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Seven Last Words of the Emperor Hadrian
Animula vagula blandula
hospes comesque corporis, quae hunc abibis in loca, pallida, rigida, nudula, nec, ut soles, dabis iocos?
1.
Dear soul mate, little guest and companion, what shift will you make now, out there in the cold? If this is a joke, it is old, old. 2. Soul, small wandering one, my lifelong companion, where will you go — numb, pale, undefended — now the joke we shared is ended? 3. Little lightfoot spirit, house mate, bedfellow, where are you off to now? Cat got your tongue? Lost your shirt, caught your death? Well, the last laugh is on you. Is on us. 4. Sweet urchin, fly -by-night, heart’s guest, my better half and solace, you’ve really done it this time. You’ve played one trick too many. Fool, you’ve laughed us both out of breath. 5. If this is one of your jokes, my jack, my jack-in-the-box, lay off. Where have you got to? It’s cold out there. And what will you do without me, you sweet idiot? Go naked? Homeless? Come back to bed. 6. What’s this, old mouse, my secret sharer? Gone where? Did you think I’d let you slip away without me after a lifetime of happy scrapes? Who warmed you, clothed you, fed you, paid with laughter for your tricks, your japes? Is this the one joke, poor jackanapes, dear bugaboo, your emperor does not get? 7. So you’re playing fast and loose, are you? You’ve cut the love knot. Well let’s see how you get on out there without me. Who’s kidding who? Without my body, its royal breath and blood to warm you, my hands, my tongue to prove to you what’s real, what’s not, poor fool, you’re nothing. But O, without you, my sweet nothing, I’m dust. |
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© 2003, David Malouf From: The Best Australian Poems 2003 Publisher: Black Inc, Melbourne, 2003 ISBN: 1863950931 |
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