Hi S4ME poetry readers:
In 1902, the poet Rainer Maria Rilke was young, poor, and struggling with writer’s block. He accepted to work in Paris for the sculptor Auguste Rodin. Rodin encouraged Rilke to observe animals. Rilke found a caged panther at the Paris Zoo and developed his impressions of the animal into one of his most famous poems, “The Panther.” Rilke’s poem explores themes of confinement. It resonates deeply with me. I decided to write a sequel to Rilke’s poem. It appears in the fall issue of
West Trestle Review:
https://www.westtrestlereview.com/wtr_september_2025_veronica_ashenhurst.html
Rilke’s Panther Befriends Me
I once read that the poet Rilke saw
a caged panther in Paris, with fur like night.
The animal’s pained eyes were yellow rooms.
Ill and shut in myself, I sensed the creature’s will
denied. When metal bars seem to last
forever, the lure is to cease counting years.
Rilke had learned to look anew that year
he wrote the panther’s poem. The poet’s sight
held viscera, skin, heart—until at last,
the trapped creature looked back at him. At night,
I weighed these thoughts, read the poem again, and willed
the rough-tongued, heaving animal room
for afterlife. Now, the cat soars through rooms
of sky, roars at stars, and recalls old years
of midnight hunts. He springs his unbound will,
and comes to condole with me. I can see
his paws, claws withdrawn like switchblades. By night,
he surveys me in my bed, and at last,
tilts his head in friendship. I’ve borne this lasting
illness and the gloom, alone in my room
so long. But with Rilke’s panther, at night,
fear subsides, as we have both known years
encaged. He, with strong bones and polished coat, sees
my scars, my fickle limbs, this numb will.
So, I sit up. The animal, willing,
lifts a curtain from his pupils. There’s lasting
insight in his eye. On his haunches, he sees
my potential coiled, tail-like, in this room,
surrounded by the silt of worn-out years.
The panther says we’ll leave this hurt tonight,
and I, tucked into the creature’s heart by night,
climb the clouds with him and feel his pulse. We’ll
gallop, hear the river that in years
past Rilke called grey silk. And here, at last—
in Paris gardens once again, with rooms
of blooms—we’ll touch the roses Rilke saw,
while Paris finds the sun. Night cannot last—
we’ll shed these pelts of grief. In the petaled rooms,
the panther lends his eye. He knows how much I yearn to see.
***
Rilke’s poem “The Panther” is here:
https://www.thereader.org.uk/featured-poem
I hope you enjoy the work.