I arrive feeling lonely - two weeks away from the consuming routines of work having repaired my physical exhaustion, but brought me hard up against what I use those routines to hide from: how alone and unanchored I am. I hope for a relationship with Vienna, want the city to fill me up.
Congenial, gemütlich, you stroke my mood and senses, soothing, anchoring my heart in time and place, yet slowly plant unease. You preserve your dark history alongside your architectural heritage. Something in the sheer size and number of your gorgeous palaces affronts. And then, the wall-plaques and small museums: here and here and here the Jewish citizens were, and are gone.
Beneath your charm and beauty, a more complex, painful, bitter-sweet allure. My Viennese friends left and lived abroad, and have all returned.
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Reading this, I suddenly remembered a poem by Erich Fried, written after his return to Vienna, which he had left at the age of 17:
Weil ich nun in der Fremde wohn
verschwimmst du oft in mir.
Und manchmal braucht es Mühe schon
dass ich dich nicht verlier.
Du meine Freude und meine Welt,
du Angst und banger Mut! –
dass ich dich einmal wiederseh,
mein Wien, ist gut.
My impressions of Vienna come almost all from Schnitzler. This is a different picture.
Welcome home, Jean. Hugs --
The poem is lovely, thank you.
Dale, Schnitzler, hmm - well I'm sure a lot of what he wrote about still goes on!
The perfect city.
Perfection kills.
Such lovely pictures and such lovely words. I spent a week in Vienna last year and this reminded me of that.
The second picture made me smile cos I have one at the exact same place. Here.
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