Capitolo 2
Our souls are light; they has shaken a load of times. . .
What did we build it for? Was it everything one dream? . . .
Ghostly above of us in lamplight the glint of towers. . .
And after some they will fall to dust and to rain;
We will lacerate down otherwise them to us with impatient hands;
And it cuts out stone some earth, and he/she builds again them.
II.
One, from his/her bright tall window in a tower,
Thin out, as falls in the evening,
And he/she sees the curtain that advances some shower
Squirting his/her silver on roofs and walls:
He/she sees how, rapid as a shade, it crosses the city,
And it murmurs over far walls to the sea,
Leaving a glint of water in the dark canyons,
And I silver that falls from eave and tree.
One, from his/her bright tall window that looks down,
You protect as a dreamer on the rain-bright city,
And he/she thinks his/her towers they are as a dream.
The western windows blaze in the last shine of the sun,
Pale roofs start to sparkle.
Bewaring down of a window stop in a wall
He sees us everybody;
Lifting our pale faces toward the rain,
Crossing the sky, and going again our ways,
Being standing in the street of access, waiting under the trees. . .
In the bright tall window he dreams there, and he/she sees
Thing we am blind to,--us who and they crowd
From wall to wall in the darkening of a cloud.
The gulls slowly go adrift above of the city of towers,
On the roofs to the darkening sea that them badminton;
Evening falls quickly in a pluvius evening.
The yellow lamps make again the occhiolino one to the time.
The towers arrive taller and more black against the sky.
III.
One, where the pale sea foamed to the yellow sand,
With wave to the din slowly wave,
You turns to the city of towers as skin in the evening;
And it slowly walked from the road of darkening toward him;
And it as the towers they darkened against the sky;
And through the distance the toll of a bell felt.
Along the road of darkening he expedited alone,
With his/her eyes thrown down,
It is thought as the roads they were hoarse with a tide of people,