Long before our time they called her old,
But she’d walk down the same road every day.
Her age became too much to say
In years – and, like a forest’s, would be told
In centuries. She comes to stand at dusk –
Her spot each time the same – and to foretell.
She is a hollow, wrinkled husk,
Dark as a fire-gutted citadel.
She has to turn her flock of talking loose
Or it will grow too crowded to relieve.
Flapping and screaming, words are flying all
Around her. Then, returning home to roost,
They find a perch beneath her eyebrows’ eaves,
And in that shadow wait for night to fall.
(Rainer Maria Rilke)
More Poetry from Rainer Maria Rilke:
- Elegy X (Rainer Maria Rilke Poems)
- Elegy I (Rainer Maria Rilke Poems)
- Elegy IV (Rainer Maria Rilke Poems)
- Fear of the Inexplicable (Rainer Maria Rilke Poems)
- To Lou Andreas-Salo (Rainer Maria Rilke Poems)
- Dedication to M. (Rainer Maria Rilke Poems)