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Rainer Maria Rilke - The Temptation Of St. AnthonyRainer Maria Rilke - The Temptation Of St. Anthony
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It didn`t help for him to drive the quills Of porcupines into his lecher`s flesh His pandemonian senses uttered shrill Expulsive cries and issued him a fresh Supply of freaks: Crawling, flitting sights` Ill-fitting heads, whose squints and leers distort Their teeming faces, glint-eyed with delight, Crowding in around him for their sport. Fruitful at night, his senses spawned like flies Clustered on dung. Their hatchlings` breeding place, His body, waved with brightly speckled lies That coalesced to whispers of disgrace. Unwanted pleasure would dissolve his face Into a drinking pool that filled with eyes And he, as shadows opened up their thighs, Handled and warm, awake to his embrace, Screamed for the angel, screamed without restraint. The angel, trailing glory from above, Arrived, was there, and then contrived to shove The difficulties back into the saint. So he could struggle, inwardly tormented By beasts and demons, as he had for years, And somehow God, an essence far from clear, Could be distilled from what the saint fermented.
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