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Romantics -- Lisel Mueller

 
(Poem #236)Romantics
 Johannes Brahms and Clara Schumann
                           
 The modern biographers worry
 "how far it went," their tender friendship.
 They wonder just what it means
 when he writes he thinks of her constantly,
 his guardian angel, beloved friend.
 The modern biographers ask
 the rude, irrelevant question
 of our age, as if the event
 of two bodies meshing together
 establishes the degree of love,
 forgetting how softly Eros walked
 in the nineteenth-century, how a hand
 held overlong or a gaze anchored
 in someone’s eyes could unseat a heart,
 and nuances of address not known
 in our egalitarian language
 could make the redolent air
 tremble and shimmer with the heat
 of possibility. Each time I hear
 the Intermezzi, sad
 and lavish in their tenderness,
 I imagine the two of them
 sitting in a garden
 among late-blooming roses
 and dark cascades of leaves,
 letting the landscape speak for them,
 leaving us nothing to overhear.
-- Lisel Mueller

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