X COSMIC IMPRESSIONISTS AND EPIC INFINITIES In the occult verse of Stefan George the mist is woven into the words; in that of ALFRED MOMBERT (1872-1942) it lies clinging over them, but shifting to reveal strange glimpses of the Unveil or chaos, of planets rising half-formed from blind seas, with a spirit-being ('the sea-gull shoots freely through his body5) ranging through the seething clouds: the poet-creator, or God, with logos nesting in his hair. At a cursory glance at this weltering vapour the wary reader may well say: blamr Dunst pure and simple, but with Mombert familiarity breeds a distant, if not effortless, com- prehension. The terror is in the ideas, not in the language; this is of the simplest: it is even very often like the babbling of a child. Nor is there intricacy of rhythm or even the melody of rapt music: it is all rather prose poetry lifting here and there into ghost-like incantation. The early poems of Tag und Nacht (i 894) have the lure of simplicity; the later verse (Der Gluhende, 1896; Die Schopfung, 1897; Der Denker, 1901; Die Bliite des Chaos, 1905; Attar> 1925; the two dramas Aiglas Herabkunft, 1929, and Aiglas Tempel, 1931) can only be (like Einstein) an acquired taste. Der Held der Erde (1919) is a mythically transfigured vision of the First Great War. "Symphonic dramas' is the name he gives to the trilogy Aeon, der Weltgesuchte (1907), Aeon, ^wischen den Framn (1910), and Aeon vor Syraktis (1911); Aeon is the genius of humanity wedded at Syra- cuse, in the face of the teeming east and at the cradle of the sea- faring nations, to Semiramis, the mother of peoples. Here all is symbol: thus Aeon is 'between two women' as in temporal dramas, but of these women one is Chaos and the othet Form, or Gothic art (unformed and therefore to-be-shaped) and Greek art (formed and perfect). The poet's aim, at which he toiled for fifty years, was 242