We shall remember once, too late,
This simple happening, so fine,
This very bench where we are seated,
Your burning temple next to mine.
From hazel stamens, cinders fall
White as the poplars that they land on,
Beginnings want to be fecund,
May gives itself with sweet abandon.
The pollen falls on both of us,
Small mountains made of golden ashes
It forms around us, and it falls
On our shoulders and our lashes.
It falls into our mouths when speaking,
On eyes, when we are mute with wonder
And there’s regret, but we don’t know
Why it would tear us both asunder.
We shall remember once, too late,
This simple happening, so fine,
This very bench where we are seated
Your burning temple next to mine.
In dreams, through longings, we can see—
All latent in the dust of gold
These forests that perhaps could be—
But that will never, ever, grow.
By Lucian Blaga
Translated by Cristina Hanganu-Bresch








![Plate 4 (Autumnal Equinox)
Collection:
David Rumsey Historical Map Collection
Author:
Pardies, Ignace Gaston, 1636-1673
Date:
1693
Engraver or Printer:
Duchange, Gaspard
Short Title:
Plate 4: Virgo, Hydra and other constellations.
Publisher:
Sebastien Mabre-Cramoisy Paris
Pub Date:
1693
From the Linda Hall Library exhibition catalog: “Pardies’ star atlas is stylistically one of the most attractive ever published. Pardies took his constellation figures primarily from Bayer’s Uranometria, but since each chart covers a large section of the sky, these figures had to be carefully integrated, which was not an easy task. Pardies’ engraver accomplished this task with great success…The plate(which) shows Hercules, Ophiuchus] Scorpius, Sagittarius, Aquila, and Lyra,..is one of the most stunning compositions in the history of celestial cartography.”](http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_masv7cfqpV1qahuhjo1_1280.jpg)