Sometimes we find ourselves in the presence of a form that guides and encloses our earliest dreams. For a painter, a tree is composed in its roundness. But the poet continues the dream from higher up. He knows that when a thing becomes isolated, it becomes round, it assumes a figure of being that is concentrated upon itself. In Rilkes Poèmes français, this is how the walnut tree lives and commends attention. Here again, around a lone tree, which is the centre of the world, the dome of the sky becomes round, in accordance with the rule of cosmic poetry.
Tree alwas in the center
Of all that surrounds it
Tree feasting upon
Heaven's great dome
Needless to say, all the poet sees, is a tree in a meadow [in the Rhone valley]:
He is not thinking of the legendary Ygdrasil that would concentrate the entire cosmos, uniting heaven and earth. But the imagination of round being follows its own law: since, as the poet says, the walnut tree is “proudly rounded,” it can feast upon “heaven’s [Plural in French]
great dome.” The world is around the round being.
And from Verse to verse, the poem grows, increases its being. The tree is alive, reflective, straining toward god.
You, as nobody else
turn everywhere
behaving like an apostle
who does not know, from where
God will appear to him
So, to be sure,
it develops itself in roundness
stretching towards Him its ripe arms
Tree that perhaps
Thinks innerly
Tree that dominates self
Slowly giving itself
The form that eliminates
Hazards of Wind.
I shall never find a better document for a phenomenology of a being which is at once established in its roundness and developing in it. Rilke’s tree propagates in green spheres a roundness that is a victory over accidents of form and capricious events of mobility. Here becoming has countless forms, countless leaves [mille feuilles], but being is subject to no dispersion: If I could ever succeed in grouping together all the images of being, all the multiple, changing images that, in spite of everything, illustrate permanence of being, Rilke's tree would open an important chapter in my album of concrete metaphysics.