Hermann Hesse understood trees to be symbols of transcendence and rebirth, of instinctive growth present in all natural life. This elegant collection of his essays, poems, and passages on trees, accompanied by thirty-one of his watercolor illustrations, reveals his inspired thoughts on nature, spirituality, and self-knowledge. Together, his writings and paintings mirror the seasons and landscapes as he experienced them, and help remind us that trees' annual rings are representations of our own days' struggle, happiness, and purpose.
In the author's words: "They struggle with all the force of their lives for one thing only: to fulfill themselves according to their own laws . . . Whoever has learned to listen to trees no longer wants to be one. He wants to be nothing except who he is."
Inhaltsverzeichnis
CONTENTS
Trees 1
My Heart Greets You* 5
Good Friday 7
The Old Copper Beech* 9
Movement and Stillness in Harmony* 13
Flowering Branch 17
The Miracle of Rebirth* 19
Spring Night 23
Chestnut Trees 25
Dream 33
The Peach Tree 35
In Full Flower 39
Hermits and Warriors* 41
Shackled Power and Passion* 43
The Birch 45
May in the Chestnut Forest 46
The Black Forest 51
"Trees" by Joyce Kilmer 53
Uprooted* 56
Page from a Diary 58
Linden Blossoms 61
Lament for an Old Tree 67
Vagrant Hostel 76
Opposites 79
Night with Mountain Wind 85
The Little Path 88
Summer Afternoon at an
Old Country House 93
Elegy in September 94
At Bremgarten Castle 95
Natural Forms* 97
Tree in Autumn 99
Pruned Oak 101
A Stray Son of the South* 102
From "Description of a Landscape" 103
Withered Leaf 115
Between the Hourglass
and the Withered Leaf* 117
In the Fog 118
A Broken Branch Creaks 119
Wanderer in Late Autumn 120
Afterword by
Volker Michels 123
Sources 131
List of Plates
* Titles followed by an asterisk were supplied by the German editor,
Volker Michels, for untitled poems or excerpts from longer works.