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  抒情插曲(1822-1823)
  
  
  
  我把叹息和苦痛,
  灌输在这本书中,
  你要是把它打开,
  就露出我的隐衷。
  
  
  2
  
  从我的眼泪里
  迸发出许多花朵,
  而我的叹息
  变成了夜莺之歌。
  
  爱人呵,如果你爱我,
  我将把花儿全部奉献,
  而且在你的窗前
  将响起夜莺的歌声。
  
  6
  
  把你的脸贴住我的脸,
  让泪眼留在一起!
  把你的心贴住我的心,
  让爱火烧在一起!
  
  等我们盈盈的泪珠,
  滴入这熊熊的火里,
  等我双臂抱紧了你--
  我情愿殉情而死!
  
  8
  
  太空中的星辰,
  几千年来毫无更动,
  它们彼此面面相觑,
  怀着爱情的悲痛。
  
  它们说着一种语言,
  十分丰富而美丽,
  可是任何语言学家,
  对这种语言都茫无所知。
  
  我倒曾把它钻研,
  而且铭记不忘;
  我所依据的文法
  就是我爱人的面庞。
  
  22
  
  我曾很久地占有你的心房,
  你已完全把它淡忘,
  你那甜蜜、虚伪而狭隘的心,
  比它更甜蜜而虚伪的真是难寻。
  
  你把那爱情和烦恼遗忘,
  它们曾一同折磨过我的心房。
  我不知道,爱比苦是否更深?
  我只知道,这二者都深得骇人!
  
  35
  
  有一棵松树孤单单
  在北国荒山上面。
  它进入睡乡;冰和雪
  给它裹上了白毯。
  
  它梦见一棵棕榈,
  长在遥远的东方,
  孤单单默然哀伤,
  在灼热的岩壁上。
  
  40
  
  亲爱的美丽的情人,
  我总是不能忘记:
  我曾一度占有过你,
  你的心和你的身子。
  
  你那娇柔而年轻的身子,
  我还想将它占有;
  那颗心尽可掩埋,
  我有自己的心已经足够。
  
  我要将我的心切开,
  拿一半吹进你的躯体,
  我要抱紧了你,
  我们的身心要合为一体。
  
  42
  
  无数旧时的幻影
  从坟墓里升起,
  好像我在你的身旁
  曾经度过的一些日子。
  
  白天我像做梦一样,
  跑遍了大街小巷;
  人们奇怪地看我,
  我是沉默而忧伤。
  
  夜晚的情调更佳,
  街道上空空无人;
  只有我和我身影,
  默默地逍遥闲行。
  
  我漫步走过溪桥,
  脚步传出了回音;
  月儿从云端透露,
  用殷勤的眼光致敬。
  
  我在你家门前立停,
  凝视着天空,
  凝视着你的窗户--
  我的心儿悲痛。
  
  我知道你常探出窗外
  向着下面窥视,
  看我立在月光之下,
  宛如一根柱子。
  
  54
  
  在你的面颊上
  是炎炎的夏天;
  在你的心儿里,
  是冰冷的冬天。
  
  我最爱的人儿!
  这些都要改变。
  你脸上将是冬天,
  你心里将是夏天。
  
  55
  
  两人互相分离,
  总要握手惜别,
  开始哭泣流泪,
  然后不住叹息。
  
  我们没有哭泣,
  没有唉声叹气!
  直到分别以后,
  才流泪而叹息。
  
  61
  
  我在梦中哭了一阵,
  我梦见,你躺在墓里。
  我醒来,面孔上
  泪珠儿还流个不止。
  
  我在梦中哭了一阵,
  我梦见,你把我丢弃。
  我醒来,哀哀地,
  我还大哭了多时。
  
  我在梦中哭了一阵,
  我梦见,你没有变心。
  我醒来,泪珠儿
  还像潮涌似地飞迸。
  
  62
  
  我每夜在梦中和你相见,
  看见你对我情意绵绵,
  我不由得放声大哭,
  跪倒在你的脚边。
  
  你凄然地向我凝眸,
  轻摇着你金发的头;
  像珍珠一样的泪珠
  从你的眼中缓缓下流。
  
  你悄悄地对我轻语,
  并且授给我一束柏枝。
  我醒来,不见柏枝,
  你的轻语我也忘记。
  
  68
  
  爱人啊,自从你的眼光
  不再向我炯炯洞照,
  阴郁而浓密的黑暗,
  总围绕在我的周遭。
  
  那美丽的爱情之星,
  已消灭了灿烂的光华,
  深渊在我的足下开口--
  太古之夜啊,请把我吞下!
  
  钱春绮 译
  
  
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  时事诗(1839-1856)
  
   
  
  6 秘密
  
  我们不叹息,眼泪已干,
  我们常微笑,甚至笑出声来!
  任何眼色,任何表情,
  决不把秘密泄漏出来。
  
  它怀着沉默的痛苦
  躲在我们热烈的灵魂深处:
  即使它在粗鲁的心中喧嚷,
  嘴总是痉挛地紧紧闭住。
  
  你去问摇篮里的婴儿,
  你去问坟墓里的死尸,
  也许他们会向你公布
  我经常对你保守的秘密。
  
  11 人生航行
  
  一片欢笑和歌唱!
  太阳的光辉闪烁摇晃。
  波浪颠簸着快乐的轻舟。
  我和知友们坐在舱中,情思悠悠。
  
  小船遭难,撞碎得无踪无影,
  我的友人们又谁都不善泅泳,
  他们在祖国的海中化作波臣;
  暴风把我飘掷到塞纳河滨。
  
  我和一些新的朋友,
  登上一只新的客舟;
  异国的风波将我东飘西荡——
  故国迢迢!我心忧伤!
  
  又是一片歌唱和欢笑——
  船板破碎,狂风怒号——
  天上没有一颗星辰照耀——
  我心忧伤!故国迢迢!
  
  钱春绮 译
  
  
  
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  还乡曲(1823-1824)
  
   
  
  1
  
  在我极端阴暗的生活里,
  曾闪烁过一个美丽的清姿;
  而今这清姿已经消失,
  我眼前尽是茫茫的黑夜。
  
  孩子们处在黑暗之中,
  常要觉得惴惴不安,
  他们总是高声唱歌,
  以便把那恐怖驱散。
  
  我这发狂的孩子,
  如今在黑暗之中唱歌;
  这歌儿虽不悦耳,
  却驱散了我的忧愁。
  
  34
  
  你那百合花似的手指,
  我怎能再吻它一次,
  把它放在我的心上,
  让我悄悄地哭死!
  
  你那紫罗兰的明眸,
  日夜在我面前浮起,
  这可爱的碧色之谜,
  我弄不懂它的意义。
  
  36
  
  他们俩互相悦慕,
  却不愿互吐真情;
  他们露着敌意的样子,
  情愿为爱情牺牲性命。
  
  最后他们彼此分离,
  只在梦中偶尔遇到;
  他们早已死去多时,
  自己还茫不知道。
  
  46
  
  在我最近的歌里,
  要是还脱离不了
  那往日的凄凉音调,
  请你不要心焦!
  
  稍待,我这悲歌哀音
  就要成为人间绝响,
  从我康复的心中
  要涌出新春的歌唱。
  
  49
  
  心,我的心,不要悲哀,
  你要忍受命运的安排,
  严冬劫掠去的一切,
  新春会给你还来。
  
  你还是那样绰绰有余!
  世界还是那样美丽多彩!
  我的心,只要你情之所钟,
  你都可以尽量去爱!
  
  64
  
  我要把我一切的苦痛
  惯入一句单独的话语,
  我把它交给了轻风,
  让轻风载它而去。
  
  在满藏苦痛的话语,
  被轻风带到你的身旁;
  不论何时何地,
  总在你的耳边喧嚷。
  
  等到你夜来安寝,
  刚要闭上你的眼睛,
  我的话语就要跟随你
  直入深深的梦境。
  
  99
  
  死亡是严寒的黑夜,
  生命是闷热的白天。
  天黑了,我进入梦乡,
  白天使我很疲惫。
  
  一棵树长到我坟墓上面,
  年轻的夜莺在枝头歌唱;
  它歌唱纯洁的爱情,
  在梦中我也听得见。
  
  钱春绮 译
  SONNETS TO MY MOTHER, B. HEINE,
  
  nte VON GELDERN.
  I.
  
  I HAVE been wont to bear my forehead high
  My stubborn temper yields with no good grace.
  The king himself might look me in the face,
  
  And yet I would not downward cast mine eye.
  
  But I confess, dear mother, openly,
  However proud my haughty spirit swell,
  When I within thy blessed presence dwell,
  
  Oft am I smit with shy humility.
  Is it thy soul, with secret influence,
  Thy lofty soul piercing all shows of sense,
  Which soareth, heaven-born, to heaven again ?
  
  Or springs it from sad memories that tell
  How many a time I caused thy dear heart pain,
  
  Thy gentle heart, that loveth me so well !
  
  3
  
  
  
  SONNETS TO MY MOTHER.
  
  II.
  
  IN fond delusion once I left thy side ;
  Unto the wide world's end I fain would fare,
  To see if I might find Love anywhere,
  
  And lovingly embrace Love as a bride.
  
  Love sought I in all paths, at every gate ;
  Oft and again outstretching suppliant palms,
  I begged in vain of Love the slightest alms,
  
  But the world laughed and offered me cold hate.
  Forever I aspired towards Love, forever
  Towards Love, and ne'ertheless I found Love nevcr,-
  
  And sick at heart, homeward my steps did move.
  And lo ! thou comest forth to welcome me ;
  And that which in thy swimming eyes I see,
  
  That is the precious, the long-looked-for Love.
  
  
  
  THE SPHINX.
  
  THIS is the old enchanted wood,
  Sweet lime trees scent the wind ;
  
  The glamor of the moon has cast
  A spell upon my mind.
  
  Onward I walk, and as I walk
  Hark to that high, soft strain !
  
  That is the nightingale, she sings,
  Of love and of love's pain.
  
  She sings of love and of love's pain,
  
  Of laughter and of tears.
  So plaintive her carol, so joyous her sobs,
  
  I dream of forgotten years.
  
  5
  
  
  
  THE SPHINX.
  
  Onward I walk, and as I walk,
  There stands before mine eyes
  
  A castle proud on an open lawn,
  Whose gables high uprise.
  
  
  
  With casements closed, and everywhere
  Sad silence in court and halls,
  
  It seemed as though mute death abode
  Within those barren walls.
  
  
  
  Before the doorway crouched a sphinx,
  Half horror and half grace ;
  
  With a lion's body, a lion's claws,
  And a woman's breast and face.
  
  
  
  A woman fair ! The marble glance
  Spake wild desire and guile.
  
  The silent lips were proudly curled
  In a confident, glad smile.
  
  
  
  THE SPHINX.
  
  The nightingale, she sang so sweet,
  
  I yielded to her tone.
  I touched, I kissed the lovely face,
  
  And lo, I was undone !
  
  
  
  The marble image stirred with life,
  The stone began to move ;
  
  She drank my fiery kisses' glow
  With panting thirsty love.
  
  
  
  She well nigh drank my breath away ;
  
  And, lustful still for more,
  Embraced me, and my shrinking flesh
  
  With lion claws she tore.
  
  
  
  Oh, rapturous martyrdom ! ravishing pain !
  
  Oh, infinite anguish and bliss !
  With her horrible talons she wounded me,
  
  While she thrilled my soul with a kiss.
  
  
  
  THE SPHINX.
  
  The nightingale sang : " Oh beautiful sphinx.
  
  Oh love ! what meaneth this ?
  That thou minglest still the pangs of death
  
  With thy most peculiar bliss ?
  
  Thou beautiful Sphinx, oh solve for me
  
  This riddle of joy and tears !
  I have pondered it over again and again,
  
  How many thousand years ! "
  
  
  
  DONNA CLARA.
  
  IN the evening through her garden
  Wanders the Alcalde's daughter ;
  Festal sounds of drum and trumpet
  Ring out hither from the castle.
  
  " I am weary of the dances,
  Honeyed words of adulation
  From the knights who still compare me
  To the sun, with dainty phrases.
  
  " Yes, of all things I am weary,
  Since I first beheld by moonlight,
  Him my cavalier, whose zither
  Nightly draws me to my casement.
  7* 9
  
  
  
  IO DONNA CLARA.
  
  " As he stands, so slim and daring,
  With his flaming eyes that sparkle
  From his nobly-pallid features,
  Truly he St. George resembles."
  
  
  
  Thus went Donna Clara dreaming,
  On the ground her eyes were fastened,
  When she raised them, lo ! before her
  Stood the handsome, knightly stranger.
  
  
  
  Pressing hands and whispering passion,
  These t;vain wander in the moonlight.
  Gently doth the breeze caress them,
  The enchanted roses greet them.
  
  
  
  The enchanted roses greet them,
  And they glow like love's own heralds ;
  " Tell me, tell me, my beloved,
  Wherefore, all at once thou blushcst."
  
  
  
  DONNA CLARA. II
  
  
  
  " Gnats were stinging me, my darling,
  And I hate these gnats in summer,
  E'en as though they were a rabble
  Of vile Jews with long, hooked noses.'
  
  
  
  " Heed not gnats nor Jews, beloved,"
  Spake the knight with fond endearments.
  From the almond-tree dropped downward
  Myriad snowy flakes of blossoms.
  
  
  
  Myriad snowy flakes of blossoms
  Shed around them fragrant odors.
  " Tell me, tell me, my beloved,
  Looks thy heart on me with favor ?"
  
  
  
  " Yes, I love thee, oh my darling,
  And I swear it by our Savior,
  Whom the accursed Jews did murder
  Long ago with wicked malice."
  
  
  
  12 DONNA CLARA.
  
  " Heed thou neither Jews nor Savior,"
  Spake the knight with fond endearments ;
  Far-off waved as in a vision
  Gleaming lilies bathed in moonlight.
  
  
  
  Gleaming lilies bathed in moonlight
  Seemed to watch the stars above them.
  " Tell me, tell me, my beloved,
  Didst thou not erewhile swear falsely ? "
  
  
  
  Naught is false in me, my darling,
  E'en as in my bosom floweth
  Not a drop of blood that's Moorish,
  Neither of foul Jewish current"
  
  
  
  " Heed not Moors nor Jews, beloved,"
  Spake the knight with fond endearments.
  Then towards a grove of myrtles
  Leads he the Alcalde's daughter.
  
  
  
  DONNA CLARA. 13
  
  And with love's slight, subtle meshes,
  He hath trapped her and entangled ;
  Brief their words, but long their kisses,
  For their hearts are overflowing.
  
  
  
  What a melting bridal carol,
  
  Sings the nightingale, the pure one !
  
  How the fire-flies in the grasses
  
  Trip their sparkling, torch-light dances !
  
  
  
  In the grove the silence deepens ;
  Naught is heard save furtive rustling
  Of the swaying myrtle branches,
  And the breathing of the flowers.
  
  
  
  But the sound of drum and trumpet
  Burst forth sudden from the castle.
  Rudely they awaken Clara,
  Pillowed on her lover's bosom.
  
  
  
  DONNA CLARA.
  
  " Hark, they summon me, my darling.
  But before I go, oh tell me,
  Tell me what thy precious name is,
  Which so closely thou hast hidden."
  
  And the knight, with gentle laughter,
  Kissed the fingers of his donna,
  Kissed her lips and kissed her forehead,
  And at last these words he uttered :
  
  " I, Sefiora, your beloved,
  Am the son of the respected
  Worthy, erudite Grand Rabbi,
  Israel of Saragossa ! "
  
  
  
  DON RAMIRO.
  
  " Donna Clara ! Donna Clara !
  Hotly-loved through years of passion !
  Thou hast wrought me mine undoing,
  And hast wrought it without mercy !
  
  *' Donna Clara ! Donna Clara !
  Still the gift of life is pleasant.
  But beneath the earth 'tis frightful,
  In the grave so cold and darksome.
  
  " Donna Clara ! Laugh, be merry,
  For to-morrow shall Fernando
  Greet thee at the nuptial altar.
  Wilt thou bid me to the wedding ? "
  
  15
  
  
  
  i6 DON RAAflRO.
  
  " Don Ramiro ! Don Ramiro !
  Very bitter sounds thy language,
  Bitterer than the stars' decrees are,
  Which bemock my heart's desire.
  
  
  
  " Don Ramiro ! Don Ramiro !
  Cast aside thy gloomy temper.
  In the world are many maidens,
  But us twain the Lord hath parted.
  
  
  
  " Don Ramiro, thou who bravely
  Many and many a man hast conquered,
  Conquer now thyself, to-morrow
  Come and greet me at my wedding."
  
  
  
  " Donna Clara ! Donna Clara !
  Yes, I swear it. I am coming.
  I will dance with thce the measure.
  Now good-night ! I come to-morrow."
  
  
  
  DON RAMIRO.
  
  " So good-night ! " The casement rattled,
  Sighing neath it, stood Ramiro.
  Long he stood a stony statue,
  Then amidst the darkness vanished.
  
  
  
  After long and weary struggling,
  Night must yield unto the daylight.
  Like a many-colored garden,
  Lies the city of Toledo.
  
  
  
  Palaces and stately fabrics
  Shimmer in the morning sunshine.
  And the lofty domes of churches
  Glitter as with gold incrusted.
  
  
  
  Humming like a swarm of insects,
  Ring the bells their festal carol.
  With sweet tones the sacred anthem
  From each house of God ascendeth.
  
  
  
  18 DON RAMIRO.
  
  But behold, behold ! beyond there,
  Yonder from the market- chapel,
  With a billowing and a swaying,
  Streams the motley throng of people.
  
  
  
  Gallant knights and noble ladies,
  In their holiday apparel;
  While the pealing bells ring clearly,
  And the deep-voiced organ murmurs.
  
  
  
  But a reverential passage
  In the people's midst is opened,
  For the richly-clad young couple,
  Donna Clara, Don Fernando.
  
  
  
  To the bridegroom's palace-threshold,
  Wind the waving throngs of people;
  There the wedding feast beginneth,
  Pompous in the olden fashion.
  
  
  
  DON RAMIRO.
  
  
  
  Knightly games and open table,
  Interspersed with joyous laughter,
  Quickly flying, speed the hours,
  Till the night again hath fallen.
  
  
  
  And the wedding-guests assemble
  For the dance within the palace,
  And their many-colored raiment
  Glitters in the light of tapers.
  
  v
  
  Seated on a lofty dais,
  
  Side by side, are bride and bridegroom,
  
  Donna Clara, Don Fernando,
  
  And they murmur sweet love-whispers.
  
  
  
  And within- the hall wave brightly
  All the gay-decked streams of dancers ;
  And the rolling drums are beaten.
  Shrill the clamorous trumpet soundeth.
  
  
  
  2O VON RAMIRO.
  
  " Wherefore, wherefore, beauteous lady,
  Are thy lovely glances fastened
  Yonder in the hall's far corner ? "
  In amazement asked Fernando.
  
  
  
  " See'st thou not, oh Don Fernando,
  Yonder man in sable mantle ? "
  And the knight spake, kindly smiling,
  " Why, 'tis nothing but a shadow."
  
  
  
  But the shadow drew anear them,
  'Twas a man in sable mantle.
  Clara knows at once Ramiro,
  And she greets him, blushing crimson.
  
  
  
  And the dance begins already,
  
  Gaily whirl around the dancers
  
  In the waltz's reckless circles,
  
  Till the firm floor creaks and trembles.
  
  
  
  DON RAMIRO. 21
  
  " Yes, with pleasure, Don Ramiro,
  I will dance with thee the measure ;
  But in such a night-black mantle
  Thou shouldst never have come hither. "
  
  
  
  With fixed, piercing eyes, Ramiro
  Gazes on the lovely lady.
  Then embracing her, speaks strangely,
  " At thy bidding I came hither."
  
  
  
  In the wild whirl of the measure,
  Press and turn the dancing couple,
  And the rolling drums are beaten,
  Shrill the clamorous trumpet soundeth.
  
  
  
  " White as driven snow thy cheeks are ! "
  Whispers Clara, inly trembling.
  " At thy bidding I came hither,"
  Hollow ring Ramiro's accents.
  
  
  
  22 DON RAM1RO.
  
  In the hall the tapers flicker,
  With the eddying stream of dancers,
  And the rolling drums are beaten,
  Shrill the clamorous trumpet soundeth.
  
  
  
  " Cold as ice I feel thy fingers,"
  Whispers Clara, thrilled with terror.
  " At thy bidding I came hither."
  And they rush on in the vortex.
  
  
  
  " Leave me, leave me, Don Ramiro !
  Like a corpse's scent thy breath is."
  Once again the gloomy sentence,
  "At thy bidding I came hither."
  
  
  
  And the firm floor glows and rustles,
  Merry sound the horns and fiddles ;
  Like a woof of strange enchantment,
  All within the hall is whirling.
  
  
  
  DON RAM IRQ.
  
  
  
  " Leave me, leave me, Don Ramiro ! "
  
  All is waving and revolving.
  
  Don Ramiro still repeateth,
  
  " At thy bidding I came hither."
  
  
  
  " In the name of God, begone then ! "
  Clara shrieked, with steadfast accent.
  And the word was scarcely spoken,
  When Ramiro had evanished.
  
  
  
  Clara stiffens ! deathly pallid,
  
  Numb with cold, with night encompassed.
  
  In a swoon the lovely creature
  
  To the shadowy realm is wafted.
  
  
  
  But the misty slumber passes,
  And at last she lifts her eyelids.
  Then again from sheer amazement
  Her fair eyes at once she closes.
  
  
  
  DON RAM1RO,
  
  For she sees she hath not risen,
  Since the dance's first beginning.
  Still she sits beside the bridegroom,
  And he speaks with anxious question.
  
  " Say, why waxed thy cheek so pallid ?
  Wherefore filled thine eyes with shadows?'
  " And Ramiro ? " stammers Clara,
  And her tongue is glued with horror.
  
  But with deep and serious furrows
  Is the bridegroom's forehead wrinkled.
  " Lady, ask not bloody tidings
  Don Ramiro died this morning."
  
  
  
  TANNHAUSER,
  
  A LEGEND.
  I.
  
  GOOD Christians all, be not entrapped.
  
  In Satan's cunning snare.
  I sing the lay of Tannhauser,
  
  To bid your souls beware.
  
  Brave Tannhauser, a noble knight,
  Would love and pleasure win.
  
  These lured him to the Venusberg.
  Seven years he bode therein.
  
  " Dame Venus, loveliest of dames,
  
  Farewell, my life, my bride.
  Oh give me leave to part from thee,
  
  No longer may I bide."
  2 25
  
  
  
  26 TANNIIAUSER.
  
  " My noble knight, my Tannhauser,
  Thou'st kissed me not to-day.
  
  Come, kiss me quick, and tell me now,
  What lack'st thou here, I pray ?
  
  
  
  " Have I not poured the sweetest wine
  Daily for thee, my spouse ?
  
  And have I not with roses, dear,
  Each day enwreathed thy brows ? "
  
  
  
  " Dame Venus, loveliest of dames,
  
  My soul is sick, I swear,
  Of kisses, roses and sweet wine,
  
  .tod craveth bitter fare.
  
  " We have laughed and jested far too much,
  And I yearn for tears this morn.
  
  Would that my head no rose-wreath wore,
  But a crown of sharpest thorn."
  
  
  
  TANNHA USER.
  
  " My noble knight, my Tannhauser,
  
  To vex me thou art fain.
  Hast thou not sworn a thousand times
  
  To leave me never again ?
  
  
  
  " Come ! to my chamber let us go ;
  
  Our love shall be secret there.
  And thy gloomy thoughts shall vanish at sight
  
  Of my lily-white body fair."
  
  
  
  " Dame Venus, loveliest of dames,
  Immortal thy charms remain.
  
  As many have loved thee ere to-day,
  So many shall love again.
  
  
  
  " But when I think of the heroes and gods,
  
  Who feasted long ago,
  Upon thy lily-white body fair,
  
  Then sad at heart I grow.
  
  
  
  28 TANNHA USER.
  
  Thy lily-white body filleth me
  With loathing, for I see
  
  How many more in years to come
  Shall enjoy thee, after me."
  
  
  
  " My noble knight, my Tannhauser,
  Such words thou should'st not say.
  
  Far liefer had I thou dealt'st me a blow,
  As often ere this day.
  
  
  
  " Far liefer had I thou should'st strike me low,
  
  Than such an insult speak ;
  Cold, thankless Christian that thou art,
  
  Thus the pride of my heart to break.
  
  
  
  " Because I have loved thee far too well,
  To hear such words is my fate,
  
  Farewell ! I give thee free leave to go.
  Myself, I open the gate ! "
  
  
  
  TANNHA USER.
  
  II.
  
  In Rome, in Rome, in the holy town,
  To the music of chimes and of song,
  
  A stately procession moves, the Pope
  Strides in the midst of the throng.
  
  This is the pious Pope Urbain ;
  
  The triple crown he wears,
  The crimson robe, and many a lord
  
  The train of his garment bears.
  
  " Oh, holy Father, Pope Urbain,
  
  I have a tale to tell ;
  I stir not hence, till thou shrivest me,
  
  And savest me from hell."
  
  The people stand in a circle near,
  And the priestly anthems cease ;
  
  Who is the pilgrim wan and wild,
  Who falleth upon his knees ?
  
  
  
  29
  
  
  
  TANNHA USER.
  
  " Oh, holy Father, Pope Urbain,
  Who canst bind and loose as well,
  
  Now save me from the evil one,
  And from the pains of hell.
  
  
  
  " I am the noble Tannhauser,
  Who love and lust would win,
  
  These lured me to the Venusberg,
  Seven years I bode therein.
  
  
  
  ' Dame Venus is a beauteous dame,
  Her charms have a subtle glow.
  
  Like sunshine with fragrance of flowers blent
  Is her voice so soft and low.
  
  
  
  " As the butterfly flutters anigh a flower,
  From its delicate chalice sips,
  
  In such wise ever fluttered my soul
  Anigh to her rosy lips.
  
  
  
  T ANN HA USER.
  
  " Her rich black ringlets floating loose,
  
  Her noble face enwreath.
  When once her large eyes rest on thee,
  
  Thou canst not stir nor breathe.
  
  
  
  " When once her large eyes rest on thee,
  With chains thou art bounden fast ;
  
  'Twas only in sorest need I chanced
  To flee from her hill at last.
  
  
  
  " From her hill at last I have escaped,
  But through all the livelong day,
  
  Those beautiful eyes still follow me.
  ' Come back ! ' they seem to say.
  
  
  
  " A lifeless ghost all day I pine,
  But at night I dream of my bride,
  
  And then my spirit awakes in me.
  She laughs and sits by my side.
  
  
  
  32 TANNHAUSER.
  
  "How hearty, how happy, how reckless her laugh !
  
  How the pearly white teeth outpeep !
  Ah ! when I remember that laugh of hers,
  
  Then sudden tears must I weep.
  
  
  
  " I love her, I love her with all my might,
  And nothing my love can stay,
  
  Tis like to a rushing cataract,
  Whose force no man can sway.
  
  
  
  " For it dashes on from cliff to cliff,
  And roarcth and foameth still.
  
  Though it break its neck a thousand times,
  Its course it would yet fulfill.
  
  
  
  " Were all of the boundless heavens mine,
  
  I would give them all to her,
  I would give her the sun, I would give her the moon
  
  And each star in its shining sphere.
  
  
  
  TANNHAUSER.
  
  " I love her, I love her with all my might,
  With a flame that devoureth me.
  
  Can these be already the fires of hell,
  That shall glow eternally ?
  
  
  
  " Oh, holy Father, Pope Urbain,
  Who canst bind and loose as well,
  
  Now save me from the evil one,
  And from the pains of hell ! "
  
  
  
  Sadly the Pope upraised his hand,
  
  And sadly began to speak :
  " Tannhauser, most wretched of all men,
  
  This spell thou canst not break.
  
  
  
  " The devil called Venus is the worst
  Amongst all we name as such.
  
  And nevermore canst thou be redeemed
  
  From the beautiful witch's clutch.
  3
  
  
  
  33
  
  
  
  34
  
  
  
  TANNHA USKK.
  
  " Thou with thy spirit must atone
  For the joys thou hast loved so well ;
  
  Accursed art thou ! thou are condemned
  Unto everlasting hell ! "
  
  
  
  HI.
  
  So quickly fared Sir Tannhauser,
  His feet were bleeding and torn
  
  Back to the Venusberg he came,
  Ere the earliest streak of mom.
  
  
  
  I )amc Venus, awakened from her sleep.
  From her bed upsprang in haste.
  
  Already she hath with her arms so white
  Her darling spouse embraced.
  
  Forth from her nose outstrcams the blood,
  The tears from her eyelids start ;
  
  She moistens the face of her darling spouse
  With the tears and blood of her heart.
  
  
  
  TANNHA USER.
  
  The knight lay down upon her bed,
  And not a word he spake ;
  
  Dame Venus to the kitchen went
  A bowl of broth to make.
  
  
  
  She gave him broth, she gave him bread,
  She bathed his wounded feet ;
  
  She combed for him his matted hair,
  And laughed so low and sweet:
  
  
  
  " My noble knight, my Tannhauser,
  Long hast thou left my side.
  
  Now tell me in what foreign lands
  So long thou couldst abide."
  
  
  
  " Dame Venus, loveliest of dames,
  
  I tarried far from home.
  In Rome I had some business, dear,
  
  But quickly back have come.
  
  
  
  35
  
  
  
  36 TANNHAUSER.
  
  " On seven hills great Rome is built,
  The Tiber flows to the sea.
  
  And while in Rome I saw the Pope ;
  He sent his love to thee.
  
  
  
  "Through Florence led my journey home,
  Through Milan, too, I passed ;
  
  And glad at heart, through Switzerland
  I clambered back at last.
  
  
  
  " But as I went across the Alps,
  
  The snow began to fall ;
  Below, the blue lakes smiled on me;
  
  I heard the eagles call.
  
  
  
  " When I upon St. Gothard stood,
  I heard the Germans snore ;
  
  For softly slumbered there below
  Some thirty kings and more.
  
  
  
  TANNHAUSER. 37
  
  " To Frankfort I on Schobbas came,
  Where dumplings were my food.
  
  They have the best religion there :
  Goose-giblets, too, are good.
  
  " In Weimar, the widowed muse's seat,
  
  Midst general grief I arrive.
  The people are crying ' Goethe's dead,
  
  And Eckermann's still alive ! '" *
  
  * There are eight more verses to this poem, which I take the lib-
  erty of omitting.
  
  K. L.
  
  
  
  IN THE UNDERWORLD.
  
  
  
  " O to be a bachelor ! "
  
  Pluto now forever sighs.
  
  " In my marriage miseries,
  
  I perceive, without a wife
  Hell was not a hell before.
  
  " O to be a bachelor !
  Since my Proserpine is mine,
  Daily for my grave I pine,
  When she raileth I can hear
  
  Barking Cerberus no more.
  
  " My poor heart needs rest and ease,
  In the realm of shades I cry,
  No lost soul is sad as I.
  Sisyphus I envy now,
  
  And the fair Danai'ilc-*."
  
  38
  
  
  
  IN THE UNDERWORLD. 39
  
  II.
  
  In the realm of shades, on a throne of gold,
  By the side of her royal spouse, behold
  
  Fair Proserpine,
  
  With gloomy mien,
  While deep sighs upheave her bosom.
  
  
  
  " The roses, the passionate song I miss
  
  Of the nightingale ; yea, and the sun's warm kiss.
  
  Midst the Lemur's dread,
  
  And the ghostly dead,
  Now withers my life's young blossom.
  
  
  
  " I am fast in the yoke of marriage bound
  To this cursed rat-hole underground.
  
  Through my window at night,
  
  Peers each ghostly sprite,
  And the Styx murmurs lower and lower.
  
  
  
  40 ^V THE UNDERWORLD.
  
  " To-day I have Charon invited to dinner,
  
  He is bald, and his limbs they grow thinner and thinner,
  
  And the judges, beside,
  
  Of the dead, dismal-eyed,
  In such company I shall grow sour."
  
  in.
  
  Whilst their grievance each is venting
  
  In the underworld below,
  -Ceres, on the earth lamenting,
  
  Wrathful wanders to and fro.
  
  With no hood in sloven fashion,
  
  Neither mantle o'er her gown,
  She declaims that lamentation
  
  Unto all of us well-known ;
  
  " Is the blessed spring-tide here ?
  
  Has the earth again grown young ?
  Green the sunny hills appear,
  
  And the icy band is sprung.
  
  
  
  IN THE UNDERWORLD. 41
  
  " Mirrored from the clear blue river.
  
  Zeus, unclouded, laugheth out,
  Softer zephyr's wings now quiver,
  
  Buds upon the fresh twig sprout."
  
  
  
  In the hedge a new refrain ;
  
  Call the Oreads from the shore,
  " All thy flowers come again,
  
  But thy daughter comes no more/'
  
  
  
  Ah, how many weary days
  
  I have sought o'er wide earth's space.
  Titan, all thy sunny rays
  
  I have sent on her dear trace.
  
  
  
  Yet not one renews assurance
  
  Of the darling face I wot,
  Day, that finds all things, the durance
  
  Of my lost one, findeth not.
  
  
  
  42 Iff THE UNDERWORLD.
  
  " Hast thou ravished, Zeus, my daughter ?
  
  Or, love-smitten by her charms,
  Hath, o'er Orcus's night-black water,
  
  Pluto snatched her in his arms ?
  
  
  
  " Who towards that gloomy strand
  Herald of my grief will be ?
  
  Ever floats the bark from land,
  Bearing phantoms ceaselessly.
  
  
  
  " Closed those shadowy fields are ever
  
  Unto any blessed sight.
  Since the Styx hath been a river,
  
  It hath borne no living wight.
  
  
  
  " There are thousand stairs descending,
  But not one leads upward there.
  
  To her tears no token lending,
  At the anxious mother's prayer."
  
  
  
  IN THE UNDERWORLD.
  
  IV.
  
  Oh, my mother-in-law, Ceres,
  
  Cease thy cries, no longer mourn.
  
  I will grant thee, what so dear is,
  I myself so much have borne.
  
  Take thou comfort. We will fairly
  Thy child's ownership divide ;
  
  And for six moons shall she yearly
  In the upper world abide.
  
  Help thee through long summer hours
  
  In thy husbandry affairs ;
  Binding up for thee the flowers,
  
  While a new straw-hat she wears.
  
  She will dream when twilight pleasant
  Colors all the sky with rose ;
  
  When by brooks some clownish peasant
  Sweetly on his sheep's pipe blows.
  
  
  
  43
  
  
  
  44 *N THE UNDERWORLD.
  
  Not a harvest dance without her,
  She will frisk with Jack and Bess ;
  
  Midst the geese and calves about her
  She will prove a lioness.
  
  
  
  Hail, sweet rest ! I breathe free, single,
  
  Here in Orcus far from strife,
  Punch with Lethe I will mingle,
  
  And forget I have a wife.
  
  v.
  
  At times thy glance appeareth to importune,
  As though thou didst some secret longing prove.
  
  Alas, too well I know it, thy misfortune
  A life frustrated, a frustrated love.
  
  
  
  How sad thine eyes are ! Yet have I no power
  To give thee back thy youth with pleasure rife ;
  
  Incurably thy heart must ache each hour
  For love frustrated and frustrated life.
  
  
  
  THE VALE OF TEARS.
  
  THE night wind through the crannies pipes,
  
  And in the garret lie
  Two wretched creatures on the straw,
  
  As gaunt as poverty.
  
  And one poor creature speaks and says,
  
  " Embrace me with thine arm,
  And press thy mouth against my mouth,
  
  Thy breath will keep me warm."
  
  The other starveling speaks and says,
  
  " When I look into thine eyes
  Pain, cold and hunger disappear,
  
  And all my miseries."
  
  45
  
  
  
  THE VALE OF TEARS.
  
  They kissed full oft, still more they wept,
  Clasped hands, sighed deep and fast ;
  
  They often laughed, they even sang,
  And both were still at last.
  
  
  
  With morning came the coroner,
  And brought a worthy leech,
  
  On either corpse to certify
  The cause of death of each.
  
  
  
  The nipping weather, he affirmed,
  Had finished the deceased.
  
  Their empty stomachs also caused,
  Or hastened death at last
  
  
  
  He added that when frost sets in
  
  Tis needful that the blood
  Be warmed with flannels ; one should have,
  
  Moreover, wholesome food.
  
  
  
  SOLOMON.
  
  DUMB are the trumpets, cymbals, drums and shawms to-
  night,
  
  The angel shapes engirdled with the sword,
  About the royal tent keep watch and ward,
  
  Six thousand to the left, six thousand to the right.
  
  They guard the king from evil dreams, from death.
  
  Behold ! a frown across his brow they view.
  
  Then all at once, like glimmering flames steel-blue,
  Twelve thousand brandished swords leap from -the sheath.
  
  But back into their scabbards drop the swords
  Of the angelic host ; the midnight pain
  Hath vanished, the king's brow is smooth again ;
  
  And hark ! the royal sleeper's murmured words :
  
  47
  
  
  
  48 SOLOMON.
  
  " O Shulamite, the lord of all these lands am I,
  This empire is the heritage I bring,
  For I am Judah's king and Israel's king ;
  
  But if thou love me not, I languish and I die."
  
  
  
  MORPHINE.
  
  MARKED is the likeness 'twixt the beautiful
  And youthful brothers, albeit one appear
  Far paler than the other, more serene ;
  Yea, I might almost say, far comelier
  Than his dear brother, who so lovingly
  Embraced me in his arms. How tender, soft
  Seemed then his smile, and how divine his glance !
  No wonder that the wreath of poppy-flowers
  About his head brought comfort to my brow,
  And with its mystic fragrance soothed all pain
  From out my soul. But such delicious balm
  A little while could last. I can be cured
  Completely only when that other youth,
  The grave, pale brother, drops at last his torch.
  Lo, sleep is good, better is death in sooth
  The best of all were never to be born.
  
  4 49
  
  
  
  SONG.
  
  OFT in galleries of art
  
  Thou hast seen a knight perchance,
  Eager for the wars to start,
  
  Well-equipped with shield and lance.
  
  Him the frolic loves have found,
  Robbed him of his sword and spear,
  
  And with chains of flowers have bound
  Their unwilling chevalier.
  
  Held by such sweet hindrances,
  Wreathed with bliss and pain, I stay,
  
  While my comrades in the press
  Wage the battle of the day.
  
  50
  
  
  
  SONG.
  
  NIGHT lay upon my eyelids,
  About my lips earth clave ;
  
  With stony heart and forehead
  I lay within my grave.
  
  
  
  How long I cannot reckon,
  I slept in that strait bed ;
  
  I woke and heard distinctly
  A knocking overhead.
  
  " Wilt thou not rise, my Henry ?
  
  The eternal dawn is here ;
  The dead have re- arisen,
  
  Immortal bliss is near."
  
  
  
  SOA'G.
  
  
  
  " I cannot rise, my darling,
  I am blinded to the day.
  
  Mine eyes with tears, thou knowest,
  Have wept themselves away."
  
  
  
  " Oh, I will kiss them, Henry,
  Kiss from thine eyes the night.
  
  Thou shall behold the angels
  And the celestial light."
  
  
  
  " I cannot rise, my darling,
  
  My blood is still outpoured
  Where thou didst wound my heart once
  
  With sharp and cruel word."
  
  
  
  " I'll lay my hand, dear Henry,
  
  Upon thy heart again.
  Then shall it cease from bleeding.
  
  And stilled shall be its pain."
  
  
  
  SONG. 53
  
  
  
  " I cannot rise, my darling,
  My head is bleeding see !
  
  I shot myself, thou knowest,
  When thou wast reft from me."
  
  
  
  " Oh, with my hair, dear Henry,
  I'll staunch the cruel wound,
  
  And press the blood-stream backward ;
  Thou shalt be whole and sound."
  
  
  
  So kind, so sweet she wooed me,
  I could not say her nay ;
  
  I tried to rise and follow,
  And clasp my loving may.
  
  
  
  Then all my wounds burst open,
  From head and breast outbreak
  
  The gushing blood in torrents
  And lo, I am awake !
  
  
  
  SONG.
  
  DEATH comes, and now must I make known
  That which my pride eternally
  Prayed to withhold ; for thee, for thee,
  
  My heart has throbbed for thee alone.
  
  The coffin waits ! within my grave
  They drop me soon, where I shall rest.
  But thou, Marie, shall beat thy breast,
  
  And think of me, and weep and rave.
  
  And thou shall wring thy hands, my friend.
  Be comforted ! it is our fate,
  Our human fate, the good and great
  
  And fair must have an evil end.
  
  54
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  1823-1824.
  
  
  
  TO
  
  FREDERIKA VARNHAGEN VON ENSE,
  
  THE SONGS OP
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND
  
  ARK DEDICATED IN JOYFUL HOMAGE BY THE AUTHOR
  
  IIEINRICH HEINE.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  
  
  IN my life, too full of shadows,
  Beamed a lovely vision bright.
  
  Now the lovely vision's vanished,
  I am girt about by night.
  
  Little children in the darkness
  
  Feel uneasy fears erelong,
  And, to chase away their terrors,
  
  They will sing aloud a song.
  
  I, a foolish child, am singing
  Likewise in the dark apart.
  
  If my homely lay lack sweetness,
  Yet it cheers my anxious heart.
  3* 57
  
  
  
  58 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  II.
  
  I know not what spell is o'er me,
  That I am so sad to day ;
  
  An old myth floats before me
  I cannot chase it away.
  
  The cool air darkens, and listen,
  How softly flows the Rhine!
  
  The mountain peaks still glisten
  Where the evening sunbeams shine.
  
  The fairest maid sits dreaming
  
  In radiant beauty there.
  Her gold and her jewels are gleaming.
  
  She combeth her golden hair.
  
  With a golden comb she is combing ;
  
  A wondrous song sings she.
  The music quaint in the gloaming,
  
  Hath a powerful melody.
  
  
  
  59
  
  
  
  It thrills with a passionate yearning
  The boatman below in the night.
  
  He heeds not the rocky reef's warning,
  He gazes alone on the height.
  
  I think that the waters swallowed
  The boat and the boatman anon.
  
  And this, with her singing unhallowed,
  The Lorelei hath done.
  
  
  
  in.
  
  
  
  My heart, my heart is heavy,
  Though merrily glows the May.
  
  Out on the ancient bastion,
  Under the lindens, I stay.
  
  Below me the calm blue waters
  Of the quiet town-moat shine ;
  
  A boy in his boat rows past me,
  He whistles and drops his line.
  
  
  
  60 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  And yonder the cheerful colors,
  And tiny figures, one sees,
  
  Of people, and villas, and gardens,
  And cattle, and meadows, and trees.
  
  
  
  Young women are bleaching linen;
  
  They leap in the grass anear.
  The mill-wheel rains showers of diamonds,
  
  Its far away buzz I hear.
  
  
  
  Above on the gray old tower
  
  Stands the sentry house of the town.
  And a scarlet-coated fellow
  
  Goes pacing up and down.
  
  
  
  He toys with his shining musket
  That gleams in the sunset red,
  
  Presenting and shouldering arms now
  I wish he would shoot me dead.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND. 6 1
  
  IV.
  
  In tears through the woods I wander.
  
  The thrush is perched on the bough :
  She springs and sings up yonder
  
  " Oh, why so sad art thou ? "
  
  The swallows, thy sisters, are able
  
  My dear, to answer thee.
  They built clever nests in the gable,
  
  Where sweetheart's windows be,
  
  v.
  
  The night is wet and stormy,
  
  And void of stars the sky ;
  'Neath the rustling trees of the forest
  
  I wander silently.
  
  There flickers a lonely candle
  
  In the huntsman's lodge to-night.
  It shall not tempt me thither ;
  
  It burns with a sullen light.
  
  
  
  62 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  There sits the blind old granny,
  In the leathern arm-chair tall,
  
  Like a statue, stiff, uncanny
  And speaketh not at all.
  
  
  
  And to and fro strides, cursing,
  The ranger's red haired son,
  
  With angry, scornful laughter
  Flings to the wall his gun.
  
  
  
  The beautiful spinner weepeth,
  
  And moistens with tears her thread.
  
  At her feet her father's pointer,
  Whimpering, crouches his head.
  
  VI.
  
  When I met by chance in my travels
  All my sweetheart's family,
  
  Papa, mamma, little sister
  Most cordially greeted me.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND. 63
  
  About my health they inquired ;
  
  Nor even did they fail
  To say I was nowise altered,
  
  Only a trifle pale.
  
  
  
  I asked after aunts and cousins,
  And many a dull old bore.
  
  And after the dear little poodle,
  That barked so softly of yore.
  
  
  
  And how was my married sweetheart ?
  
  I asked them soon. They smiled,
  And in friendliest tone made answer
  
  She was soon to have a child.
  
  
  
  And I lisped congratulations,
  
  And begged, when they should see,
  
  To give her the kindest greetings,
  A thousand times for me.
  
  
  
  64 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  Burst forth the baby-sister,
  " That dear little dog of mine
  
  Went mad when he grew bigger,
  And we drowned him in the Rhine."
  
  
  
  The child resembles my sweetheart,
  The same old laugh has she ;
  
  Her eyes are the same ones over,
  That wrought such grief for me.
  
  VII.
  
  We sat in the fisher's cabin,
  Looking out upon the sea.
  
  Then came the mists of evening,
  Ascending silently.
  
  The lights began in the lighthouse
  
  One after one to burn,
  And on the far horizon
  
  A ship we could still discern.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  We spake of storm and shipwreck,
  The sailor and how he thrives,
  
  And how betwixt heaven and ocean,
  And joy and sorrow he strives.
  
  
  
  We spake of distant countries,
  South, North, and everywhere,
  
  And of the curious people,
  And curious customs there ;
  
  
  
  The fragrance and light of the Ganges,
  
  That giant-trees embower,
  Where a beautiful tranquil people
  
  Kneel to the lotus flower ;
  
  
  
  Of the unclean folk in Lapland,
  
  Broad-mouthed and flat-headed and small,
  Who cower upon the hearthstone,
  
  Bake fish, and cackle and squall.
  
  
  
  66 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  The maidens listened gravely,
  Then never a word was said,
  
  The ship we could see no longer ;
  It was far too dark o'erhead.
  
  
  
  VIII.
  
  Thou fairest fisher maiden,
  Row thy boat to the land.
  
  Come here and sit beside me,
  Whispering, hand in hand.
  
  Lay thy head on my bosom,
  And have no fear of me ;
  
  For carelessly thou trustest
  Daily the savage sea.
  
  My heart is like the ocean,
  With storm and ebb and flow,
  
  And many a pearl lies hidden
  Within its depths below.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  IX.
  
  The moon is up, and brightly
  
  Beams o'er the waters vast.
  I clasp my darling tightly ;
  
  Our hearts are beating fast.
  
  In the dear child's bosom, nestling,
  
  Alone I lie on the sand.
  " Hear'st thou the wild winds rustling ?
  
  Why trembles thy foam-white hand ? "
  
  " That is no wild wind sighing,
  
  That is the mermaid's lay ;
  And they are my sisters crying,
  
  Whom the sea swallowed one day."
  
  x.
  
  Up amidst the clouds, the moon,
  
  Like a giant orange, beams,
  O'er the gray sea shining down,
  
  With broad stripes and golden gleams.
  
  
  
  68 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  And I pace the shore alone,
  Where the billows white are broken.
  
  Many a tender word I hear, ,
  Words within the water spoken.
  
  Ah, the night is far too long,
  And my heart throbs fast for pleasure.
  
  Beautiful undines, come forth !
  
  Sing jmd dance your magic measure.
  
  Take my body and my soul :
  On your lap my head shall rest.
  
  Sing to death, caress to death ;
  Kiss the life from out my breast
  
  
  
  XI.
  
  All in gray clouds closely muffled,
  Now the high gods sleep together,
  
  And I listen to their snoring.
  Here below 'tis stormy weather.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  Stormy weather, raging tempest
  Soon the helpless vessel shatters.
  
  Who these furious winds can bridle ?
  Who can curb the lordless waters ?
  
  
  
  I can ne'er control the tempest,
  Over deck and masthead sweeping ;
  
  I will wrap me in my mantle,
  And will sleep as gods are sleeping,
  
  XII.
  
  The night wind draws his trousers on,
  
  His foam-white hose once more ;
  
  He wildly whips the waves anon,
  They howl, and rage, and roar.
  
  From yon dark height, with frantic might,
  
  The rain pours ceaselessly.
  It seems as if the ancient night
  
  Would drown the ancient sea.
  
  
  
  70 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  Anigh the mast the sea-mew screams,
  " With hoarse shrieks, flying low.
  Its every cry an omen seems,
  A prophecy of woe.
  
  
  
  XIII.
  
  The storm for a dance is piping,
  With bellow and roar and hiss.
  
  Hurrah ! how the ship is tossing,
  What a merry wild night is this !
  
  A living mountain of water
  The sea upheaves with might.
  
  Here an abyss is yawning ;
  There towers a foaming height
  
  And sounds of retching and curses
  Forth from the cabin come ;
  
  And I, to the mast close clinging,
  Long to be safe at home.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  
  
  XIV.
  
  i
  
  The evening shades are falling,
  The sea-fog spreads with night.
  
  Mysterious waters' are calling,
  There rises something white.
  
  The mermaid comes from the ocean,
  
  BesMe me sitting down ;
  Her white breast's breathing motion,
  
  I see through the gossamer gown.
  
  And she doth clasp and hold me,
  In passionate, painful, way.
  
  Too close thou dost enfold me,
  Thou lovely water fay !
  
  " Within mine arms I hide thee,
  With all my strength enfold,
  
  I warm myself beside thee,
  The night is far too cold."
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  Paler the moon is growing
  Through shadowy vapors gray.
  
  Thine eyes with tears are flowing,
  Thou lovely water fay !
  
  
  
  " With tears they are not flowing.
  
  As I from waves did rise,
  Forth from the ocean going,
  
  A drop fell in mine eyes."
  
  
  
  The sea-mews moan, entreating,
  What does the mad surf say ?
  
  Thy heart is wildly beating,
  Thou lovely water fay.
  
  
  
  " My heart is beating sadly
  And wild as ever it can,
  
  Because I love thee madly,
  Thou lovely son of man."
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  
  
  XV.
  
  When I before thy dwelling,
  
  In early morning pace,
  How gladly in the window
  
  I see thy gentle face.
  
  Thy brown-black eyes in pity,
  Mine own eyes, wistful scan,
  
  " Who art thou, and what lack'st thou,
  Thou strange, unhappy man ? "
  
  I am a German poet,
  
  Of goodly German fame,
  When their best names are spoken,
  
  Mine own they are sure to name.
  
  
  
  And what I lack, sweet maiden,
  Most Germans lack the same.
  When men name sharpest sorrows,
  Mine own they are sure to name.
  4
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  74
  
  
  
  XVI.
  
  
  
  The sea outspreading glorious,
  In the dying sunbeams shone.
  
  We sat by the lonely fisher's house,
  We sat there mute and alone.
  
  
  
  The waters swell, the mists arise,
  
  The sea-mew flutters past,
  And then from out thy loving eyes
  
  The tears come flowing fast.
  
  I see them falling on thy hand.
  
  Upon my knees I sink,
  And from the hollow of thy hand
  The burning tears I drink.
  
  
  Since then strange flames my flesh devour,
  
  My spent soul disappears,
  The wretched woman in that hour
  Poisoned me with her tears.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  XVII.
  
  Up yonder on the mountain,
  There stands a castle tall ;
  
  There dwelt three beauteous maidens,
  And I was loved by all.
  
  
  
  On Saturday Hetty kissed me,
  And Sunday was Julia's day ;
  
  On Monday Kunigunda
  
  Nigh hugged my breath away.
  
  On Tuesday, in the castle,
  My maidens gave a ball.
  
  The neighboring lords and ladies
  Came riding one and all.
  
  But I was not invited.
  
  Amazed they all appeared ;
  The gossiping aunts and cousins
  
  Remarked the fact, and sneered.
  
  
  
  jr(5 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  XVIII.
  
  Upon the far horizon
  
  Like a picture of the mist,
  
  Appears the towered city
  
  By the twilight shadows kissed.
  
  The moist, soft breezes ripple
  Our boat's wake gray and dark,
  
  With mournful measured cadence
  The boatman rows my bark.
  
  The sun from clouds outshining,
  Lights up once more the coast.
  
  The very spot it shows me
  Where she I loved was lost.
  
  XIX.
  
  All hail to thee, thou fairest
  And most mysterious town !
  
  That once inclosed my dearest
  Within thy gateways brown.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND
  
  77
  
  Speak out, ye towers and portals !
  
  My sweetheart, where is she ?
  I left her in your keeping ;
  
  Ye should my warders be.
  
  
  
  The towers are not guilty,
  
  For rooted fast were they.
  When sweetheart, with trunks and luggage,
  
  So quickly stole away.
  
  The gates gave willing passage,
  
  With noiseless bars and locks.
  A door will always open,
  
  When the adorer knocks.
  
  
  
  xx.
  
  
  
  I tread the dear familiar path,
  The old road I have taken ;
  
  I stand before my darling's house,
  Now empty and forsaken.
  
  
  
  78 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  Oh far too narrow is the street,
  
  The roofs seem tottering downward.
  
  The very pavement burns my feet ;
  I hurry faster onward.
  
  XXI.
  
  Here to her vows I listened,
  
  I tread the empty halls,
  And where her tear-drops glistened,
  
  The poisoned serpent crawls.
  
  XXII.
  
  The quiet night broods over roof-tree and steeple;
  
  Within this house dwelt my treasure rare.
  'Tis long since I left the town and its people,
  
  But the house stands still on the self-same square.
  
  
  
  Here stands, too, a man ; toward heaven he gazes,
  And he wrings his hands with a wild despair.
  
  I shudder with awe when his face he raises,
  
  For the moonlight shows me mine own self there.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND. 79
  
  Oh, pale sad creature! my ghost, my double,
  Why dost thou ape my passion and tears,
  
  That haunted me here with such cruel trouble,
  So many a night in the olden years ?
  
  XXIII.
  
  How can'st thou slumber calmly,
  
  Whilst I alive remain ?
  My olden wrath returneth,
  
  And then I snap my chain.
  
  
  
  Know'st thou the ancient ballad
  Of that dead lover brave,
  
  Who rose and dragged his lady
  At midnight to his grave ?
  
  
  
  Believe me, I am living ;
  
  And I am stronger far,
  Most pure, most radiant maiden,
  
  Than all the dead men are.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  XXIV.
  
  The maiden sleeps in her chamber,
  
  Where the trembling moonbeams glance,
  
  Without there singeth and ringeth
  The melody of a dance.
  
  " I will look just once from the window,
  
  To see who breaks my rest."
  A skeleton fiddles before her,
  
  And sings like one possessed.
  
  " To dance with me you promised,
  And you have broken your vow.
  
  To-night is a ball in the churchyard,
  Come out and dance with me now."
  
  The music bewitches the maiden ;
  
  Forth from her home doth she go ;
  She follows the bony fiddler,
  
  Who sings as he scrapes his bow.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  He fiddles, and hops and dances,
  And rattles his bones as he plays;
  
  His skull nods grimly and strangely,
  In the clear moonlight's rays.
  
  
  
  xxv.
  
  I gazed upon her portrait,
  
  While dark dreams filled my brain,
  And those beloved features
  
  Began to breathe again.
  
  I saw upon her lips then
  
  A wondrous smile arise,
  And as with tears of pity
  
  Glistened once more her eyes.
  
  Adown my cheeks in silence,
  The tears came flowing free.
  
  And oh ! I cannot believe it,
  That thou art lost to me !
  
  
  
  82 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  XXVI.
  
  I, a most wretched Atlas, the huge world,
  The whole huge world of sorrow I must carry.
  Yea, the unbearable must bear, though meanwhile
  My heart break in my bosom.
  
  Thou haughty heart, thyself hast willed it thus,
  Thou would'st be happy, infinitely happy,
  Or infinitely wretched, haughty heart !
  And lo ! now art thou wretched.
  
  XXVII.
  
  The years are coming and going,
  Whole races are borne to their rest ;
  
  But never ceases the passion
  That burns within my breast.
  
  Only once more I would see thee,
  
  And make thee a low salaam,
  And with my dying breath, murmur :
  
  " I love you still, Madame ! "
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  8
  
  XXVIII.
  
  I dreamed that the moon looked sadly down,
  And the stars with a troubled ray ;
  
  I went to my sweetheart's home the town
  Lies many a league away.
  
  My longing led me before her door ;
  
  I kissed the stone steps brown,
  That her feet had touched in the days of yore,
  
  And the trailing hem of her gown.
  
  The night was long, the night was cold,
  Ice-cold did the stone steps seem.
  
  In the window her own wan face, behold !
  Illumed by the moon's pale beam.
  
  XXIX.
  
  What means this lonely tear-drop
  
  That blurs my troubled sight,
  From olden times returning
  
  Back to mine eyes to-night ?
  
  
  
  84 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  Its many glimmering sisters
  
  Are vanished long ago,
  In the night and the wind they vanished
  
  With all my joy and my woe.
  
  
  
  And like the mists of evening
  Did those blue stars depart,
  
  That smiled all joys and sorrows
  Into my trusting heart.
  
  Alas ! my love, too, melted
  Like idle breath one day ;
  
  Oh lingering, lonely tear-drop,
  Thou also fade away !
  
  XXX.
  
  The pale half-moon of autumn
  Through clouds peers doubtfully.
  
  Within the lonely churchyard
  The parsonage I see.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND. gc
  
  The mother reads in her Bible,
  
  The son at the light doth gaze ;
  One drowsy daughter is nodding,
  
  While another speaks and says :
  
  
  
  " Ah me ! how dreary the days are !
  How dull, and dark, and mean !
  Only when there's a funeral
  Is anything to be seen."
  
  
  
  The mother looks from her Bible :
  
  " Nay, only four in all
  Have died since thy father was buried
  
  Without by the churchyard wall."
  
  
  
  Then yawns the eldest daughter,
  " I will starve no longer here ;
  
  I will go to the Count to-morrow,
  He is rich, and he loves me dear."
  
  
  
  86 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  The son bursts out a-laughing :
  
  "At the 'Star' three huntsmen drink deep ;
  They are making gold, and they promise
  
  To give me their secret to keep."
  
  Toward his lean face, flings the mother
  
  Her Bible, in wrath and grief.
  " Out ! God- forsaken beggar,
  
  Thou wilt be a common thief ! "
  
  
  
  They hear a tap on the window,
  And behold a beckoning hand.
  
  There in his sable vestments
  They see the dead father stand.
  
  XXXI.
  
  To-night is wretched weather,
  It snows, and storms, and rains ;
  
  Out in the pitch-black darkness
  I gaze through the window-panes.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  There flickers a lonely candle,
  Slow winding down the street ;
  
  And a'beldame, with her lantern,
  Goes hobblinsr on in the sleet.
  
  
  
  I think 'tis for eggs and butter
  That she braves this weather wild,
  
  To bake a cake for her daughter,
  Her grown-up ailing child.
  
  Who lies at home in her arm-chair,
  And sleepily blinks at the light.
  
  Over her beautiful forehead
  Her golden curls wave bright.
  
  
  
  XXXII.
  
  They think my heart is breaking,
  
  In sorrow's bitter yoke,
  I too begin to think it,
  
  As well as other folk.
  
  
  
  88 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  Thou large-eyed little darling,
  Do I not always say
  
  
  
  I love thee past all telling
  Love gnaws my heart away ?
  
  But only in my chamber
  I dare express my pain ;
  
  For always in thy presence
  Quite silent I remain.
  
  
  
  For there were evil angels
  Who sealed my lips so close.
  
  And oh ! from evil angels
  Sprang all my wretched woes.
  
  
  
  XXXIII.
  
  Ah, those pure white lily fingers,
  Once again could I but kiss them,
  
  Press them close against my heart,
  Melt away in silent weeping !
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND
  
  Oh, those clearest eyes of violet
  Hover day and night before me,
  
  And I ponder o'er the meaning
  Of those lovely blue enigmas.
  
  xxxiv.
  
  " Did she ne'er express compassion
  
  For thy tender situation ?
  Could'st thou never in her glances
  
  Read thy love's reciprocation ?
  
  " Could'st thou ne'er surprise the spirit
  In her bright eyes unawares ?
  
  Yet thou surely art no donkey,
  Dearest friend, in these affairs ! "
  
  
  
  XXXV.
  
  
  
  They loved one another, but neither
  Confessed a word thereof.
  
  They met with coldest glances,
  Though pining away with love.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  At last they parted ; their spirits
  
  Met but in visions rare.
  They are long since dead and buried,
  
  Though scarcely themselves aware.
  
  xxxvi.
  
  And when I lamented my cruel lot,
  You yawned in my face and you answered not.
  But now that I set it in daintiest rhyme,
  You flourish my trumpet all the time.
  
  XXXVII.
  
  I called the devil and he came,
  
  His face with wonder I must scan ;
  He is not ugly, he is not lame,
  
  He is a delightful, charming man.
  A man in the prime of life, in fact,
  Courteous, engaging and full of tact
  A diplomat, too, of wide research
  Who cleverly talks about state and church.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND. QJ
  
  A little pale, but that is en rtgle,
  
  For now he is studying Sanscrit and Hegel.
  
  His favorite poet is still Fouque ;
  
  With the brawls of the critics he meddles no more,
  
  For all such things he has given o'er,
  
  Unto his grandmother Hecate".
  
  He praised my forensic works that he saw,
  
  He had dabbled a little himself in law.
  
  He said he was proud my acquaintance to make,
  
  And should prize my friendship, and bowed as he
  
  spake.
  
  And asked if we had not met before
  At the house of the Spanish Ambassador ?
  Then I noted his features line by line,
  And found him an old acquaintance of mine.
  
  
  
  XXXVIH.
  
  Mortal, sneer not at the devil ;
  
  Life's a short and narrow way,
  And perdition everlasting
  
  Is no error of the day.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  Mortal, pay thy debts precisely,
  
  Life's a long and weary way ;
  And to-morrow thou must borrow,
  
  As thou borrow'dst yesterday.
  
  xxxix.
  
  Three holy kings from the .and of the West
  
  Go asking whoso passes,
  " Where is the road to Bethlehem,
  
  Ye gentle lads and lasses ? "
  
  But neither young nor old can tell.
  
  The kings fare patient onward,
  They follow a golden star o'erhead,
  
  That bright and kind shines downward.
  
  The star stands still o'er Joseph's house,
  
  Thither the pilgrims bringing ;
  The oxen low, the Infant cries,
  
  The three wise kings are singing.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  XL.
  
  My child, we two were children,
  
  As lively as ever you saw,
  We crept into the hencoop,
  
  And we hid there beneath the straw.
  
  And there, like cocks, crowed loudly,
  While folk went passing by.
  
  " Kickery-koo ! " they fancied,
  'Twas really the cock's own cry.
  
  The chests that lay in the courtyard,
  
  With paper we overlaid.
  Therein we lived together ;
  
  An excellent house we made.
  
  The old cat of our neighbor
  
  Would visit us at whiles ;
  We gave her bows and curtsies,
  
  And compliments and smiles.
  
  
  
  94 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  After her health we inquired
  Gravely whenever she came.
  
  To many an ancient Tabby
  
  Since then we have done the same.
  
  
  
  We talked like grown folks sagely,
  And sat there oft and long,
  
  Complaining how all had altered,
  Since the days when we were young.
  
  
  
  How love and faith and friendship
  Had vanished, the world was bare ;
  
  How dear were tea and coffee,
  And money had grown so rare !
  
  
  
  Those childish games are over,
  All things roll on with youth,
  
  Money, the world, and the seasons,
  And faith and love and truth.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  XLI.
  
  My heart is heavy ; from the present
  It yearns towards those old days again,
  
  When still the world seemed fair and pleasant,
  And men lived happy, free from pain.
  
  Now all things seem at six and sevens,
  A scramble and a constant dread ;
  
  Dead is the Lord God in the heavens,
  Below us is the devil dead.
  
  And all folks sad and mournful moving,
  Wear such a cross, cold, anxious face ;
  
  Were there not still a little loving,
  There would not be a resting place.
  XLII.
  
  As the moon with splendor pierces
  Through the dark cloud- veil of night,
  
  From my darksome Past emerges
  Once again a dream of light.
  
  
  
  06 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  All upon the deck were seated,
  Proudly sailing down the Rhine.
  
  Green with June the shores were glowing
  In the evening's sunset-shine.
  
  
  
  At the feet of a fair lady
  
  Sat I, full of thoughts untold,
  
  O'er her pale and lovely features
  Played the sunlight's ruddy gold.
  
  
  
  Lutes were ringing, boys were singing,
  Wondrous joy on stream and shore.
  
  Blue and bluer grew the heavens,
  And the spirit seemed to soar.
  
  
  
  Hill and city, wood and meadow,
  
  Glided past in fairy-wise.
  And I saw the whole scene mirrored
  
  In the lovely lady's eyes.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  XLIII.
  
  In a dream I saw my sweetheart,
  A woman harassed with care ;
  
  Faded, and haggard, and withered,
  The form that had bloomed so fair.
  
  One child in her arms she carried,
  And one by the hand she led.
  
  And trouble and poverty plainly
  In her eyes and her raiment I read.
  
  
  
  Across the square she tottered,
  And face to face we stood.
  
  She looked at me, and I spoke then
  In quiet but mournful mood.
  
  " Come home with me to my dwelling,
  Thou art pale and ill, I think,
  
  And there, with unceasing labor,
  
  I will furnish thee meat and drink.
  5
  
  
  
  98 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  "And I will serve thee, and cherish
  Thy children so wan and mild.
  
  And thyself more dearly than any,
  Thou poor, unhappy child.
  
  
  
  " Nor will I vex thee by telling
  The love that burns in my breast;
  
  And I will weep when thou diest
  Over thy place of rest."
  
  XLIV.
  
  " Dearest friend, what may it profit
  
  To repeat the old refrain ?
  Wilt thou, brooding still above it,
  
  Sitting on love's egg remain!
  
  Ah, it needs incessant watching;
  
  From the shell the chicks have risen.
  Clucking, they reward thy hatching,
  
  And this book shall be their prison."
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  XLV.
  
  Only bear with me in patience,
  If the notes of former wrongs
  
  Many a time distinctly echo
  In the latest of my songs.
  
  Wait ! the slow reverberation
  
  Of my grief wi'l soon depart,
  And a spring of new song blossom
  
  In my healed, reviving heart.
  
  XLVI.
  
  'Tis time that, more sober and serious grown,
  
  From folly at last I break free.
  I, who so long in comedian's gown,
  
  Have played in the play with thee.
  
  The scenes gaily painted were bright to behold,
  
  And in ultra- romantic tints shone.
  My knightly, rich mantle was spangled with gold ;
  
  Noblest feelings were ever mine own.
  
  
  
  100 HOMEWARD BOUA'D.
  
  But now with grave trouble my thoughts are beset,
  
  Although from the stage I depart ;
  And my heart is as wretchedly miserable yet,
  
  As though I still acted my part.
  
  Ah God ! all unwitting and wholly in jest,
  
  What I felt and I suffered I told.
  I have fought against Death who abode in my breast
  
  Like the dying wrestler of old.
  
  XLVII.
  
  The great king Wiswamitra
  
  In dire distress is now.
  He seeks with strife and penance
  
  To win Waschischta's cow.
  
  
  
  Oh, great King Wiswamitra,
  Oh what an ox art thou !
  
  So much to struggle and suffer,
  And only for a cow.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND. ioi
  
  XLVIII.
  
  Heart, my heart, oh, be not shaken !
  
  Bravely bear thy fate. Once more
  
  Shall the coming Spring restore
  What the Winter rude hath taken.
  
  How abundant is thy measure!
  
  Still, O world, how fair thou art !
  
  And thou yet may'st love, my heart,
  Everything that gives thee pleasure.
  
  XLIX.
  
  Thou seemest like a flower,
  
  So pure and fair and bright ;
  A melancholy yearning
  
  Steals o'er me at thy sight.
  
  I fain would lay in blessing
  
  My hands upon thy hair,
  Imploring God to keep thee,
  
  So bright, and pure, and fair.
  
  
  
  IO2 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  L.
  
  Child, I must be very careful,
  For thy soul would surely perish,
  
  If the loved heart in thy bosom
  Love for me should ever cherish.
  
  But the task proves all too easy,
  Strange regrets begin to move me.
  
  Meanwhile many a lime I whisper :
  " If I could but make her love me ! "
  
  LI.
  
  When on my couch reclining,
  Buried in pillows and night,
  
  There hovers then before me
  A form of grace and light.
  
  As soon as quiet slumber
  Has closed my weary eyes,
  
  Then softly does the image
  Within my dream arise.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  But with my dream at morning,
  
  It never melts away ;
  For in my heart I bear it
  
  Through all the livelong day.
  
  LII.
  
  Maiden with the lips of scarlet,
  Clearest, sweetest eyes that be,
  
  O my darling little maiden,
  Ever do I think of thee !
  
  
  
  Dreary is the winter evening :
  Would that I were in thy home,
  
  Sitting by thee, calmly chatting,
  In the cosy little room.
  
  And upon my lips, my darling,
  
  I would press thy small white hand.
  
  I would press and I would moisten
  With my tears thy small, white hand.
  
  
  
  103
  
  
  
  104
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  LIII.
  
  Let the snow without be piled,
  Let the howling storm rage wild,
  Beating o'er the window-pane,
  I will never more complain,
  For within my heart bide warm
  Spring-tide joy and sweetheart's form.
  
  
  
  LIV.
  
  Some to Mary bend the knee,
  Others unto Paul and Peter,
  I, however, I will worship,
  Sun of beauty, only thee.
  
  
  
  Kiss me, love me, dearest one,
  Be thou gracious, show me favor,
  Fairest sun among all maidens,
  Fairest maiden under the sun.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND. 105
  
  LV.
  
  Did not my pallid cheek betray
  
  My love's unhappy fate ?
  And wilt thou force my haughty lips
  
  To beg and supplicate ?
  
  Oh far too haughty are these lips,
  
  They can but kiss and jest.
  They speak perchance a scornful word,
  
  While my heart breaks in my breast.
  
  LVI.
  
  Dearest friend, thou art in love,
  Tortured with new woes thou art ;
  
  Darker grows it in thy brain,
  Lighter grows it in thy heart.
  
  Dearest friend, thou art in love,
  
  Though thou hast not yet confessed.
  
  I can see thy flaming heart
  Burn already through thy vest.
  
  
  
  IO6 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  LVII.
  
  I fain by thce would tarry,
  To rest there and to woo ;
  
  But thou away must hurry,
  Thou hadst too much to do.
  
  I told thee that my spirit
  Was wholly bound to thee,
  
  And thou didst laugh to hear it,
  And curtsy low to me.
  
  Yea, thou did'st much misuse me,
  In all my love's distress,
  
  And even didst refuse me
  At last the parting kiss.
  
  I will not for thy glory
  Go drown, when all is o'er ;
  
  My dear, this same old story
  Kcfcll me once before.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND. 107
  
  LVIII.
  
  Sapphires are those eyes of thine,
  
  So lively and so sweet,
  Thrjce blessed is the happy man
  
  Whom they with love will greet.
  
  Thy heart, it is a diamond,
  
  That sheds a splendid light.
  Thrice blessed is the happy man
  
  For whom it glows so bright.
  
  As red as rubies are thy lips,
  
  Naught fairer can I prove.
  Thrice blessed is the happy man
  
  To whom they whisper love.
  
  Oh, knew I but that happy man,
  
  Could I at last discover,
  Deep in the greenwood, all alone
  
  His bliss were quickly over.
  
  
  
  108 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  LIX.
  Lovers' vows, wherefrom thou turnest,
  
  Bound me closely to thy heart,
  Now my jest grows sober earnest,
  
  I am pierced by mine own dart.
  
  Laughingly thou stand'st before me
  
  If thou leave me in my need,
  All the powers of hell come o'er me,
  
  I shall shoot myself indeed.
  
  LX.
  
  Our life and the world have too fragment-like grown ;
  To the German Professor I'll hie me anon
  
  Who sets in straight order all things ovcrhurled.
  He will draw up a sensible system, I think,
  With his nightcap and nightgown he'll stop every chink
  
  In this tumble-down edifice known as the world.
  
  I.XI.
  
  Long through my racked and weary brain
  I )id endless thoughts and dreams revolve ;
  
  But now thy lovely eyes, my dear,
  Have brought me to a firm resolve.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  Within their radiance wise and kind,
  Where'er thine eyes shine, I remain.
  
  I could not have believed it true
  That I should ever love again.
  
  LXII.
  
  To-night they give a party,
  
  The house is all a-glow.
  Above, in the lighted window,
  
  Moves a shadow to and fro.
  
  Thou see'st me not in the darkness,
  
  I stand below, apart.
  Still less, my dear, thou seeest
  
  Within my gloomy heart.
  
  My gloomy heart it loves thee ;
  
  It breaks for love of thee,
  It breaks, and yearns, and bleedeth,
  
  Only thou wilt not see.
  
  
  
  109
  
  
  
  HO HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  LXIII.
  
  
  
  I fain would outpour all my sorrows
  
  In a single word to-day.
  To the merry winds I would trust it,
  
  They would merrily bear it away.
  
  They would bear it to thee, my darling,
  The word of sorrowful grace.
  
  Thou should'st hear it at every hour,
  Thou shouldst hear it in every place.
  
  And scarce in the midnight darkness
  Shouldst thou close thine eyes in sleep,
  
  Ere my whispered word, it would follow,
  Though thy dream were ever so deep.
  
  LXIV.
  
  Thou hast diamonds, and pearls and jewels,
  All thy heart covets in store,
  
  And the loveliest eyes under heaven
  My darling, what wouldst thou more ?
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND. \
  
  Upon thine eyes, so lovely,
  
  Have I written o'er and o'er
  Immortal songs and sonnets
  
  My darling, what wouldst thou more ?
  
  And with thine eyes so lovely
  
  Thou hast stung me to the core,
  And hast compassed my undoing
  
  My darling, what wouldst thou more ?
  
  LXV.
  
  He who for the first time loves,
  
  E'en rejected, is a god.
  He who loves a second time,
  
  Unrequited, is a fool.
  
  Such a fool am I, in loving
  
  Once again with no return.
  Sun and moon and stars are laughing ;
  
  I am laughing too and dying.
  
  
  
  H2 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  LXVI.
  
  They gave me advice, they counseled sense,
  They overpowered with compliments.
  Patience ! they said, and in my need
  They'd prove themselves my friends indeed.
  
  Despite their promise to help and protect,
  I surely had perished of sheer neglect,
  Had there not come a worthy man,
  Who bravely to help me now began.
  
  Oh, the worthy man ! he gave me to eat ;
  Such kindness as his I shall never forget.
  I long to embrace him, but never can,
  For I am myself this excellent man.
  
  LXVII.
  
  This most amiabb of fellows
  Ne'er enough can honored be.
  
  Ah ! to oysters, Rhine-wine, cordial,
  Many a time he treated me.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND. 113
  
  Natty are his hose and trousers,
  
  Nattier his cravat is seen ;
  And he enters every morning,
  
  Asks me how my health has been.
  
  
  
  Of my rich renown he speaketh,
  Of my charms and wit displayed.
  
  Zealous, eager seems he ever
  To befriend me and to aid.
  
  
  
  And at parties in the evening,
  With inspired brow and eye,
  
  He declaims before the ladies
  My immortal poesy.
  
  
  
  How delightfully refreshing
  Now-a-days to find still here .
  
  Such a youth, when good things surely
  More and more do disappear.
  
  
  
  114 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  LXVIII.
  
  I dreamt I was Almighty God,
  And sat within the sky,
  
  And angels sat on either side,
  And praised my poetry.
  
  And sweets and pasties there I ate,
  And drank the best Tokay,
  
  Worth many a precious florin bright,
  Yet had no bill to pay.
  
  
  
  No less was I nigh bored to death,
  And longed for earth and evil,
  
  And were I not Almighty God,
  I fain had been the devil.
  
  " Thou long-legged angel Gabriel,
  Make haste ; begone from here !
  
  And hither bring my friend Eugene,
  The friend I love so dear.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND. 115
  
  "Within the college seek him not,
  
  But where good wine inspires.
  And seek him not in Hedwig Church,
  
  But seek him at Miss Myers'."
  
  
  
  Then spreading broad his mighty wings,
  
  The angel doth descend,
  And hastens off, and brings me back
  
  Dear Bendel, my good friend.
  
  
  
  Lo, youth, I am Almighty God !
  
  The earth is my estate.
  Did I not always promise thee
  
  I should be something great ?
  
  
  
  And I accomplish miracles
  That shall thy homage win.
  
  To-day to please thee I shall bless
  The city of Berlin.
  
  
  
  Il6 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  Behold, the pavements of each street
  Now wider, broader, grown !
  
  And to an oyster, fresh and clear,
  Transformed is every stone.
  
  
  
  A shower of sweet lemonade
  Pours down like dew divine.
  
  And through the very gutters flows
  The mellowest Rhine wine.
  
  
  
  Oh, how the Berlinese rejoice !
  
  They lush o'er such good fare.
  The councillors and aldermen
  
  Will drain the gutters bare.
  
  
  
  The poets are in ecstasies
  At such a feast divine.
  
  The captains and the corporals
  Lick up the streaming wine.
  
  
  
  HOME WA RD -BO UND. j j
  
  The captains and the corporals,
  
  What clever men are they !
  They think such miracles as these
  
  Occur not every day.
  
  LXIX.
  
  I left you in the midmost of July,
  
  To-day, my friends in winter I behold.
  
  Then in the heat ye basked so warm and bright,
  But now ye have grown cool, yea, even cold.
  
  Soon I depart again, and come once more,
  Then shall I find you neither warm nor cold.
  
  And I shall moan lamenting o'er your graves,
  And mine own heart shall then be poor and old.
  
  
  
  Oh, to be chased from lovely lips ! and torn
  From lovely arms that clasped as in a dream.
  
  I fain had stayed with thee another morn.
  Then came the postboy with his tinkling team.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  
  
  E'en such is life, my child, a constant moan
  A constant parting, evermore good-byes,
  
  Could not thy heart cling fast unto mine own ?
  
  Couldst thou not hold me steadfast with thine eyes ?
  
  LXXI.
  
  All night, in the shadowy post-chaise,
  We drove through the winter weather.
  
  We slept on each other's bosoms,
  We jested and laughed together.
  
  But how were we both astonished,
  
  When morning bade us stir,
  Betwixt us two sat Cupid,
  
  The blindfold passenger.
  
  LXXII.
  
  Lord knows where the reckless creature
  Chose her transient stopping-place !
  
  Swearing through the rainy weather,
  Everywhere I seek her trace.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  I have been to every tavern
  Running up. and running down,
  
  And of every surly waiter
  Made inquiries in the town.
  
  Lo, I see her in yon window I
  And she beckons all is well !
  
  Could I guess that you had chosen,
  Lady, such a grand hotel ?
  
  LXXIII.
  
  Like shadows black the houses
  
  Uprise in long array.
  Enveloped in my mantle
  
  I hurry on my way.
  
  The old cathedral-belfry
  
  Chimes midnight grave and slow.
  With all her charms and kisses
  
  My love awaits me now.
  
  
  
  120 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  The moon is my companion,
  Kind-beaming from the sky
  
  I reach the house beloved,
  And joyously I cry
  
  "I thank thee, trusty servant,
  That thou hast cheered my way.
  
  And now, dear moon, I leave thee.
  On others shed thy ray.
  
  " And if a lonely lover
  
  Who sings of grief, thou see,
  
  Oh give him such sweet solace
  As thou hast given me."
  
  
  
  LXXIV.
  
  Wert thou, in sooth, mine honored wife,
  Then shouldst thou envied be ;
  
  A merry pastime were thy life
  All pleasure, mirth, and glee.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND. v
  
  And should'st thou scold, and rail and curse,
  
  I'd meekly bear my fate ;
  But if thou do not praise my verse,
  
  Then shall we separate.
  
  LXXV.
  
  Upon thy snow-white shoulders
  
  I lean my head at rest ;
  And secretly I hearken
  
  To the yearning of thy breast.
  
  In thy heart hussars blue-coated
  Are riding and blowing their horn ;
  
  And my darling will surely desert me
  With the earliest streak of morn.
  
  And if thou desert me to-morrow,
  
  None the less art thou mine to-day.
  And within thine arms so lovely,
  
  Still doubly blest I stay.
  6
  
  
  
  122 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  
  
  LXXVI.
  
  
  
  Hussars are blowing their trumpets,
  And to thy doors they ride.
  
  A garland of wreathed roses
  I bring to thee, my bride.
  
  
  
  That were a boisterous household,
  Landpests and soldiery !
  
  And in thy little heart, dear,
  The goodliest quarters be.
  
  
  
  LXXVII.
  
  I, too, in my youth did languish,
  Suffered many a bitter anguish,
  
  Burning in love's spell.
  Now the price of fuel's higher,
  And extinguished is the fire,
  
  Ma foil and that is well
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  Think of this, my youthful beauty,
  Dry the stupid tears of duty,
  
  Quell love's stupid, vague alarms.
  Since thy life is not yet over,
  Oh forget thy former lover,
  
  Mafoi! within mine arms.
  
  LXXVIII.
  
  Dost thou hate me then so fiercely,
  Hast thou really changed so blindly ?
  
  To the world I shall'proclaim it,
  Thou could'st treat me so unkindly.
  
  Say, ungrateful lips, how can you
  Breathe an evil word of scorning,
  
  Of the very man who kissed you
  So sincerely, yestermorning ?
  
  LXXIX.
  Yes, they are the self-same eyes
  
  That still brighten as I greet her,
  Yes, they are the self-same lips
  
  That made all my life seem sweeter.
  
  
  
  124
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  Yes, it is the very voice,
  
  At whose slightest tones I faltered.
  But no more the same am I ;
  
  I wend homeward strangely altered.
  
  By the fair white arms embraced
  With a close and tender passion,
  
  Now I lie upon her heart,
  
  Dull of brain, in cold vexation.
  
  LXXX.
  
  Ye could not understand mine ire
  Nor I the tales that ye did tell,
  
  But when we met within the m ^ t
  We knew each other very well.
  
  LXXXI.
  
  But the eunuchs still complained,
  ^Vhen I raised my voice to sing
  
  They complained and they maintained
  That it had too harsh a ring.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  And they raised with one accord
  All their dainty voices clear,
  
  Little crystal trills outpoured
  Oh, how pure and fine to hear !
  
  And they sang of love so sweet,
  
  Love's desire and love's full measure,
  
  That the rare artistic treat
  
  Made the ladies weep for pleasure.
  
  LXXXII.
  
  On the walls of Salamanca
  
  Gently sigh the breezes yonder.
  
  Often with my gracious Donna,
  There on summer eves I wander.
  
  
  
  Round my beauty's slender girdle,
  Tenderly mine arm enwreathing,
  
  I can feel with blessed finger
  
  Her proud bosom's haughty breathing.
  
  
  
  125
  
  
  
  126 HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  But I hear an anxious whisper
  Through the linden-branches coming,
  
  And below, the somber mill-stream
  Murmurs dreams of evil omen.
  
  
  
  Ah, Sefiora, I foresee it !
  
  I shall be expelled forever,
  On the walls of Salamanca,
  
  We again shall wander never !
  
  LXXXIII.
  
  Next to me lives Don Henriquez,
  He whom folk " the beauty " call ;
  
  Neighborly our rooms are parted
  Only by a single wall.
  
  Salamanca's ladies flutter
  
  When he strides along the street,
  Clinking spurs, mustachoes twirling,
  
  And with hounds about his feet.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND. I2 j
  
  But in quiet hours of evening
  
  He will sit at home apart,
  His guitar between his fingers,
  
  And sweet dreams within his heart
  
  
  
  Then he smites the chords with passion,
  
  All at once begins to strum.
  Ah, like squalling cats his scrapings,
  
  Toll-de-roll and toodle-dum 1
  
  LXXXIV.
  
  We scarcely had met ere thy voice and thine eye
  Assured me, my darling, that thou wast mine own ;
  
  And had not thy mother stood cruelly nigh,
  I think I should really have kissed thee anon.
  
  To-morrow again I depart from the town,
  
  And hasten forth on my weary track,
  From the window my yellow-haired lass peeps down,
  
  And the friendliest greetings I waft her back.
  
  
  
  I2 g HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  LXXXV.
  
  Lo, on the mountains the sunbeams' first kiss !
  
  The bells of the herd ring afar on the plain,
  My darling, my lambkin, my sun and my bliss,
  
  Oh, fain would I see thee and greet thec again !
  
  I gaze on thy windows with curious eyes.
  
  Farewell, dearest child, I must vanish for thee,
  In vain ! for the curtain moves not there she lies,
  
  There slumbers she still and dreams about me ?
  
  LXXXVI.
  
  In Halle, near the market,
  There stand two mighty lions.
  
  Ah, lion -strength of Halle town,
  How art thou tamed and broken !
  
  In Halle, near the market,
  There stands a mighty giant,
  
  He holds a sword and he never moves,
  He is petrified with terror.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND. 12 g
  
  In Halle, near the market,
  
  A stately church is standing,
  Where the Burschenschaft and the Landsmannschaft
  
  Have plenty of room to worship.
  
  
  
  LXXXVII.
  
  Dusky summer-eve declineth
  
  Over wood and verdant meadow,
  Golden moon in azure heavens,
  
  Wafting fragrance, softly shineth.
  
  By the brook-side chirps the cricket,
  Something stirs within the water,
  And the wanderer hears a rustling,
  
  Hears a breathing past the thicket.
  
  In the streamlet, white and slender,
  All alone the nymph is bathing,
  Beautiful her arms and shoulders
  
  Shimmer in the moonbeams' splendor.
  
  6*
  
  
  
  130
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  LXXXVI1I.
  
  Night enfolds these foreign meadows,
  Sick heart, weary limbs caressing.
  
  Ah, thy light athwart the shadows,
  Moon, is like a quiet blessing !
  
  Gentle moon, thy mild beams banish
  Gloomy terrors where they hover.
  
  All my woes dissolve and vanish,
  And mine eyes with dew brim over.
  
  LXXXIX.
  
  Death is like the balmy night,
  Life is like the sultry day ;
  It is dark, and I am sleepy.
  
  I am weary of the light.
  
  O'er my couch a tree doth spring
  In its boughs a nightingale
  Sings of love, of naught but love,
  
  In my dream I hear him sing.
  
  
  
  HOMEWARD BOUND.
  
  XC.
  
  " Tell me where's your lovely maiden,
  Whom you sang of erst so well,
  
  As a flame that through your bosom
  Pierced with rare, enchanted spell."
  
  Ah, that flame is long extinguished !
  
  And my heart is cold above.
  And this little book the urn is
  
  For the ashes of my love.
  
  
  
  SONGS TO SERAPHINE.
  
  
  
  SONGS TO SERAPHINE.
  
  
  
  IN the dreamy wood I wander,
  
  In the wood at even-tide ;
  And thy slender, graceful figure
  
  Wanders ever by my side.
  
  Is not this thy white veil floating ?
  
  Is not that thy gentle face ?
  Is it but the moonlight breaking
  
  Through the dark fir-branches' space ?
  
  Can these tears so softly flowing
  
  Be my very own I hear ?
  Or indeed, art thou beside me,
  
  Weeping, darling, close anear ?
  
  
  
  SONGS TO SERAPHINE.
  
  II.
  
  Over all the quiet sea-shore
  
  Shadowing falls the hour of Hesper ;
  Through the clouds the moon is breaking,
  
  And I hear the billows whisper.
  
  " Can that man who wanders yonder
  
  Be a lover or a dunce ?
  For he seems so sad and merry,
  
  Sad and merry both at once."
  
  But the laughing moon looks downward,
  And she speaks, for she doth know it :
  
  " Yes, he is both fool and lover,
  And, to cap it all, a poet ! "
  
  HI.
  
  Behold ! 'tis a foam-white sea-mew
  
  That flutters there on high.
  Far over the black night-waters
  
  The moon hangs up in the sky.
  
  
  
  SONGS TO SERAPHINE. 137
  
  The shark and the roach dart forward
  For breath as the breeze floats by.
  
  The sea-mew poises and plunges,
  The moon hangs up in the sky.
  
  
  
  Oh, lovely transient spirit,
  
  How heavy of heart am I !
  Too near to thee is the water,
  
  The moon hangs up in the sky.
  
  IV.
  
  In moonlit splendor rests the sea,
  
  The soft waves ripple along.
  My heart beats low and heavily,
  
  I think of the ancient song.
  
  The ancient song that quaintly sings
  
  Towns lost in olden times ;
  And how from the sea's abyss there rings
  
  The sound of prayers and chimes.
  
  
  
  1 38 SONGS TO SERAPHINE.
  
  But pious prayers and chimes, I ween,
  
  Are offered all in vain.
  For that which once hath buried been
  
  May never come back again.
  
  
  
  v.
  
  I knew that thou must love me
  Twas long ago made clear.
  
  But thy confession filled me
  With deep and secret fear.
  
  I clambered up the mountain,
  And sang aloud for glee.
  
  Then while the sun was setting,
  I wept beside the sea.
  
  My heart is like the sun, dear,
  Yon kindled flame above ;
  
  And sinks in large-orbed beauty
  Within a sea of love.
  
  
  
  SONGS TO SERAPHINE.
  VI.
  
  How enviously the sea-mew-
  Looks after us, my dear ;
  Because upon thy lips then
  So close I pressed mine ear.
  
  He fain would know what issued,
  
  Most curious of birds !
  If thou mine ear fulfillest
  
  With kisses or with words.
  
  What through my spirit hisses ?
  
  I, too, am sore perplexed !
  Thy words, dear, and thy kisses
  
  Are strangely intermixed.
  
  VII.
  
  Shy as a fawn she passed me by ;
  
  And, fleet as any heifer,
  She clambered on from cliff to cliff,
  
  Her hair flew with the zephyr.
  
  
  
  140 SONGS TO SERAPHINE.
  
  Where to the sea's edge slope the rocks,
  I reached her, trembling near it
  
  Then, softly with the softest words,
  I melted her proud spirit.
  
  
  
  There we two sat as high as heaven,
  And heaven's own rapture drinking.
  
  While in the dark waves far below ;
  The gradual sun was sinking.
  
  
  
  Below us in the deep, dark sea,
  The fair sun dropped ; then dashing,
  
  The waves broke wildly over him,
  With turbulence of passion.
  
  
  
  Oh do not weep ! he is not dead,
  'Ncath billows swelling higher ;
  
  He has but hidden in my heart,
  With all his burning fire.
  
  
  
  SONGS TO SERAPHINE.
  VIII.
  
  Come, let us build upon this rock,
  The Church of God's last lover,
  
  The third New Testament's revealed,
  The agony is over.
  
  Refuted is the second book
  
  That fooled us through long ages.
  
  The stupid torture of the flesh
  Is not for modern sages.
  
  Hear'st thou the Lord in the dark sea,
  With thousand voices speaking ?
  
  See'st thou o'erhead the thousand lights
  Of God's own glory breaking ?
  
  The holy God dwells in the light,
  
  As in the dark abysses.
  For God is everything that is :
  
  His breath is in our kisses.
  
  
  
  142
  
  
  
  SOA'GS 7O SERAPUINE.
  IX.
  
  Gray night broods above the ocean,
  Little stars gleam sparkling o'er us.
  
  And the waters' many voices
  
  Chant in deep, protracted chorus.
  
  Hark ! the old northwind is playing
  On the polished waves of ocean,
  
  That, like tubes of some great organ,
  Thrill and stir with sounding motion.
  
  
  
  Partly pagan, partly sacred,
  Rise these melodies upswelling
  
  Passionately to the heavens,
  Where the joyous stars are dwelling.
  
  And the stars wax large and larger,
  In bright mazes they are driven,
  
  Large as suns at last revolving,
  Through the spaces of vast heaven.
  
  
  
  SONGS TO SERAPH1NE.
  
  And weird harmonies they warble
  With the billows' music blending.
  
  Solar nightingales, they circle
  Through the spheres strange concord sending.
  
  And with mighty roar and trembling,
  
  Sky and ocean both are ringing ;
  And a giant's stormy rapture
  
  Feel I in my bosom springing.
  
  
  
  x.
  
  
  
  Shadow-love and shadow-kisses,
  Life of shadows, wondrous strange !
  
  Shall all hours be sweet as this is,
  Silly darling, safe from change ?
  
  All things that we clasp and cherish,
  Pass like dreams we may not keep.
  
  Human hearts forget and perish,
  Human eyes must fall asleep.
  
  
  
  144
  
  
  
  SO.VGS TO SERAPHINE.
  
  XI.
  
  She stood beside the ocean,
  And sighed as one oppressed,
  
  With such a deep emotion
  The sunset thrilled her breast.
  
  Dear maiden, look more gayly,
  This trick is old, thou'lt find.
  
  *
  
  Before us sinks he daily,
  To rise again behind.
  
  XII.
  
  My ship sails forth with sable sails,
  
  Far over the savage sea ;
  Thou know'st how heavy is my woe,
  
  Yet still thou woundest me.
  
  
  
  Thy heart is fickle as the wind,
  
  And flits incessantly.
  My ship sails forth with sable sails,
  
  Far over the savage sea.
  
  
  
  SONGS TO SERAPHINE,
  
  XIII.
  
  I told nor man, nor woman
  How ill you dealt with me ;
  
  I came abroad and published it *
  To the fishes in the sea.
  
  Only upon terra firma
  
  I have left you your good name ;
  But over all the ocean
  . Every creature knows your shame.
  
  XIV.
  
  The roaring waves press onward
  
  To reach the strand.
  Then swell, and, crashing downward,
  
  Break on the sand.
  
  They roll with surging power,
  
  Nor rest, nor fail
  And then ebb slow and slower
  
  Of what avail ?
  
  
  
  146 SONGS TO SERAP11IXL.
  
  XV.
  
  The Runenstein juts in the sea,
  
  I sit here with my dreams,
  Th^ billows wander foamingly ;
  
  Winds pipe, the sea-mew screams.
  
  Oh I have loved tull many a lass,
  
  And many a worthy fellow,
  Where have they gone ? The shrill winds pass,
  
  And wandering foams the billow.
  
  XVI.
  
  The waves gleam in the sunshine,
  
  They seem of gold to be.
  When I am dead, my brothers,
  
  Oh drop me in the sea.
  
  For dearly have I loved it.
  
  Like cooling balm descends
  Upon my heart its current :
  
  We were the best of friends.
  
  
  
  TO ANGELIQUE.
  
  
  
  Now that heaven smiles in favor,
  Like a mute shall I still languish,
  
  I, who when unhappy, ever
  
  Sang so much about mine anguish ?
  
  Till a thousand striplings haunted
  By despair, my notes re-fluted,
  
  And unto the woe I chanted,
  Greater evils still imputed.
  
  Oh ye nightingales' sweet choir,
  That my bosom holds in capture,
  
  Lift your joyous voices higher,
  
  Let the whole world hear your rapture !
  
  i47
  
  
  
  1 4 8 TO ANGELIQUE.
  
  II.
  
  Though thou wert fain to pass me quickly,
  Yet backward didst thou look by chance ;
  
  Thy wistful lips were frankly parted,
  Impetuous scorn was in thy glance.
  
  Would that I ne'er had sought to hold thee,
  To touch thy fleeing gown's white train !
  
  The dear mark of thy tiny footprints
  Would that I ne'er had found again !
  
  For now thy rare wild charm has vanished,
  Like others thou art tame to see,
  
  Intolerably kind and gentle
  Alas ! thou art in love with me.
  
  in.
  
  Ne'er can I believe, young beauty,
  
  Thy disdainful lips alone :
  For such big black eyes as thine are
  
  Virtue never yet did own.
  
  
  
  TO ANGELIQUE.
  
  And those brown-streaked lies down-glancing
  Say " I love thee ! " clearly scanned,
  
  Let thy little white heart kiss me
  White heart, dost thou understand ?
  
  
  
  IV.
  
  
  
  From the slightest of emotions,
  What a sudden transformation,
  
  To the most unbounded passion,
  And the tenderest relation !
  
  
  
  Every day it waxes deeper,
  My affection for my lady.
  
  I am almost half-persuaded
  That I am in love already.
  
  Beautiful her soul : though truly
  That's a question of opinion.
  
  I am surer of the beauty
  Of the bodily dominion.
  
  
  
  I 50 TO ANGELIQUE.
  
  Oh that waist ! And oh that forehead !
  
  Oh that nose ! The sweet enclosure
  Of the lovely lips in smiling !
  
  And the bearing's proud composure !
  
  
  
  v.
  
  Ah, how fair thou art when frankly
  Thou reveal'st thy soul's dimensions
  
  And thy speech is overflowing
  With the noblest of intentions.
  
  
  
  When thou tell'st me how thy feelings
  Always have been truest, highest,
  
  To the pride within thy bosom
  Thou no sacrifice denyest
  
  Not for millions, thou averrest,
  Man could thy pure honor buy,
  
  Ere thou sell thyself for money
  Ah, thou wouldst far liefer die.
  
  
  
  TO ANGELIQUE. 151
  
  
  
  I before thee stand and listen ;
  
  To the end I listen stoutly,
  Like a type of faith in silence,
  
  And I fold my hands devoutly.
  
  
  
  VI.
  
  
  
  I closed my sweetheart's either eye,
  And on her mouth I kissed,
  
  Now asking me the reason why
  She never gives me rest.
  
  
  
  From set of sun till morning rise,
  
  Each hour does she persist,
  ' Oh wherefore did you close mine eyes,
  
  When on my mouth you kissed ? "
  
  I never yet have told her why,
  
  Myself I scarcely wist.
  I closed my sweetheart's either eye,
  
  And on her mouth I kissed.
  
  
  
  152 TO ANGELIQUE.
  
  VII.
  
  When I, enraptured by precious kisses,
  Rest in thine arms for briefest season,
  
  Of Germany thou must not ask me,
  I cannot bear it there is a reason !
  
  Leave Germany in peace, 1 do beseech thee,
  Vex not with endless questions my poor spirit
  
  Concerning home, friends, social, kind relations,
  There is a reason why I cannot bear it
  
  The oak-tree there is green, the German women
  Have soft blue eyes tender they are and fair.
  
  They whisper sighs of hope and truth and passion.
  I have good cause 'tis more than I can bear.
  
  VIII.
  
  Whilst I, after other people's,
  
  Others people's darlings gaze,
  And before strange sweethearts' dwellings
  
  Sighing pace through weary days.
  
  
  
  TO ANGELIQUE.
  
  Then perhaps those other people
  
  In another quarter pine,
  Pacing by my very windows,
  
  Coveting that girl of mine.
  
  Th-t were human ! God in heaven,
  Watch us still whate'er befall !
  
  God in heaven, joy and blessing,
  Joy and blessing send us all !
  
  
  
  IX.
  
  Dismiss me not, e'en if my thirst
  
  Quenched with that sweet draught be !
  
  Bear with me for a season yet,
  That shall suffice for me.
  
  Canst thou no longer be my love,
  
  Then be to me a friend ;
  For friendship only just begins
  
  When love is at an end.
  7*
  
  
  
  TO ANCELIQUE.
  
  
  
  This mad carnival of loving,
  This our heart's intoxication
  Ends at last, and we twain, sobered,
  
  Yawningly look each on each.
  
  All the luscious cup is drained
  
  That was filled with sensuous juices,
  Foaming to the brim, enticing,
  
  All the luscious cup is drained.
  
  And the violins arc silent,
  
  That so sweetly played for dancing,
  For the giddy dance of passion
  
  Yes, the violins are silent.
  
  And the lanterns are extinguished,
  That with gorgeous light illumined
  All the motley troop of maskers
  
  Yes, the lanterns are extinguished.
  
  
  
  TO ANGELIQUE.
  
  And to-morrow comes Ash- Wednesday,
  I will draw upon thy forehead
  Then an ashen cross, and murmur,
  
  Woman, thou art dust remember !
  
  
  
  SPRING FESTIVAL.
  
  THIS is the spring-tide's mournful feast,
  The frantic troops of blooming girls
  Are rushing hither with flying curls,
  
  Moaning they smite their bare white breast,
  Adonis ! Adonis !
  
  The night has come. By the torches' gleams
  They search the forest on every side,
  That echoes with anguish far and wide,
  
  With tears, mad laughter,- .and sobs and screams,
  Adonis ! Adonis !
  
  The mortal youth so strangely fair,
  Lies on the cold turf pale and dead ;
  His heart's blood staineth the flowers red,
  
  And a wild lament fulfills the air,
  
  Adonis ! Adonis !
  
  156
  
  
  
  CHILDE HAROLD.
  
  Lo, a large black-shrouded barge
  Sadly moves with sails outspread,
  
  And mute creatures' muffled features
  Hold grim watch above the dead.
  
  Calm below it lies the poet
  With his fair face bare and white,
  
  Still with yearning ever turning
  Azure eyes towards heaven's light. '
  
  As he saileth sadly waileth
  
  Some bereaven undine-bride.
  O'er the springing waves outringing,
  
  Hark ! a dirge floats far and wide.
  
  i57
  
  
  
  THE ASRA.
  
  DAILY the fair Sultan's daughter
  Wanders to and fro at twilight
  By the margin of the fountain,
  Where the waters white are rippling.
  
  Daily the young slave at twilight
  Stands beside the fountain's margin,
  Where the waters white are rippling,
  Daily grows he pale and paler.
  
  There one evening moved the princess
  Toward the slave with words swift-spoken
  " Tell me, tell me what thy name is,
  Where thy home is, what thy lineage ? "
  
  158
  
  
  
  THE A SKA.
  
  
  
  159
  
  
  
  Spake the youthful slave : " My name is
  Mahomet, I come from Yemen ;
  And by birth I am an Asra,
  One who dieth when he loves."
  
  
  
  -
  
  
  
  HELENA.
  
  THOU hast invoked me from my grave,
  And through thy magic spell
  
  Hast quickened me with fierce desire,
  This flame thou canst not quell.
  
  Oh press thy lips against my lips,
  
  Divine is mortal breath ;
  I drink thy very soul from thee.
  
  Insatiable is death.
  
  
  
  SONG.
  
  THERE stands a lonely pine-tree
  In the north, on a barren height ;
  
  He sleeps while the ice and snow flakes
  Swathe him in folds of white.
  
  He dreameth of a palm-tree
  
  Far in the sunrise-land,
  Lonely and silent longing
  
  On her burning bank of sand.
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  1825-26.
  
  
  
  TO
  FREDERICK MERCKEL,
  
  THE PICTURES OP
  
  THE NORTH SEA
  
  ARE A*rECTIONATKl.Y DEDICATED BY THE AirTMOR.
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  FIRST CYCLUS.
  
  " To be disinterested in everything, but above all in love and friendship, was my
  supreme wish, my maxim, my practice ; hence my daring expression at a later
  period : 'Ifl love thee, what is that to thee?' sprang directly from my heart."
  Goethe's " Truth and Poetry," Book xiv.
  
  I. CORONATION.
  
  OH songs of mine ! beloved songs of mine,
  Up, up ! and don your armor,
  And let the trumpets blare,
  And lift upon your shield
  
  This youthful maiden
  Who now shall reign supreme
  Over my heart, as queen !
  Hail ! hail ! thou youthful queen !
  
  165
  
  
  
  166 THE NORTH SEA.
  
  From the sun above
  I snatch the beaming red gold,
  And weave therewith a diadem
  
  For thy consecrated head.
  
  From the fluttering azure-silken canopy of heaven,
  Where blaze the diamonds of night,
  A precious fragment I cut :
  And as a coronation mantle,
  I hang it upon thy royal shoulders.
  I bestow on thee a court
  Of richly-attired sonnets,
  Haughty Terzine and stately stanzas.
  My wit shall serve thee as courier,
  My fancy shall be thy fool,
  Thy herald, whose crest is a smiling tear,
  Shall be my humor.
  
  
  
  But I myself, oh Queen,
  Low do I kneel before thee,
  On the cushion of crimson samite,
  And as homage I dedicate to thee.
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  
  
  i6 7
  
  
  
  The tiny morsel of reason,
  
  That has been compassionately spared me
  
  By thy predecessor in the realm.
  
  
  
  n. TWILIGHT.
  
  ON the wan shore of the sea
  Lonely I sat with troubled thoughts.
  The sun dropped lower, and cast
  Glowing red streaks on the water.
  And the white wide waves,
  Crowding in with the tide,
  Foamed and rustled, nearer and nearer,
  With a strange rustling, a whispering, a hissing,
  A laughter, a murmur, a sighing, a seething,
  And amidst all these a mysterious lullaby.
  I seemed to hear long-past traditions,
  Lovely old-time fairy-tales,
  Which as a boy I had heard,
  From the neighbor's children,
  When on summer evenings we had nestled
  On the stone steps of the porch.
  
  
  
  1 68 THE NORTH SEA.
  
  With little eager hearts,
  And wistful cunning eyes,
  Whilst the grown maidens
  Sat opposite at their windows
  Near their sweet-smelling flower pots,
  
  With their rosy faces,
  Smiling and beaming in the moonlight.
  
  
  
  III. SUNSET.
  
  THE glowing red sun descends
  Into the wide, tremulous
  Silver-gray ocean.
  Ethereal, rosy tinted forms
  
  Are wreathed behind him, and opposite,
  Through the veil of autumnal, twilight clouds,
  Like a sad, deathly-pale countenance,
  
  Breaks the moon,
  And after her, like sparks of light,
  In the misty distance, shimmer the stars.
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  Once there shone forth in heaven,
  
  Nuptially united.
  
  Luna the goddess, and Sol the god.
  And around them gathered the stars,
  
  Those innocent little children.
  
  But evil tongues whispered dissension,
  And in bitterness parted
  The lofty, illustrious pair.
  
  Now all day in lonely splendor
  The sun-god fares overhead,
  Worshiped and magnified in song,
  
  For the excellence of his glory,
  By haughty prosperity hardened men.
  
  But at night
  
  In heaven wandereth Luna,
  The poor mother,
  
  With her orphaned, starry children ;
  And she shines with a quiet sadness,
  And loving maidens and gentle poets
  Dedicate to her their tears and their songs
  
  
  
  169
  
  
  
  I JO
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  Poor weak Luna ! Womanly-natured,
  Still doth she love her beautiful consort.
  Towards evening pale and trembling,
  She peers forth from light clouds,
  And sadly gazes after the departing one,
  And in her anguish fain would call to him, " Come !
  Come ! our children are pining for thee ! "
  But the scornful sun-god,
  At the mere sight of his spouse,
  Glows in doubly-dyed purple,
  
  With wrath and grief,
  And implacably he hastens downward
  To the cold waves of his widowed couch.
  
  
  
  Thus did evil-whispering tongues
  
  Bring grief and ruin
  Even upon the immortal gods.
  
  And the poor gods in heaven above
  Painfully wander
  
  Disconsolate on their eternal path,
  And cannot die ;
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  And drag with them
  
  The chain of their glittering misery.
  
  But I, the son of man,
  The lowly-born, the death-crowned one,
  I murmur no more.
  
  
  
  IV. NIGHT ON THE SHORE.
  
  STARLESS and cold is the night,
  
  The sea yawns ;
  And outstretched flat on his paunch, over the sea,
  
  Lies the uncouth North-wind.
  Secretly with a groaning, stifled voice,
  Like a peevish, crabbed man in a freak of good humor,
  
  He babbles to the ocean,
  And recounts many a mad tale,
  
  Stories of murderous giants,
  Quaint old Norwegian Sagas,
  And from time to time, with re-echoing laughter,
  
  He howls forth
  The conjuration-songs of the Edda,
  
  
  
  172
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  
  
  With Runic proverbs
  
  So mysteriously arrogant, so magically powerful,
  That the white children of the sea
  High in the air upspring and rejoice,
  Intoxicated with insolence.
  
  Meanwhile on the level beach,
  Over the wave-wetted sand,
  Strides a stranger whose heart
  Is still wilder than wind or wave.
  
  Where his feet-fall
  
  Sparks are scattered and shells are cracked.
  And he wraps himself closer in his gray mantle,
  And walks rapidly through the windy night,
  
  Surely guided by a little light,
  That kindly and invitingly beams
  From the lonely fisherman's hut.
  
  
  
  Father and brother are on the sea,
  And quite alone in the hut
  Bides the fisher's daughter,
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  The fisher's rarely-beautiful daughter.
  
  She sits on the hearth,
  And listens to the cosy auspicious hum
  
  Of the boiling kettle,
  And lays crackling fagots upon the fire.
  
  And blows thereon,
  Till the flickering red flames
  With a magic charm are reflected
  
  On her blooming face.
  On her delicate white shoulders
  Which so pathetically outpeep
  From the coarse gray smock,
  And on her little tidy hand
  Which gathers more closely the petticoat
  About her dainty loins.
  
  But suddenly the door springs wide,
  And in steps the nocturnal stranger
  His eyes rest with confident love
  On the slim, white maiden,
  Who stands trembling before him,
  Like a frightened lily.
  
  
  
  173
  
  
  
  174 THE NORTH SEA.
  
  And he flings his mantle to the ground
  
  And laughs and speaks.
  " Thou see'st my child ! I keep my word.
  
  And I come, and with me, comes
  The olden time when the gods of heaven
  Descended to the daughters of men,
  And embraced the daughters of men,
  And begot with them
  A race of sceptre-bearing kings,
  And heroes, the wonder of the world.
  But thou my child, no longer stand amazed
  
  At my divinity.
  And I beseech thce, boil me some tea with rum,
  
  For it is cold out doors,
  And in such a night-air as this,
  Even we, the eternal gods, must freeze.
  And we easily catch a divine catarrh,
  And an immortal cough."
  
  v. POSEIDON.
  THE sunbeams played
  Upon the wide rolling sea.
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  Far out on the roadstead glimmered the vessel
  
  That was to bear me home.
  But the favoring wind was lacking,
  And still quietly I sat on the white down,
  By the lonely shore.
  
  And I read the lay of Odysseus,
  The old, the eternally-young lay,
  From whose billowy-rushing pages
  Joyously into me ascended
  The breath of the gods,
  And the lustrous spring-tide of humanity,
  And the blooming skies of Hellas.
  
  
  
  My loyal heart faithfully followed
  The son of Laertes in his wanderings and vexations,
  By his side I sat with troubled soul,
  
  On the hospitable hearth
  Where queens were spinning purple.
  
  And I helped him to lie and happily to escape
  From the dens of giants and the arms of nymphs.
  
  
  
  175
  
  
  
  176 THE NORTH SEA.
  
  And I followed him into Cimmerian night,
  
  Into storm and shipwreck,
  And with him I suffered unutterable misery.
  
  
  
  With a sigh I spake : " Oh, thou cruel Poseidon,
  
  Fearful is thy wrath,
  And I myself tremble
  For mine own journey home."
  Scarce had I uttered the words,
  
  When the sea foamed,
  And from the white billows arose
  
  The reed-crowned head of the sea-god.
  
  And disdainfully he cried :
  " Have no fear, Poetling !
  
  Not in the least will I imperil
  
  Thy poor little ship.
  Neither will I harass thy precious life
  
  With too considerable oscillations.
  For thou, Poetling, hast never offended me.
  Thou hast not injured a single turret
  On the sacred stronghold of Priam.
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  
  
  177
  
  
  
  Not a single little lash hast thou singed
  In the eyelid of my son Polyphemus ;
  And never hast thou been sagely counselled and pro-
  tected
  By the goddess of wisdom, Pallas Athene."
  
  Thus exclaimed Poseidon,
  And plunged again into the sea.
  And, at his coarse sailor-wit,
  
  Laughed under the water
  Amphitrite, the stout fish woman,
  And the stupid daughters of Nereus.
  
  VI. DECLARATION.
  
  Shadowing downward came dusky evening,
  
  Wildly the breakers rolled,
  I sat alone upon the shore and gazed
  
  At the white dance of the waves.
  
  And my bosom heaved with the sea,
  A deep homesickness yearningly seized my heart
  For thee, oh lovely image,
  
  
  
  1 7 8
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  
  
  Who surround'st me everywhere,
  Who call'st to me everywhere,
  
  Everywhere, everywhere,
  
  In the rushing of the wind, in the dashing of the sea,
  And in the sighing of mine own breast.
  
  With a slender reed I wrote upon the sand,
  
  " Agnes, I love thee ! "
  But the wicked waves came overflowing
  
  That sweet confession,
  
  And blotted it out.
  
  Oh brittle reed ! oh swiftly-scattered sand !
  Oh flowing waves, I trust you no more !
  The heavens grow darker, my heart beats more wildly,
  And with a mighty hand, from the Norwegian woods,
  I snatch the loftiest fir,
  
  And I plunge it
  Into Etna's glowing gulf ;
  And, with such a fire-steeped giant's pen,
  I write on the dusky canorjy of heaven,
  " Agnes, I love thee ! "
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  Each night hereafter overhead shall blaze
  
  Those eternal letters of flame.
  And all future generations of our descendants
  Shall joyously read the celestial sign,
  " Agnes, I love thee ! "
  
  VII. NIGHT IN THE CABIN.
  
  THE ocean hath its pearls,
  The heaven hath its stars,
  But oh, my heart, my heart,
  My heart hath its love.
  
  Great are the sea and the heavens,
  But greater is my heart.
  And fairer than pearls or stars
  Glistens and glows my love,
  
  Thou little, youthful maiden,
  
  Come unto my mighty heart.
  
  My heart, and the sea, and the heavens
  
  Are melting away with love.
  
  
  
  179
  
  
  
  ISO THE NORTH SEA.
  
  On the azure vault of heaven,
  Where the beauteous stars are shining,
  I am fain to press my lips now,
  Wildly press midst stormy weeping.
  
  
  
  Yonder myriad stars the eyes are
  Of my darling, and they twinkle,
  And they beckon to me kindly
  From the azure vault of heaven.
  
  
  
  Towards the azure vault of heaven,
  Towards the eyes of my beloved,
  Piously mine arms uplifting,
  Thus I supplicate and worship ;
  
  
  
  Lovely eyes, ye lights of heaven,
  Graciously my soul inspire
  Let me die and let me win you,
  You and all your spacious heavens.
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  
  
  From the eyes of heaven yonder,
  Golden sparks fall trembling downward,
  Through the night. My soul dilateth,
  Filled and overfilled with passion.
  
  Oh ye eyes of heaven yonder,
  Weep yourselves to death within me !
  Till my spirit overfloweth
  With the radiant starry tear drops.
  
  
  
  Cradled by the waves of ocean,
  And by drowsy thoughts and visions,
  Still I lie within the cabin,
  In my berth so dark and narrow.
  
  Through the open hatchway yonder,
  I can see the stars clear shining.
  The beloved eyes so gentle,
  Of my gentle well-beloved.
  
  
  
  1 82 THE NORTH SEA.
  
  The beloved eyes so gentle
  Hold above my head their vigil ;
  And they glimmer and they be< kon
  From the azure vault of heaven.
  
  On the azure vault of heaven,
  Still I gaze through blessed hours,
  Till a white and filmy vapor
  Veils from me those eyes beloved.
  
  
  
  Against the wooden wall of the ship
  
  Where my dreaming head reclines,
  Break the waves, the wild sea-waves.
  They whisper and murmur
  
  Close into mine ear :
  " Oh foolish young fellow,
  Thine arm is short and the sky is far off,
  And the stars are all firmly nailed above
  
  With golden nails.
  
  Vain is thy yearning and vain is thy sighing !
  The best thou canst do is to go to sleep."
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  
  
  183
  
  
  
  I dreamed a dream about a strange vast heath,
  All overlaid with white and quiet snow.
  And I beneath that white snow buried lay,
  And slept the cold and lonely sleep of death.
  
  But from the dark and shadowy heavens yonder,
  Upon my grave the starry eyes looked down.
  Those gentle eyes ! Triumphantly they sparkled,
  With still serenity, yet full of love.
  
  VIII. STORM.
  
  THE tempest is raging.
  It lashes the waves,
  
  And the waves foaming and rearing in wrath
  Tower on high, and the white mountains of water
  
  Surge as though they were alive,
  While the little ship over-climbs them
  With laborious haste,
  And suddenly plunges down
  Into the black, wide-yawning abyss of the tide.
  
  
  
  1 84 THE NORTH SEA.
  
  O sea.
  Thou mother of beauty, of the foam-engendered
  
  one,
  
  Grandmother of love, spare me !
  Already scenting death, flutters around me
  
  The white, ghostly sea-mew,
  And whets his beak on the mast.
  And hungers with glutton-greed for the heart
  Which resounds with the glory of thy daughter,
  And which the little rogue, thy grandson,
  Hath chosen for his play-ground,
  
  
  
  In vain are my prayers and entreaties,
  My cry dies away in the rushing storm,
  
  In the battle-tumult of the winds.
  They roar and whistle and crackle and howl
  
  Like a bedlam of tones.
  And amidst them, distinctly I hear
  
  Alluring notes of harps,
  Heart-melting, heart-rending,
  
  And I recognize the voice.
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  Far away on the rocky Scotch coast,
  Where the little gray castle juts out
  
  Over the breaking waves,
  There at the lofty-arched window
  Stands a beautiful suffering woman,
  Transparently delicate, and pale as marble.
  
  And she plays on the harp, and she sings,
  And the wind stirs her flowing locks,
  And wafts her melancholy song
  Over the wide, stormy sea.
  
  ix. CALM.
  
  CALM at sea ! The sunbeams flicker
  Falling on the level water,
  And athwart the liquid jewels
  Ploughs the ship her emerald furrows.
  
  By the rudder lies the pilot
  On his stomach, gently snoring,
  Near the mast, the tarry ship-boy
  Stoops at work, the sail repairing.
  
  
  
  j86 THE NORTH SEA.
  
  'Ncath their smut his cheeks arc ruddy,
  Hotly flushed, his broad mouth twitches.
  Full of sadness are the glances
  Of his eyes so large and lovely.
  
  
  
  For the captain stands before him,
  Raves and scolds and curses : " Rascal !
  Little rascal, thou hast robbed me
  Of a herring from the barrel."
  
  
  
  Calm at sea ! above the water
  Comes a cunning fish out-pccping.
  Warms his little head in sunshine,
  Merrily his small fins plashing.
  
  
  
  But from airy heights, the sea-mew
  On the little fish darts downward.
  ( 'arrying in his beak his booty
  Back he soars into the azure.
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  X. AN APPARITION IN THE SEA.
  
  I HOWEVER lay on the edge of the vessel,
  And gazed with dreamy eyes
  Down into the glass-clear water.
  And gazed deeper and deeper,
  
  Deep down into the bottom of the sea.
  At first like a twilight mist,
  Then gradually more distinctly colored,
  Domes of churches and towers arose,
  And at last, as clear as sunshine, a whole city,
  An antique Netherland city,
  Enlivened with people.
  Grave men with black mantles,
  And white ruffs, and chains of honor,
  And long swords and long faces,
  Strode over the swarming market-place,
  Towards the court-house with its high steps,
  - Where the stone effigies of emperors
  Kept guard with scepter and sword.
  Near by, past long rows of houses,
  Past casements like polished mirrors,
  
  
  
  187
  
  
  
  188 THE NORTH SEA.
  
  And pyramidal, clipped lindens,
  Wandered, in rustling silks, the young maidens,
  
  With slender forms, and flower-faces
  Decently encircled by their black hoods,
  And their waving golden hair.
  
  Motley-clad folk in Spanish garb
  Strut past and salute each other.
  
  Elderly dames
  
  In brown, old-fashioned attire,
  Missal and rosary in hand,
  
  Hasten with tripping steps
  Towards the great cathedral,
  Drawn thither by the chiming bells,
  And by the deep-voiced tones of the organ.
  
  And the far-off chimes smite me also
  
  With mysterious awe.
  Insatiable yearning, profound sadness
  
  Steal into my heart,
  Into my scarcely-healed heart.
  
  I feel as if its wounds
  \Vre kissed open by beloved lips,
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA. jg
  
  And began to bleed afresh,
  
  With hot, red drops,
  That fall long and slowly,
  On an old house below there,
  
  In the deep city of the sea ;
  On an old high -gabled house,
  Sadly deserted by all living creatures,
  Save that in the lower window,
  
  Sits a maiden,
  
  Her head resting on her arms,
  Like a poor, forsaken child,
  And I know thee, thou poor forsaken child.
  
  Deep down, deep as the sea,
  Thou hiddest thyself from me,
  
  In a childish freak,
  And never couldst rise again.
  
  And thou sat'st a stranger among strangers,
  
  Through long ages,
  Whilst I, my soul full of grief,
  I sought thee over the whole earth.
  Forever I sought thee,
  
  
  
  190
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  Thou ever-beloved,
  Thou long-lost,
  Thou found at last !
  I have found thee, and I see once more
  Thy sweet face,
  The wise, loyal eyes,
  The darling smile,
  And never again will I leave thee,
  And I come down to thee now,
  And with wide-stretched arms,
  I leap down upon thy breast.
  
  But just at the right moment
  
  The captain seized me by the foot,
  
  And drew me from the edge of the vessel,
  
  And cried with a peevish laugh,
  
  " Doctor, are you possessed by the devil ? "
  
  XI. PURIFICATION.
  
  REMAIN in thy deep sea-home,
  
  Thou insane dream,
  Which so many a night
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA. Igl
  
  Hast tortured my heart with a counterfeit happiness,
  
  And which now as a vision of the sea
  Dost threaten me even in the broad daylight.
  
  Remain there below to all eternity !
  And I cast moreover down unto thee
  All my sorrows and sins,
  
  And the cap and bells of folly
  That have jingled so long upon my head.
  And the cold, sleek serpent's skin
  
  Of dissimulation,
  Which so long has enwound my soul
  
  My sick soul,
  My God-denying, angel-denying
  
  Wretched soul.
  
  Hilli-ho ! Hilli-ho ! Here comes the breeze.
  Up with the sails ! They flutter and belly to the wind.
  Over the treacherous smooth plain
  
  Hastens the ship
  And the emancipated soul rejoices.
  
  
  
  192
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  XII. PEACE.
  
  HIGH in heaven stood the sun,
  Surrounded by white clouds.
  The sea was calm ;
  
  And I lay musing on the helm of the ship,
  Dreamily musing, and, half-awake,
  Half asleep, I saw Christ,
  
  The Savior of the world.
  In waving white raiment
  
  He strode gigantically tall
  
  Over land and sea.
  His head touched heaven,
  He spread his hands in benediction
  
  Over land and sea ;
  And for a heart in his bosom
  He bore the sun,
  The red fiery sun,
  And the red, fiery sun-heart
  Showered its beams of grace,
  And its pure love-bestowing light,
  That illumines and warms
  Over land and sea.
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  
  
  193
  
  
  
  Peals of festal bells drew hither and thither,
  As swans might draw by chains of roses
  
  The smooth-gliding vessel,
  And sportively drew it to the verdant banks,
  Where folk dwelt in a lofty-towered
  
  Overhanging town.
  
  Oh miracle of peace ! How quiet was the town !
  Hushed was the dull murmur of chattering, sweltering
  
  Trade.
  
  And through the clean, resounding streets,
  Walked people clad in white,
  Bearing branches of palm.
  And when two such would meet,
  
  They looked at each other with ardent sympathy
  And, trembling with love and self denial,
  Kissed each other's brow,
  And glanced upward
  Towards the sun-heart of the Savior,
  Which in glad propitiation irradiated downward
  
  Its crimson blood :
  And thrice they exclaimed,
  
  "Praised be Jesus Christ !"
  9
  
  
  
  194 T * IE NORTH SEA.
  
  Couldst thou have conceived this vision,
  What wouldst thou have given,
  
  Most dearly beloved,
  Thou who art so weak in body and mind,
  
  And so strong in faith !
  Thou who so singly honorest the Trinity,
  Who kissest daily the pug and the reins and the paws
  
  Of thy lofty protectress,
  And hastenest with canting devotion
  To the Aulic councilor and to the councilor of justice,
  And at last to the council of the Realm
  
  In the pious city,
  Where sand and faith flourish,
  And the Jong-suffering waters of the sacred Spree
  
  Purify souls and dilute tea.
  Couldst thou have conceived this vision
  
  Most dearly beloved,
  
  Thou hadst borne it to the lofty minnows of the mar-
  ket place,
  
  With thy pale blinking countenance,
  Rapt with piety and humility;
  And their high mightinesses
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  
  
  195
  
  
  
  Ravished and trembling with ecstacy,
  
  Would have fallen praying with thee on their knees,
  
  And their eyes glowing with beatitude,
  Would have promised thee an increase of salary,
  
  Of a hundred thalers Prussian currency.
  And thou wouldst have stammered with folded hands,
  " Praised be Jesus Christ ! "
  
  
  
  SECOND CYCLUS.
  
  Motto, Xenophon's Anabasis IV. V.
  I. SALUTATION TO THE SEA.
  
  THALATTA ! Thalatta !
  All hail to thee, thou Eternal sea !
  All hail to thee ten thousand times
  
  From my jubilant heart,
  As once thou wast hailed
  By ten thousand Grecian hearts,
  Misfortune-combating, homeward-yearning,
  World-renowned Grecian hearts.
  
  
  
  196
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  
  
  The waters heaved,
  They heaved and roared.
  The sun poured streaming downward
  
  Its flickering rosy lights.
  The startled flocks of sea-mews
  Fluttered away with shrill screams ;
  
  The coursers stamped, the shields rattled,
  
  And far out, resounded like a triumphal paean,
  Thalatta ! Thalatta !
  
  
  
  All hail to thee, thou Eternal Sea !
  Like the language of home, thy water whispers to me.
  Like the dreams of my childhood I see it glimmer.
  Over thy billowy realm of waves.
  And it repeats to me anew olden memories,
  Of all the beloved glorious sports,
  Of all the twinkling Christmas gifts,
  
  Of all the ruddy coral-trees,
  Tiny golden fishes, pearls and bright-hued mussels,
  
  Whirh thou dost secretly preserve
  Below there in thy limpid house of crystal.
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA. 197
  
  Oh, how I have pined in barren exile !
  Like a withered flower
  In the tin box of a botanist,
  My heart lay in my breast.
  I feel as if all winter I had sat,
  A sick man, in a dark, sick room,
  
  Which now I suddenly leave.
  And dazzlingly shines down upon me
  The emerald spring, the sunshine-awakened spring,
  And the white-blossomed trees are rustling ;
  And the young flowers look at me,
  With their many-colored, fragrant eyes.
  And there is an aroma, and a murmuring, and a breath-
  ing and a laughter,
  
  And in the blue sky the little birds are singing,
  Thalatta ! Thalatta !
  
  Thou valiant, retreating heart,
  How oft, how bitter oft
  
  Did the fair barbarians of the North press thee hard !
  From their large victorious eyes
  They darted burning shafts.
  
  
  
  198 THE NORTH SEA.
  
  With crooked, polished words,
  They threatened to cleave my breast.
  With sharp-pointed missives they shattered
  
  My poor, stunned brain.
  In vain I held up against them my shield,
  The arrows whizzed, the strokes cracked,
  And from the fair barbarians of the North
  
  I was pressed even unto the sea.
  And now with deep, free breath, I hail the sea,
  
  The dear, redeeming sea
  
  Thalatta ! Thalatta !
  
  
  
  II. TEMPEST.
  
  GLOOMY lowers the tempest over the sea,
  And through the black wall of cloud
  
  Is unsheathed the jagged lightning,
  Swift outflashing, and swift-vanishing,
  Like a jest from the brain of Chronos.
  Over the barren, billowy water,
  Far away rolls the thunder,
  And up leap the white water-steeds,
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA. 199
  
  Which Boreas himself begot
  Out of the graceful mare of Erichthon,
  And the sea-birds flutter around,
  Like the shadowy dead on the Styx,
  Whom Charon repels from his nocturnal boat.
  
  Poor, merry, little vessel,
  Dancing yonder the most wretched of dances !
  
  Eolus sends it his liveliest comrades,
  Who wildly play to the jolliest measures ;
  
  One pipes his horn, another blows,
  A third scrapes his growling bass-viol.
  And the uncertain sailor stands at the rudder,
  And constantly gazes at the compass,
  
  The trembling soul of the ship ;
  And he raises his hands in supplication to Heaven
  
  " Oh, save me, Castor, gigantic hero !
  And thou conquering wrestler, Pollux."
  
  III. WRECKED.
  
  HOPE and love ! everything shattered
  And I myself, like a corpse
  
  
  
  200 THE NORTH SEA.
  
  That the growling sea has cast up,
  I lie on the strand,
  On the barren cold strand.
  Before me surges the waste of waters,
  Behind me lies naught but grief and misery ;
  And above me, march the clouds,
  The formless, gray daughters of the air,
  Who from the sea, in buckets of mist,
  
  Draw the water,
  And laboriously drag and drag it,
  
  And spill it again in the sea
  A melancholy, tedious task,
  And useless as my own life.
  
  The waves murmur, the sea mews scream,
  Old recollections possess me;
  Forgotten dreams, banished visions,
  Tormentingly sweet, uprise.
  
  There lives a woman in the North,
  A beautiful woman, royally beautiful.
  Her slender, cypress-like form
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA. 2OI
  
  Is swathed in a light, white raiment.
  Her locks, in their dusky fullness,
  
  Like a blessed night,
  Streaming from her braid-crowned head,
  
  Curl softly as a dream
  Around the sweet, pale face ;
  And from the sweet pale face
  Large and powerful beams an eye,
  
  Like a black sun.
  Oh thou black sun, how oft,
  How rapturously oft, I drank from thee
  
  The wild flames of inspiration !
  And stood and reeled, intoxicated with fire.
  Then there hovered a smile as mild as a dove,
  About the arched, haughty lips.
  And the arched, haughty lips
  Breathed forth words as sweet as moonlight,
  And delicate as the fragrance of the rose.
  
  And my soul soared aloft,
  And flew like an eagle up into the heavens.
  
  Silence ye waves and sea mews !
  All is over ! joy and hope
  
  
  
  202 THE NORTH SEA.
  
  Hope and love ! I lie on the ground
  An empty, shipwrecked man,
  And press my glowing face
  Into the moist sand.
  
  
  
  IV. SUNSET.
  
  THE beautiful sun
  Has quietly descended into the sea.
  The surging water is already tinted
  
  By dusky night
  But still the red of evening
  
  Sprinkles it with golden lights.
  And the rushing might of the tide
  Presses toward the shore the white waves,
  That merrily and nimbly leap
  Like woolly flocks of sheep,
  Which at evening the singing shepherd boy
  Drives homeward.
  
  " How beautiful is the sun ! "
  Thus spake after a long silence, the friend
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  Who wandered with me on the beach.
  And, half in jest, half in sober sadness,
  
  He assured me that the sun
  Was a beautiful woman, who had for policy
  Espoused the old god of the sea.
  All day she wanders joyously
  
  In the lofty heavens, decked with purple,
  
  And sparkling with diamonds ;
  Universally beloved, universally admired
  By all creatures of the globe,
  And cheering all creatures of the globe
  With the radiance and warmth of her glance.
  But at evening, wretchedly constrained,
  
  She returns once more
  To the wet home, to the empty arms
  Of her hoary spouse.
  
  
  
  " Believe me," added my friend,
  
  And laughed and sighed, and laughed again,
  
  " They live down there in the daintiest wedlock ;
  
  Either they sleep or else they quarrel,
  
  
  
  203
  
  
  
  204
  
  
  
  T1IE
  
  
  
  Until high upheaves the. sea above them,
  
  And the sailor amidst the roaring of the waves can
  
  hear
  
  How the old fellow berates his wife :
  'Round strumpet of the universe !
  Sunbeam coquette !
  The whole day you shine for others,
  
  And at night for me you are frosty and tired.'
  After such curtain lectures,
  Quite naturally bursts into tears
  The proud sun, and bemoans her misery,
  And bemoans so lamentably long, that the sea god
  
  Suddenly springs desperately out of his bed,
  
  And quickly swims up to the surface of the ocean,
  
  To collect his wits and to breathe."
  
  
  
  Thus did I myself see him yester-night,
  Uprise from the bosom of the sea.
  He had a jacket of yellow flannel,
  
  And a lily-white night cap,
  And a withered countenance.
  
  
  
  r
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA. 205
  
  V. THE SONG OF THE OCEANIDES.
  
  'Tis nightfall and paler grows the sea.
  
  And alone with his lonely soul,
  There sits a man on the cold strand
  And turns his death-cold glances
  Towards the vast, death- cold vault of heaven,
  And toward the vast, billowy sea.
  On airy sails float forth his sighs ;
  
  And melancholy they return,
  And find the heart close-locked,
  Wherein they fain would anchor.
  And he groans so loud that the white sea-mews,
  Startled out of their sandy nests,
  
  Flutter circling around him.
  And he laughingly speaks to them thus :
  
  " Ye black-legged birds,
  With white wings, oversea flutterers !
  With crooked beaks, salt-water bibbers,
  
  Ye oily seal-flesh devourers !
  Your life is as bitter as your food.
  I, however, the fortunate, taste naught but sweets !
  
  
  
  20 6 ?'// NORTH SEA.
  
  I taste the fragrance of the rose,
  The moonshine-nourished bride of the nightingale.
  I taste still sweeter sugar-plums,
  
  Stuffed with whipped cream.
  And the sweetest of all things I taste,
  The sweets of loving and of being loved !
  
  " She loves me, she loves me, the dear girl !
  Now stands she at home on the balcony of her house,
  And gazes forth in the twilight upon the street,
  And listens and yearns for me, really !
  Vainly does she glance around, and sigh,
  And sighing she descends to the garden,
  And wanders midst the fragrance and the moonlight,
  
  And talks to the flowers, and tells them
  I low I, her beloved, am so lovely and so lovable really !
  Later in her bed, in her sleep, in her dreams,
  Blissfully she hovers about my precious image,
  So that in the morning at breakfast
  Upon the glistening buttered bread,
  
  She sees my smiling face,
  And she devours it for sheer love really ! "
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA. 207
  
  Thus boasted and boasted he,
  And meanwhile screamed the sea-mews,
  As with cold, ironical tittering.
  The twilight mists ascended,
  Uncannily forth from lilac clouds
  Peered the greenish-yellow moon.
  
  Loud roared the billows,
  And deep from the loud roaring sea,
  As plaintive as a whispering monsoon,
  
  Sounded the song of the Oceanides
  Of the beautiful, compassionate mermaids,
  Distinct midst them all the lovely voice
  Of the silver-footed spouse of Peleus
  And they sigh and sing :
  
  " Oh fool, thou fool, thou boasting fool,
  Tormented with misery !
  Destroyed are all thy hopes,
  The playful children of the heart
  And ah ! thy heart, Niobe-like,
  Is petrified with grief !
  In thy brain falls the night,
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  
  
  And therein are unsheathed the lightnings of frenzy,
  And them makest a boast of thy trouble !
  Oh fool, thou fool, thou boasting fool !
  Stiff-necked art thou as thy forefather,
  The lofty Titan, who stole celestial fire
  From the gods, and bestowed it upon man.
  And tortured by eagles chained to the rock,
  Olympus-high he flung defiance, flung defiance and
  groaned,
  
  Till we heard it in the depths of the sea,
  And came to him with the song of consolation.
  Oh fool, thou fool, thou boasting fool !
  Thou, however, art more impotent still.
  'Twere more seemly that thou shouldst honor the gods,
  And patiently bear the burden of misery,
  And patiently bear it, long, so long,
  Till Atlas himself would lose patience,
  And cast from his shoulders the ponderous world
  Into eternal night."
  
  So rang the song of the Oceanides,
  Of the beautiful compassionate mermaids,
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  
  
  Until louder waves overpowered it.
  Behind the clouds retired the moon,
  
  The night yawned,
  And I sat long thereafter in the darkness and wept.
  
  VI. THE GODS OF GREECE.
  
  FULL-BLOOMING moon, in thy radiance,
  
  Like flowing gold shines the sea.
  With daylight clearness, yet twilight enchantment,
  Thy beams lie over the wide, level beach.
  And in the pure, blue starless heavens,
  
  Float the white clouds,
  Like colossal images of gods
  Of gleaming marble.
  
  No more again ! those are no clouds !
  They are themselves the gods of Hellas,
  Who erst so joyously governed the world,
  
  But now, supplanted and dead,
  Yonder, like monstrous ghosts, must fare,
  Through the midnight skies.
  
  
  
  2io THE NORTH SEA.
  
  Amazed and strangely dazzled, I contemplate
  
  The ethereal Pantheon.
  The solemnly mute, awfully agitated,
  
  Gigantic forms.
  There is Chronos yonder, the king of heaven ;
  
  Snow-white are the curls of his head,
  The world-renowned Olympus-shaking curls.
  He holds in his hand the quenched lightning,
  In his face dwell misfortune and grief ;
  But even yet the olden pride.
  Those were better days, oh Zeus,
  When thou didst celestially divert thyself
  With youths and nymphs and hecatombs.
  But the gods themselves, reign not forever ;
  
  The young supplant the old,
  As thou thyself, thy hoary father,
  And thy Titan-uncle didst supplant
  
  Jupiter- Parricida !
  Thee also, I recognize, haughty Juno ;
  
  Despite all thy jealous care,
  Another has wrested thy sceptre from thee,
  And thou art no longer Queen of Heaven.
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA. 211
  
  And thy great eyes are blank,
  And thy lily arms are powerless,
  And nevermore may thy vengeance smite
  
  The divinely-quickened Virgin,
  And the miracle-performing son of God.
  Thee also I recognize, Pallas Athena !
  With thy shield and thy wisdom, could'st thou not avert
  
  The ruin of the gods ?
  Also thee I recognize, thee also, Aphrodite !
  
  Once the golden, now the silvern !
  'Tis true that the love-charmed zone still adorns thee
  But I shudder with horror at thy beauty.
  And if thy gracious body were to favor me
  Like other heroes, I should die of terror.
  Thou seemest to me a goddess-corpse,
  
  Venus Libitina !
  No longer glances toward thee with love,
  
  Yonder the dread Ares !
  How melancholy looks Phoebus Apollo
  
  The youth. His lyre is silent,
  
  Which once so joyously resounded at the feast of the
  gods.
  
  
  
  212 THE NORTH .V
  
  Still sadder looks Hephaistos.
  And indeed nevermore shall the limper
  Stumble into the service of Hebe,
  And nimbly pour forth to the assemblage
  The luscious nectar. And long ago was extinguished
  The unextinguishablc laughter of the gods.
  
  I have never loved you, ye gods !
  For to me are the Greeks antipathetic,
  And even the Romans are hateful.
  But holy compassion and sacred pity
  
  Penetrate my heart,
  When I now gaze upon you yonder,
  
  Deserted gods !
  
  Dead night-wandering shadows,
  Weak as mists which the wind scares away.
  And when I recall how dastardly and visionary
  Are the gods who have supplanted you,
  The new, reigning, dolorous gods,
  Mischief-plotters in the sheep's clothing of humility,
  Oh then a more sullen rancor possesses me,
  And I fain would shatter the new Temples,
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  And battle for you, ye ancient gods,
  For you and your good ambrosial cause.
  And before your high altars,
  Rebuilt with their extinguished fires,
  Fain would I kneel and pray,
  And supplicating uplift mine arms.
  
  
  
  Always ye ancient gods,
  Even in the battles of mortals,
  Always did ye espouse the cause of the victor.
  But man is more magnanimous than ye,
  And in the battles of the gods, he now takes the part
  
  Of the gods who have been vanquished.
  
  
  
  Thus spake I, and lo, visibly blushed
  Yonder the wan cloud figures,
  And they gazed upon me like the dying,
  Transfigured by sorrow, and suddenly disappeared.
  
  The moon was concealed
  Behind dark advancing clouds.
  
  
  
  214 '* IIE X OR Til SEA.
  
  Loud roared the sea.
  
  And triumphantly came forth in the heavens
  The eternal stars.
  
  VII. THE PHCENIX.
  
  A BIRD comes flying out of the West ;
  
  He flies to the Eastward,
  Towards the Eastern garden-home,
  Where spices shed fragrance, and flourish,
  And palms rustle and fountains scatter coolness.
  And in his flight the magic bird sings :
  
  
  
  
  
  
  "She loves him ! she loves him !
  
  She carries his portrait in her little heart,
  And she carries it sweetly and secretly hidden,
  And knoweth it not herself !
  But in dreams he stands before her.
  She implores and weeps and kisses his hands,
  
  And calls his name,
  
  And calling she awakes, and she lies in affright,
  And amazed she rubs her beautiful eyes,
  
  She loves him ! she loves him ! "
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA. 21$
  
  Leaning on the mast on the upper deck,
  
  I stood and heard the bird's song.
  Like blackish-green steeds with silver manes,
  Leapt the white crisp-curling waves.
  Like flocks of swans glided past,
  With gleaming sails, the Helgolands,
  The bold nomads of the North Sea.
  Above me in the eternal blue
  
  Fluttered white clouds,
  And sparkled the eternal sun,
  The Rose of heaven, the fire-blossoming,
  Which joyously was mirrored in the sea.
  
  And the heavens and seas and mine own heart
  
  Resounded in echo
  She loves him ! she loves him !
  
  
  
  VIII. QUESTION.
  
  BY the sea, by the desolate nocturnal sea,
  
  Stands a youthful man,
  
  His breast full of sadness, his head full of doubt.
  And with bitter lips he questions the waves :
  
  
  
  
  2l6 THE NORTH SEA.
  
  " Oh solve me the riddle of life !
  
  The cruel, world-old riddle,
  
  Concerning which, already many a head hath been
  racked.
  
  Heads in hieroglyphic-hats,
  
  Heads in turbans and in black caps,
  
  Periwigged heads, and a thousand other
  
  Poor, sweating human heads.
  Tell me, what signifies man ?
  Whence does he come ? whither does he go ?
  Who dwells yonder above the golden stars ? "
  
  The waves murmur their eternal murmur,
  The winds blow, the clouds flow past.
  
  Cold and indifferent twinkle the stars,
  And a fool awaits an answer.
  
  IX. SEA-SICKNESS.
  
  THE gray afternoon clouds
  Drop lower over the sea,
  Which darkly riseth to meet them,
  And between them both fares the ship.
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  
  
  217
  
  
  
  Sea-sick I still sit by the mast
  
  And all by myself indulge in meditation,
  
  Those world-old ashen-gray meditations,
  
  Which erst our father Lot entertained,
  
  When he had enjoyed too much of a good thing,
  
  And afterward suffered such inconvenience.
  
  Meanwhile I think also of old stories ;
  
  How pilgrims with the cross on their breast in days of
  
  yore,
  
  On their stormy voyages, devoutly kissed
  The consoling image of the blessed Virgin.
  How sick knights in such ocean-trials,
  Pressed to their lips with equal comfort
  The dear glove of their lady.
  But I sit and chew in vexation
  An old herring, my salty comforter,
  Midst caterwauling and dogged tribulation.
  
  Meanwhile the ship wrestles
  With the wild billowy tide.
  Like a rearing war-horse she stands erect,
  Upon her stern, till the helm cracks.
  io
  
  
  
  '
  
  
  
  2i8 THE NORTH SEA.
  
  Now crashes she headforemost downward once more
  
  Into the howling abyss of waters,
  
  Then again, as if recklessly love-languid,
  
  She tries to recline
  On the black bosom of the gigantic waves,
  
  Which powerfully seethe upward,
  And immediately a chaotic ocean-cataract
  Plunges down in crisp-curling whiteness,
  
  And covers me with foam.
  
  This shaking and swinging and tossing
  
  Is unendurable !
  
  Vainly mine eye peers forth and seeks
  The German coast. But alas ! only water,
  And everywhere water turbulent water !
  
  Even as the traveller in winter, thirsts
  
  For a warm cordial cup of tea,
  So does my heart now thirst for thee
  
  My German fatherland.
  May thy sweet soil ever be covered
  With lunacy, hussars and bad verses,
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA. 2IQ
  
  And thin, lukewarm treatises.
  
  May thy zebras ever be fattened
  
  On roses instead of thistles.
  
  Ever may thy noble apes
  
  Haughtily strut in negligent attire,
  
  And esteem themselves better than all other
  
  Priggish heavy-footed, horned cattle.
  
  May thine assemblies of snails
  
  Ever deem themselves immortal
  
  Because they crawl forward so slowly ;
  
  And may they daily convoke in full force,
  
  To discuss whether the cheesemould belongs to the
  
  cheese ;
  
  And still longer may they convene
  To decide how best to honor the Egyptian sheep,
  
  So that its wool may improve
  
  And it may be shorn like others,
  With no difference.
  
  Forever may folly and wrong
  
  Cover thee all over, oh Germany,
  
  Nevertheless I yearn towards thee
  
  For at least thou art dry land.
  
  
  
  220 THE KOJiTU SEA.
  
  X. IN PORT.
  
  HAPPY the man who has reached port,
  And left behind the sea and the tempest,
  And who now sits, quietly and warm,
  In the goodly town-cellar of Bremen.
  
  How pleasantly and cordially
  
  The world is mirrored in the wine-glass.
  
  And how the waving microcosm
  
  Pours sunnily down into the thirsty heart !
  
  I see everything in the glass,
  Ancient and modern tribes,
  Turks and Greeks, Hegel and Cans,
  Citron groves and guard-parades,
  Berlin and Schilda, and Tunis and Hamburg.
  Above all the image of my beloved,
  The little angel-head against the golden background
  of Rhine-wine.
  
  Oh how beautiful ! how beautiful thou art, beloved !
  Thou art like a rose.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA. 221
  
  Not like the Rose of Shiraz,
  The Hafiz-besung bride of the nightingale.
  
  Not like the Rose of Sharon,
  The sacred purple extolled by the prophet.
  Thou art like the rose in the wine-cellar of Bremen.
  
  That is the rose of roses,
  The 'older it grows the fairer it blooms,
  And its celestial perfume has inspired me.
  And did not mine host of the town-cellar of Bremen
  Hold me fast, fast by my hair,
  I should tumble head over heels.
  
  .
  
  The worthy man ! we sat together,
  
  And drank like brothers.
  
  We spake of lofty, mysterious things, f
  
  We sighed and sank in each other's arms.
  
  And he led me back to the religion of love :
  
  I drank to the health of my bitterest enemy,
  
  And I forgave all bad poets,
  As I shall some day hope to be forgiven myself.
  I wept with fervor of piety, and at last
  The portals of salvation were opened to me,
  
  
  
  JJJ THE NORTH SEA.
  
  Where the twelve Apostles, the holy wine-butts,
  Preach in silence and yet so intelligibly
  Unto all people.
  
  
  
  Those are men I
  
  Without, unseemly in their wooden garb,
  Within, they are more beautiful and brilliant
  Than all the haughty Levites of the Temple,
  And the guards and courtiers of Herod,
  Decked with gold and arrayed in purple.
  
  But I have always averred
  That not amidst quite common folk
  
  No, in the very best society,
  Perpetually abides the King of Heaven.
  
  Hallelujah ! How lovely around me
  
  Wave the palms of Beth-El !
  How fragrant are the myrrh-trees of Hebron !
  How the Jordan rustles and reels with joy !
  And my immortal soul also reels,
  And I reel with her, and, reeling,
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA. 22$
  
  The worthy host of the town-cellar of Bremen
  Leads me up-stairs into the light of day.
  
  Thou worthy host of the town-cellar of Bremen,
  
  Seest thou on the roofs of the houses,
  Sit the angels, and they are drunk and they sing.
  
  The glowing sun up yonder
  Is naught but a red drunken nose.
  The nose of the spirit of the universe,
  And around the red nose of the spirit of the ani verse
  Reels the whole tipsy world.
  
  
  
  XI. EPILOGUE.
  
  LIKE the stalks of wheat in the fields,
  So nourish and wave in the mind of man
  
  His thoughts.
  
  But the delicate fancies of love
  Are like gay little intermingled blossoms
  
  Of red and blue flowers.
  
  
  
  
  224
  
  
  
  THE NORTH SEA.
  
  Red and blue flowers !
  The surly reaper rejects you as useless.
  The wooden flail scornCplly thrashes you,
  
  Even the luckless traveler,
  Whom your aspect delights and refreshes,
  
  Shakes his head,
  And calls you beautiful weeds.
  
  
  
  But the rustic maiden,
  The wearer of garlands,
  Honors you, and plucks you,
  And adorns with you her fair locks.
  And thus decorated she hastens to the dancing-green
  Where the flutes and fiddles sweetly resound ;
  
  Or to the quiet bushes
  
  Where the voice of her beloved soundeth sweeter
  still
  
  Than fiddles or flutes.
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