891 – 1970) was born in Berlin, Germany. On the verge of deportation to a concentration camp in 1940, she escaped with a few others to Stockholm. She began working as a translator of German poetry and in her own writing the Holocaust was the underlying theme. In 1966 she shared a Nobel Prize in literature and was cited for her “works of forgiveness, of deliverance, of peace.” Her poetry’s power comes from her absolute attention – Simon Weil’s definition of prayer. (taken from “Women in Praise of the Sacred”)
I was hard pressed to make a choice among poems of Nelly Sachs. They are all hauntingly beautiful – and in some ways enigmatic. In this poem, the longing – of God, of the poet, of the individual soul – seems tangible but at the same time ephemeral. This longing for God, for the Other, fills the spaces of air, gives root to stars, gives birth to worlds and builds a cradle for life and death. This longing for union easily crosses the vastness of space and time, even though we are, our love is, as infinitesimal as grains of sand in the cosmos. She infers that reunion of not merely a hope or a possibility, but in my reading of the poem, a certainty. Does God need this longing for reunion for continuing creation? As the primordial desire leading to manifestation? If so, this longing is more than desire; it is essence of love.
as I wandered to thoughts of going to bed, I saw your title, what a thought…one that drew me here and I am so glad…for I have often wondered if God has human emotions as we do…in which I guess He could since He is God…I have read somewhere earlier words of Nelly Sachs, maybe here somewhere?
I will have leave a note to myself of your post here and her name so I can look up more for what an energy of life she writes with….real ….and your thoughts were perfect as I reread them of her work
I will ramble if I stay on, 2:30ish am came to early…and my mind is in drifting mode so I will Thank You for such a thought-filled post…I enjoyed very much…
Take Care…You Matter…
)0(
maryrose
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Thanks, Maryrose- her poems are so lyrical and lovely. I think you can find some through google. Marie
On Sat, Apr 12, 2014 at 8:29 PM, Remembering the Sacred Self wrote:
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Thanks for this. I did not know of Nelly Sachs, and will now look at more of her work, which is really very touching as is you description of her work.
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