The Song Of The Beggar
Rainer Maria Rilke
I am always going from door to door, whether in rain or heat, and sometimes I will lay my right ear in the palm of my right hand. And as I speak my voice seems strange as if it were alien to me, for I'm not certain whose voice is crying: mine or someone else's. I cry for a pittance to sustain me. The poets cry for more. In the end I conceal my entire face and cover both my eyes; there it lies in my hands with all its weight and looks as if at rest, so no one may think I had no place where- upon to lay my head.
Next 10 Poems
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Song Of The Blindman
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Song Of The Widow
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Sonnets To Orpheus: Book 2: I
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Sonnets To Orpheus: Book 2: Vi
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Sonnets To Orpheus: Book 2: Xiii
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Sonnets To Orpheus: Book 2: Xxiii
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Sonnets To Orpheus: I
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Sonnets To Orpheus: Iv
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Sonnets To Orpheus: X
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Sonnets To Orpheus: Xix
Previous 10 Poems
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Sisters
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Poet
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Panther
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Neighbor
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Lovers
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Last Supper
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Last Evening
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Grown-up
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Future
- Rainer Maria Rilke : The Apple Orchard