Paul celan (1920- 1970) was born in a German-speaking Jewish family. His parents died in Nazi concentration camps. Celan himself went through hardships and settled in Paris on 1948. Celan shocked the postwar German poetry world with his poem Death Fugue, and later published many poems, which reached a remarkable artistic height and became the most influential German poet after Rilke.
Fog angle
Hide your mouth in the mirror,
Bow to the pillar of self-esteem,
Grab the fence of the cage:
Dedicate yourself to the darkness,
Say my name and take me to him.