I’ll take a stroll through wintry night air to free my mind from its dark wisps and snares.
While walking in the night’s leaden fog that weighs upon both eyes and mind, a building emerges from dampening slog adorned with columns of marble refined.
The fog oppresses all the known world, with eyes and ears slammed shut by fear. Its thralls have spread, its pall unfurled to wring out all sense of what was clear.
And yet: Here rises from black fog’s embrace the lights of a campus that spite fog’s dimming wastes.
Upon building’s brow, above the main gate, two words inscribed. Letters gleam through gloom and icy tendrils of iron mist’s weight: “Auditorium Maximum” —
— the place of the greatest hearing. If only this hall could vastly hold the sum of all in fog a-fearing, to teach each to hear and be thus consoled.
To live in more than piecemeal peace in a heartily hearth-warmed hall where all must learn the art of hearing, to share in the greatest art of all.
Inspired by seeing the building as described and named in the poem while walking in a dark foggy night through the New Palace and University of Potsdam grounds in late December.