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THE  POEMS  OP  HEINE. 


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BT  THE  SAME  AUTHOR. 


The  Poem  of  SehiOer, 

Complete.    Second  Edition. 

The  Poems  of  Ooethe: 

Inclnding  Hermann  and  Dorothea.     Translated  in  the 
Original  Metres.    Second  Edition. 

The  Tragedies  of  Mfteri: 

Induding  those  published  postimmonsly.    2  vols. 


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THE  POEMS  OF  HEINE 


COMPLETE 

TRANSLATED  INTO  THE  ORIGINAL  METRES 
WITH  A  SKETCH  OF  HIS  LIFE 


BY 


EDGAR  ALFRED  BOWEING,  O.B. 


LONDON*  GE0B6E  BELL  AND  SONS,  TOBE  STBEEI 
OOVENT  GARDEN. 

1891. 

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PT 
40447 


LONDON :  <» 

RBPRINTED  FROM  STKREO-PLATBS  BY  WILLIAM  CLOWES  AK.    SONS,   LIMITED, 
STAMFORD  STREET  AND  CHARING  CROSS. 


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'J 


CONTENTa 


rAQM 

PREFACE  TO  THE  SECOND  EDITIOH       •        •     viii 

PREFACE ix 

MEMOIR  OF  HEINRICH  HEINE     .        .        .        .       xi 


EARLY  POEMa 
SONGS  OF  LOVE 

Love's  Salutation 

1/  .6*8  Lament 

Yo«rning 

The  White  Flower 

Presentiment. 


MISCELLANEOUS  POEMS 

Germany,  1815 /J 

Dream,  1816 •         .  9 

The  Consecration       .*••••  11 

The  Moor's  Serenade «  12 

Dream  and  Life 13 

The  Lesson 14 

To  Francis  v.Z 14 

A  Prologue  to  the  Hartz  Journey      .        •        .  15 

Defend  Not 15 

A  Parody 16 

Walking  Flowers  at  Berlin        ....  16 

Evening  Songs 16 

Sonnets 

To  Augnstos  William  von  Schlegel           .        .  17 

To  the  Same 17 

To  Comicillor  George  S^— ,  of  Gottingen         .  19 

To  J.  B.  Rousseau 19 

The  Night   Watch  on  the    Drachenfels,     To 

Fritz  von  B 20 

In  Fritz  Steinmann's  Album   .        •         .         .  20 

To  Her ^    .  ,21 

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U  CONTENTS. 

PAOB 

Goethe's  Monmnent  at  Frankfort-os-tbe-Mainy 

1821 21 

Dresden  Poetry 21 

Beardless  Art 22 

BOOK  OF   SONGS 

PREFAGB 23 

YOUTHFUL  SORROWS  ([1817-1821) 

YisiONS 24 

Songs  . 39 

bomanoes 48 

The  Mournful  One 48 

The  Mountain  Echo 48 

The  Two  Brothers 44 

Poor  Peter 44 

The  Prisoner's  Song        •        •        •        •        •  45 

X/>^e  Grenadiers       .•••••  46 

The  Message 46 

Taking  the  Bride  Home 46 

Don  Ramiro 47 

l^elshazzar 52 

The  Minnesingers 58 

Looking  from  the  Window       •         •         •         •  54 

The  Wounded  Knight 54 

The  Sea  Voyage 54  • 

The  Song  of  I^pentance 55 

To  a  Singer  (on  her  singing  an  old  romance)     •  56 

The  Song  of  the  Ducats 57 

Dialogue  on  Paderbom  Heath  ,         •         .57 

Life's  Salutations  (from  an  album)  •         •        •  59 

Quite  True     ....••        V  59 

Sonnets 

To  A.  W.  von  Schlesrel 59 

\J3P^my  Mother,  B.  Heine,  n^b  von  Geldem        •  60 

To  H.  S. pi 

Fbbsoo  Sonnets  to  Christian  S  •        •        •  161 ' 

LYRICAL  INTERLUDE  (1822-23) 

Prolootte •        •  65 

Lybics         ..••••••  66 

The  God's  Twilight    ••....  89 

Ratcliff     .         •••••••  91 

Donna  Claba ••91' 

Alamansob •         •         •  9'( 

The  Pilgrimage  to  Kevlaab        •         •         •         ,100 

The  Dbeah  (from  Salon)       .         .         •     ^         ^  lOJ 

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CONTENTS.  iii 


NEW  POEMS 

Sebafhina  ••••••••  102 

Angelica    •••••••••  107 

Diana 112 

hobtensb    •        •        • 113 

Glabissa      .         .        •        •        .        •        •        •  115 

TOLANTB  AND  MaBY       •  •  .  •      '     •  .119 

Emma 121 

Fbedebioa   ..«>«•••  122 

Gathebinb  .         .        *        •        •        •        •        •  124 

Songs  of  Cbeation       ••••••  129 

Abboad        •••».•••  131 

Tbagedt 132 

Thb  Tannhausbb,  a  Legend  .        •        •         .133 

BOMANOES • 

A  Woman 139 

Celebration  of  Spring      •         •         •         •         .139 

ChUde  Harold 140 

The  Exorcism 140 

Extract  from  a  letter 141 

The  Evil  Star 142 

Anno  1829 142 

Anno  1839 14:^ 

At  Dawn 144 

SirOlave 144 

The  Water  Nymphs 146 

Bertrand  de  Born    ••••••  147 

Spring •        ,        •        •  147 

All  Bey          ..•••••  148 

Psyclie 149 

The  Unknown  One 149 

The  Change 150 

Fortune 150 

Lamentation  of  an  old  German  Youth        •         .150 

Away  I 151 

Madam  Mette  (from  the  Danish)      .         •         .151 

The  Meeting 153 

King  Harold  Harfagar 154 

The  Lower  World 155 

HiBCBLLANIBS 

Muledom 158 

15S 

lr.2 
162 
163 


The  Symbol  of  Madness  « 
Pride  .  .  .  , 
Away!  .  .  .  . 
Winter  .  .  .  , 
The  Old  Chimney-piece 
Longing 

Helena .        .        •        « 
T|\fi  Wisafitars      . 
Cxhe Angels  i        •        < 


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IV 


CONTENTS. 


JPOKMS  FOB  THE  TiMES 

Sound  Doctrine      ••••••     164 

Adam  the  First       ••••••     164 

Warning 165 

To  a  Quondam  Follower  of  Goethe  (1832)  .     165 

The  Secret 166 

On  the  Watchman's  Arrival  in  Paris         •         .166 

The  Drum  Major 167 

Degeneracy J69 

Henry »        .     169 

Life's  Journey 170 

The  New  Jewish  Hospital  at  Hamburg    •         •    170 
George  Herwegh    .         .         .         .         •         .171 

The  Tendency .172 

TheOhUd 173 

The  Primrose 173 

The  Changeling 174 

The  Emperor  of  China    ,  •        ,         .     174 

Church-Counsellor  Prometheua         •        •        .175 
To  the  Watchman  .         .  .         .     176 

Consoling  thoughts  .         .         ,         ,         .176 

The  World  Turned  Upside  Down      v        ^        .177 

Enlightenment 178 

Wait  Awhile  I         ..•••.     179 
Night  Thoughts     ••••••     179 

NEW  SPRING 

Prologub    ••••••••    ISO 

Ltbios •        •        •    180 


PICTURES  OF  TRAVEL 


THE  RETURN  HOME  (1823-24) 
THE  HARTZ-JOURNEY  (1824) 

THE  BALTIC    1825-26) 
Pabt  I.  (1825) 


195 

229 


Evening  Twilight  .         • 

• 

.    237 

Sunset 

• 

.     i^37 

The  Night  on  the  Strand 

1        • 

.     239 

Poseidon        .         .         •         , 

• 

.     240 

Homage         .         .         . 

.     242 

Declaration    . 

»        • 

.     242 

In  the  Cabin  at  Night     . 

»         • 

.     243 

The  Storm     .         .         •        , 

»        • 

•     245 

Calm  at  Sea  .         .         •        , 

»        • 

.     246 

The  Ocean-Spectie          •         , 

1         • 

.     247 

Purification    .         .        •         < 
Peace    .        .        •        • 

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'Pogl^m 

coirrENTs.  V 

Past  H.  (1826) 

^x  Sea  Salutation 251 

^    Thunderstonn         ••••••  253 

The  Shiprecked  One 253 

Sunset  ........  254 

The. Song  of  the  Oceanides      •        .        ^        •  2r.6 

The  Gods  of  Greece 258 

Questions 260 

The  Phoenix 261 

Echo 261 

Sea-Sickne08           ••••••  262 

In  Harbour 263 

Epilogue 26n 

Monologue  (from  book  Le  Grand)  1826    .        •  266 


ATTA  TROLL,  a  Summer  Night's  Dream 
GERMANY,  a  Winter  Tale 

BOMANCERO 


Book  I.    Histobihs 

Rhampsenitus        .  • 

The  WhiteJElephant  • 

Knave  of  Bergen    .  • 
The  Valkyres 

Hastings*  Battle-field  • 
OharlesL 

Marie  Antoinette    .  • 

The  Silesian  Weavers  . 

Pomare  .         .  « 

The  Apollo  God     .  • 
Hymn  to  King  Louis 
Two  Knighta 
Our  Marine  (A  Nauticai  Tale) 
The  Golden  Calf    . 

King  David    .         .  • 

King  Richard         •  • 

e  Asra       •        .  . 

The  Nuns      .         .  . 

Palgrayine  Jutta    .  • 
Thef  Moorish  King . 
Geoffrey  Rud^  and  Melisanda 
The  Poet  Ferdusi.. 

Voyage  by  Night  •  . 

The  Prelude  .        •  • 

Yitzliputzli    .        •  • 


of  Tripoli 


Book  II.    Lamentations 

Wood  Solitude 
Spanish  Lyrics 
The  Ex-living  One 


880 
882 

887 
888 


893 
395 
895 
398 
401 
402 
404 
405 
405 
406 
406 
407 
408 
409 
411 
412 
417 
418 
420 


•    .  484 

•  438 

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VI 


CONTENTS. 


TheEx-Walohman. 

Mythology     . 

In  Matilda's  Album        • 

To  the  Young 

The  Unbeliever      •         • 

Whither  Now? 

An  Old  Song  •         • 

Beady  Money         •        • 

The  Old  Rose 

Auto-da-Fe   . 

Lazabus 

The  Way  of  the  World 

Betrospect 

Besurrection    . 

The  Dying  One       • 

Bascality         .         • 

Betrospect        .         • 

Imperfection    . 

Pious  Warning 

The  Cooled-down  One 

Solomon 

Lost  Wishes    . 
— ^he  Anniver^ry      . 

Meeting  Again         • 

Mrs.  Care        .         . 
— ^To  the  Angels 
'^In  October,  1849      . 

Evil  Dreams    .         • 

It  Goes  Out     •         • 

The  Wm 

Enfant  Perdu . 


FA.OB 

446 
449 
449 
449 
450 
450 
451 
452 
452 
452 

453 

453 

454 

455 

455 

455 

456 

457 

457 

458 

458   ,  ^ 

-459  1^  : 

460 

460  .^;; 

461^^  / 

461 

463 

464   . 

464 

465 


Book  m.  Hebbbw  Melodies 


Princess  Sabbath  . 
Jebuda  Ben  Halevy 
Disputation  . 


466 
470 
492' 


LATEST  POEMS  (1853-54) 
Miscellaneous 

Peace  Yearning      • 
In  May  • 

Body  and  Soul        • 
Bed  Slippers  . 
Babylonian  Sorrows 
The  Slave  Siiip 
Affrontenburg 
Appendix  to  **  Lazarus  ** 
The  Dragon  Fly     . 
Ascension 
The  AfSanced  Ones 


504 
504 
605 
506 
507 
508 
612 
614 
620 
621 
524 


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CONTENTS.  Vil 

PAGB 

The  Philanthropist         .        •        •        •        •    525 
The  Whims  of  the  Amorous    •        •        •        .527 

Muni 529 

Good  Advice.         .         .        •        .        .        .530 
Beminiscences  of  Hammonia    *         .        •        •    531 

The  Robbers 533 

The  Yotmg  Cats'  Club  for  Poetry-Music.  .    ,    .    533 

Hans  Lack-Land .535 

BeooUections  from  Krahwinkers  Days  of  Terror    537 
The  Audience  (an  old  Fable)  .         ,         .         .538 

EobesI 539 

Epiloj^ue •         •     544 

Addenda 

The  Song  of  Songs 545 

The  Suttler's  Song  (from  the  Thirty  Years*  War)  546 

POSTHUMOUS  POEMS 

Horse  and  Ass        •••••.  548 

The  Ass-Election    ••••••  550 

,    Bertha  ..••••••  552 

In  the  Cathedral     ..••••  552 

The  Dragon-fly 553^ 

-^  Old  Scents     ..••...  i^^"'* 

Miserere         .••••••  555 

To  Matilda    ..•••••  5o6 

Forthe**Moiiohe"        •        •        •       •        •  55ti 


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PREFACE  TO  THE  SECOND  EDITION. 


A  Niw  edition  of  this  work  having  been  called  for,  owing 
to  the  first  edition  having  been  for  some  time  out  of 
print,  I  have  taken  advantage  of  the  opportunity  to  add 
translatioiis  of  a  remarkable  collection  of  Poems  by  Heine, 
published  for  the  first  time  since  the  appearance  of  my 
work  in  1869.  They  consist  of  as  many  as  twelve  hundred 
lines,  described  partly  as  **  Early  Poems,"  which  will  be 
found  at  the  beginning  of  the  volume,  and  partly  as 
"  Posthumous  Poems,"  which  are  placed  at  the  end.  The 
metres  of  the  original  have  been  again  retained  through- 
out. 

Various  errors  discovered  by  me  in  the  first  edition 
have  now  been  corrected ;  and  it  only  remains  for  me  to 
express  my  thanks  for  the  kind  manner  in  which  the 
critical  and  the  general  public,  both  in  England  and  abroad, 
have  received  the  work,  and  for  the  indulgence  extended 
by  them  to  its  many  imperfections. 

B.  A.  B* 


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PBEEACE. 


Ir  may  perhaps  be  thonght  that  I  exhibit  something  of  the 
brazen-faoedness  of  a  hardened  offender  in  yentnring 
once  more  (bnt,  I  hope,  for  the  last  time)  to  present  myself  tc 
the  public  in  the  guise  of  a  translator, — and,  what  is  more, 
a  translator  of  a  great  poet  The  &yourable  reception,  how- 
ever, that  my  preyioos  translations  of  the  Poems  of  Schiller 
and  Goethe  have  met  with  at  the  hands  of  the  public,  may 
possibly  be  admitted  as  some  excuse  for  this  new  attempt  to 
make  that  public  acquainted  with  the  works  of  a  third  great 
Grerman  minstrel.  Comparatively  little  known  and  little 
appreciated  in  England,  the  name  of  Heine  is  in  Grermany 
iamiliar  as  a  household  word;  and  while,  on  the  one  hand, 
many  of  his  charming  minor  poems  have  become  dear  to  the 
hearts  of  thousands  and  tens  of  thousands  of  his  fellow- 
countrymen,  and  are  sung  alike  in  the  palace  and  the  cottage, 
in  the  country  and  the  town,  on  the  other  his  sterner  works 
have  done  much  to  influence  the  political  and  religious 
tendencies  of  the  modem  Grerman  school. 

Having  prefixed  to  this  Volume  a  brief  memoir  of  Heine, 
accompanied  by  a  few  observations  on  his  various  works  and 
their  distinguishing  characteristics,  I  will  here  confine  mysiilf 
to  stating  that  I  have  adhered  with  the  utmost  strictness  to 
the  principles  laid  down  by  me  for  my  guidance  in  the  case 
of  the  previous  translations  attempted  by  me, — those  prin- 
ciples being  (1)  As  close  and  literal  an  adherence  to  the 
original  as  is  consistent  with  good  English  and  with  poetry, 
and  (2)  the  preservation  throughout  the  work  of  the  original 
metres,  of  which  Heine  presents  an  almost  unprecedented 
variety.  I  have,  on  the  occasion  of  my  former  publications, 
fully  explained  my  reasons  for  adopting  this  course,  and  will 
not  weary  the  reader  with  repeating  them.    I  have  sufficient 

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X  PBEFAOE. 

eyidence  before  mA  of  the  approval  of  the  public  in  this 
respect  to  induce  me  to  frame  my  translation  of  Heine's 
Poems  on  the  same  model. 

In  addition  to  thus  preserving  both  the  language  and  the 
metre  of  the  original,  I  have  in  one  other  respect  endeavoured 
to  reproduce  my  author  precisely  as  I  found  him,  and  that  is 
in  the  important  particular  of  completeness.  There  are  doubt- 
less many  poems  written  by  Heine  that  one  could  wish  had 
never  been  written,  and  that  one  would  willingly  refrain  from 
translating.  But  the  omission  of  these  would  hide  from  the 
reader  some  of  Heine's  chief  peculiarities,  and  would  tend  to 
give  him  an  incomplete  if  not  incorrect  notion  of  what  the 
poet  was.  A  translator  no  more  assumes  the  responsibility  of 
his  author's  words  than  a  &ithful  Editor  does,  and  he  goes 
beyond  his  province  if  he  omits  whatever  does  not  happen  to 
agree  with  his  own  notions. 

In  claiming  for  the  present  work  (extending  over  more  than 
20,000  verses)  the  abstract  merits  of  literalness,  completeness, 
and  rigid  adherence  to  the  metrical  peculiarities  of  the 
original,  it  is  very  fiar  from  my  intention  to  claim  any  credit 
for  the  manner  in  which  I  have  executed  that  difficult  task, 
or  to  pretend  that  I  have  been  successful  in  it.  That  is  a 
question  for  the  reader  alone  to  decide.  The  credit  of  con- 
scientiousness and  close  application  in  the  matter  is  all  that  I 
would  venture  to  assert  for  myself.  All  beyond  is  left 
exclusively  to  the  candid,  and,  I  would  fein  hope,  generous, 
appreciation  of  those  whom  I  now  voluntarily  constitute  my 
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HEINEIGH  HEINE. 


ALTHOUGH  little  more  than  three  years  have  elapsed 
since  Heinrich  Heine  was  first  numbered  amongst  the 
dead;  his  name  has  long  been  enrolled  in  the  lists  of  fame. 
Even  daring  his  lifetime  he  had  the  good  fortune, — and,  m  a 
poet,  the  most  nnnsual  good  fortune, — of  being  generally 
•xicepted  as  a  Representative  Man,  and  of  passing  as  the 
National  Bard  of  Young  Germany.  Although  perhaps 
scarcely  entitled  to  rank  with  Goethe  and  Schiller  in  the 
very  highest  order  of  poets,  the  name  of  Heine  will  assuredly 
always  occupy  a  prominent  place  amongst  the  minstrels  not 
only  of  Germany,  but  of  the  world. 

It  is  only  recently  that  his  works  have  been  for  the  first 
time  published  in  an  absolutely  complete  form,  the  poetry 
extending  over  more  than  two  of  the  six  volumes  of  which 
they  consist.  Universally  known  and  read  in  his  native  land, 
and  highly  popular  in  France,  which  was  for  so  many  years 
his  adopted  country,  the  works  of  Heine  are  to  the  generality 
of  Englishmen  (as  stated  in  the  Preface)  almost  entirely 
unknown.  As  the  present  volume  is,  as  far  as  I  am  aware, 
the  only  attempt  that  has  been  made  to  bring  the  far-famed 
poems  of  Heine  in  their  integrity  before  the  English  reader,* 
it  seems  desirable  to  preface  it  by  a  brief  sketch  of  his  life,  so 
that  in  seeing  what  Heine  is  as  a  poet,  we  may  be  able  to  form 
some  idea  as  to  who  he  was  as  a  man.  One  who  has  been 
compared  in  turns  to  Aristophanes,  Rabelais,  Bums,  Cer- 
Tontes,  Sterne,  Jean  Paul,  Voltaire,  Swift,  Byron,  and  Beranger 

♦  I  believe  that  a  translatiou  of  one  of  Heine's  works— ihis  "  Book 
of  Songs  ** — ^was  published  in  this  country  a  few  years  ago,  but  I 
have  not  met  with  it.  An  American  version  of  the  "Pictures  of 
Travel "  also  appeared  m  1855.  ^,^.  ,^^^  ^^  Googk 


XI]  MEMOIft  OF 

(and  to  all  these  has  he  been  likened),  can  Ite  of  no 
oommon  stamp.  The  discrepancies  both  as  to  facts  and  dates 
that  occur  between  the  various  biographies  of  Heine  are,  how- 
ever, 80  nnmerous,  that  it  has  been  no  easy  task  to  avoid  error 
in  the  following  brief  sketch  of  his  life. 

Heinrich  (or  Henry)  Heine  was  bom  in  the  Bolkerstrasse, 
at  Dusseldorf,  on  the  12th  of  December,  1799  ;  but,  singularly 
enough,  the  exact  date  of  his  birth  was,  until  recently, 
unknown  to  his  biographers,  who,  on  the  authority  of  a 
saying  of  his  own,  assigned  it  to  the  1st  of  January,  1800, 
which  he  boasted  made  him  "the  first  man  of  the  century." 
In  reply,  however,  to  a  specific  inquiry  addressed  to  him  by 
a  friend  on  this  subject  a  few  years  before  his  death,  he  stated 
that  he  was  really  bom  on  the  day  first  mentioned,  and  that 
the  date  of  1800  usually  given  by  his  biographers  was  the 
result  of  an  error  voluntarily  committed  by  his  family  in  his 
favour  at  the  time  of  the  Prussian  invasion,  in  order  to 
exempt  him  from  the  service  of  the  king  of  Prussia. 

By  birth  he  was  a  Jew,  both  of  his  parents  having  been  of 
that  persuasion.  He  was  the  eldest  Of  four  children,  and  his 
two  brothers  are  (or  were  recently)  still  alive,  the  one  being  a 
physician  in  Eussia,  and  the  other  an  officer  in  the  Austrian 
service.  The  fiunous  Solomon  Heine,  the  banker  of  Hamburg, 
whose  wealth  was  only  equalled  by  his  philanthropy,  was  his 
uncle.  His  father,  however,  was  far  from  being  in  opulent 
circumstances.  When  quite  a  child,  he  took  dehght  in 
reading  Don  Quixote,  and  used  to  cry  with  anger  at  seeing 
how  ill  the  heroism  of  that  valiant  knight  was  requited.  Ho 
says  somewhere,  speaking  of  his  boyish  days,  "apple-tarts 
"were  then  my  passion.  Now  it  is  love,  truth,  freedom,  and 
"orabH30up."  He  received  his  earliest  education  at  the 
Franciscan  convent  in  his  native  town,  and  while  there  had 
the  misfortune  to  be  the  innocent  cause  of  the  death  by 
drowning  of  a  schoolfellow,  an  incident  recorded  in  one  of  the 
poems  in  his  "Bomancero."  He  mentions  the  great  effect 
produced  upon  him  by  the  sorrowful  &ce  of  a  large  wooden 
Christ  which  was  constantly  before  his  eyes  in  the  Convent. 
Even  at  that  early  age  the  germs  of  what  has  been  called 
"  his  fantastie  sensibility,  the  food  for  infinite  irony,"  seem  to 

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HEIKBICH  HEIKE.  XUl 

bave  beai  deyeloping  themselyes.  A  yisit  of  tlio  Emperoi 
Napoleon  to  Ihisseldorf  when  he  was  a  boy  affected  him  in  a. 
singular  manner,  and  had  probably  much  to  do  with  the  i 
formation  of  those  imperialist  tendencies  which  are  often  to  / 
be  noticed  in  his  character  and  writings.  He  was  next 
placed  in  the  Lyceom  of  Dusseldorf,  and  in  1816  was  sent  to 
Hamburg  to  study  commerce,  being  intended  for  mercantile 
pursuits.  In  1819  he  was  removed  to  the  University  at  Bonn 
which  had  been  founded  in  the  previous  year,  and  there  he 
had  the  advantage  of  studying  under  Augustus  Schl^el. 
He  seems,  however,  to  have  remained  there  only  six  months, 
and  to  have  then  gone  to  the  University  of  Grottingen,  where, 
as  he  tells  us,  he  was  rusticated  soon  after  matriculation. 
He  next  took  up  his  abode  at  Berlin,  wheie  he  applied 
himself  to  the  study  of  philosophy,  under  the  direction  of 
the  great  Hegel,  whose  influence,  combined  with  iiiat  of  the 
works  of  Spinoea,  undoubtedly  had  much  to  do  with  the 
formation  of  Heine's  mind,  and  also  determined  his  future 
career.  From  this  time  we  hear  no  more  of  his  turning 
merchant ;  and  it  is  from  the  date  of  his  residence  at  Berlin 
that  we  may  date  the  rise  of  that  spirit  of  universal  indiffer- 
ence and  reckless  daring  that  so  strongly  characterizes  the 
writings  of  Heine.  Amongst  his  associates  at  this  period  may 
be  mentioned,  in  addition  to  Hegel,  Ghamisso,  Yarnhagen  von 
Ense  and  his  well-known  wife  Eachel,  Bopp  the  philologist, 
and  Grabbe,  the  eccentricities  of  whose  works  were  only 
equalled  by  the  eccentricities  of  his  life. 

Heine's  first  volume  of  poetry,  entitled  "Gedichto"  or 
Poems,  was  published  in  1822,  the  poems  being  those  which, 
under  the  name  of  "  Youthful  Sorrows,"  now  form  the  open- 
ing of  his  "Book  of  Songs."  Notwithstanding  the  extra- 
ordinary success  afterwards  obtained  by  this  latter  work,  his 
first  publication  was  very  coldly  received.  Some  of  the 
poems  in  it  were  written  as  far  back  as  1817,*  and  originally 

♦  One  of  the  finest  in  the  collection,  •*  The  Grenadiers,"  which  ia 
tiuNrooghly  imbued  with  the  spirit  of  Banger,  was  written  as  early 
at  1815,  when  Heine  was  not  sixteen  years  old,  and  before  B^ranger 
had  wi^iAD  his  analogous  poems  ^'  Ijc  Yieux  Drapeau,"  ^'  Le  Yieus 
Sergwit,"  &c.  ^  ^    ^^  ^  Google 


XIV  MEMOIB  OF 

ftppearal  in  the  Hambnrg  periodical  "Der  "Wachter"  oi 
"  Watchman."  Offended  at  this  result,  he  left  Berlin  and 
returned  to  Gottingen  in  1823,  where  he  took  to  studying 
law,  and  received  the  degree  of  Doctor  in  1825.  He  was 
baptized  into  the  Lutheran  Church  in  the  same  year,  at 
Heiligenstadt,  near  that  place.  He  afterwards  said  jocularly 
that  he  took  this  course  to  prevent  M.  de  Bothschild  treating 
him  iooformilUonairely.  It  is  to  be  feared,  however,  from  the 
tone  of  all  his  works,  that  his  nominal  religious  opinions  sat 
very  lightly  upon  him  through  life.  He  writes  as  follows  on 
this  subject  in  1852 :  "  My  ancestors  belonged  to  the  Jewish 
"  religion,  but  I  was  never  proud  of  this  descent ;  neither  did  I 
"ever  set  store  upon  my  quality  of  Lutheran,  although  I 
"  belong  to  the  evangehcal  confession  quite  as  much  as  the 
"  greatest  devotees  amongst  my  Berlin  enemies,  who  always 
"  reproach  me  with  a  want  of  rehgion.  I  rather  felt  humiliated 
"  at  passing  for  a  purely  human  creature,— I  whom  the  philo- 
"  sophy  of  Hegel  led  to  suppose  that  I  was  a  god.  How  proud 
"  I  then  was  of  my  divinity !  What  an  idea  I  had  of  my 
"  grandeur !  Alas !  that  charming  time  has  long  passed  away, 
"  and  I  cannot  think  of  it  without  sadness,  now  that  I  am 
"lying  stretched  on  my  back,  whilst  my  disease  is  making 
"  terrible  progress." 

Previous  to  this  date,  and  whilst  living  at  Berlin,  Heine 
published  (in  1823)  his  only  two  plays,  "Almanzor"  and 
"  Ratcliff,"  which  were  equally  unsuccessful  on  the  stage  and 
in  print,  and  which  are  certainly  the  least  worthy  of  all  his 
worK's.  Between  these  two  plays  he  inserted  a  collection  of 
poetry  entitled  "Lyrical  Interlude,"  which  attracted  little 
attention  at  the  time.  In  the  year  1827,  however,  he  re- 
published this  collection  at  Hamburg,  in  conjunction  with  his 
"  Youthful  Sorrows,"  giving  to  the  whole  the  title  of  the 
"Book  of  Songs."  In  proportion  to  the  indifference  with 
which  his  poems  had  been  received  on  their  first  appearance, 
was  the  enthusiasm  which  they  now  excited.  They  were  read 
with  avidity  in  every  direction,  especially  in  the  various 
universities,  where  their  influence  upon  the  minds  of  the 
students  was  very  great.  In  the  year  1852,  this  work  had 
reached  the  tenth  edition 

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HEINKICH  HEINE.  XV 

Heine's  next  great  work,  his  "  Eeisebilder,"  or  Pictures  of 
Travel,  written  partly  in  poetry  and  partly  in  prose,  was 
published  at  Hamburg  at  yarious  intervals  from  1826  to 
1831,  and,  as  its  name  implies,  is  descriptive  of  his  travels  in 
different  countries,  especially  in  England  and  Italy.  The 
poetical  portion  of  the  "  Eeisebilder,"  the  whole  of  which  is 
translated  in  this  volume,  is  divided  into  three  parts, — "The 
Eetum  Home,"  the  " Hartz- Journey,"  and  "The  Baltic," 
written  between  1823  and  1826.  This  work  again  met  with 
an  almost  unprecedented  success,  and  &om  the  date  of  its 
pubhcation  and  that  of  the  "Book  of  Songs,"  may  be 
reckoned  the  commencement  of  a  new  era  in  German  litera- 
ture. These  remarkable  poems  exhibit  the  whole  nature  of 
Heine,  free  from  all  disg^ise.  The  striking  originality,  the 
exuberance  of  fancy,  and,  above  all,  the  singular  beauty  and 
feeling  of  the  versification  that  characterize  nearly  the  whole 
of  them,  stand  out  in  as  yet  unheard-of  contrast  to  the 
intense  and  bitter  irony  that  pervades  them,— an  irony  that 
spared  nobody,  that  spared  nothing,  not  even  the  most  sacred  ^ 
subjects  being  exempt  from  the  poet's  mocking  sarcasm. 
This  characteristic  of  Heine  only  increased  as  years  passed 
on.  In  the  later  years  of  his  life,  which  were  one  long-  ^ 
continued  agony,  his  bodily  sufferings  offer  some  excuse,  it 
may  be,  for  what  would  otherwise  have  been  inexcusable  in 
the  writings  of  a  great  poet.  There  was  doubtless  much^ 
affectation  in  the  want  of  all  religious  and  political  faith  that/ 
is  so  signally  apparent  in  the  works  of  Heine,  and  yet  they  I 
betray  a  real  bitterness  of  feeling  that  cannot  be  mistaken./ 
At  every  page  may  be  traced  the  malicious  pleasure  felt  by 
him  in  exciting  the  sympathy  and  admiration  of  the  reader  to 
the  highest  pitch,  and  then  with  a  few  words, — with  the  last 
line  or  the  last  verse  of  a  long  poem,  it  may  be,— rudely 
insulting  them,  and  dashing  them  to  the  ground.  No  better 
parody  of  this  favourite  amusement  of  Heine  can  be  given 
than  by  citing  two  well-known  verses  of  Dr.  Johnson : 

"  Hermit  old  in  mossy  cell, 

"  Wearing  out  life's  eveniiijc  gi^y, 
**  Strike  thy  pensive  breast,  and  tell 

•*  Where  in  bliss,  and  which  tb**  way  V        ^  . 

.itizedbyLiOOgle 


&T1  MElklOIB  OF 

Thus  I  spake,  and  frequent  sigh'd, 

Scarce  repressed  the  falling  tear, 
When  the  hoary  sage  replied  : 

"  Come,  my  lad,  and  drink  some  beer  ." 

The  exubeiance  of  Heine's  heart,  as  has  been  well  said, 
was  only  equalled  by  the  dryness  of  his  spirit;  a  real 
enthusiasm  was  blended  with  an  unquenchable  love  of  satire; 
"his  exquisite  dilettanteism  made  him  adore  the  gods  and 
goddesses  of  Greece  at  the  expense  even  of  Christianity." 
In  short,  qualities  scarcely  ever  found  in  combination,  were 
combined  in  him ;  in  one  weak,  suffering  body  two  distinct 
and  opposite  natures,  each  equally  mighty,  were  united. 
Perhaps  the  best  name  ever  applied  to  him  is  that  of  the 
"  Julian  of  poetry." 

The  French  Bevolution  in  1830  determined  Heine's  future 
life.  He  was  then  living  at  Berlin  again,  after  having  resided 
at  Hamburg  and  Munich.  He  now  turned  politician  and 
newspaper  writer.  His  Essay  on  Nobility  was  written  at  this 
time.  He  presently  (in  May  1831)  went  to  live  in  Paris, 
where  he  resided  until  his  death,  with  the  exception  of 
making  one  or  two  short  visits  to  his  native  land.  Though 
the  fsuct  is  not  exactly  stated,  there  can  be  no  doubt  that  he 
received  some  very  broad  hints  from  the  authorities  of 
Prussia  to  leave  that  country.  From  that  time,  France 
becaiUit  bin  a«lopted  fsitherland,  and  he  himself  was  thence- 
forwanl  nior<)  of  a  Frenchman  than  a  German.  The  Germane 
have  indeed  ahvays  reproached  him  as  being  frivolous  and 
French ;  he  liaA  often  been  called  the  Voltaire  of  Germany ; 
but  Thiers  perhaps  described  him  the  most  accurately  when 
he  spoke  of  him  as  being  ''the  wittiest  Frenchman  since 
Yoltaircu'  He  wrote  French  as  fluently  as  German;  and  tho 
translations  of  hi^<  various  works  that  were  published  in 
Paris  ii  the  JiiV^u  des  deux  Mondes  and  the  BihliGtheque 
Contemyoraifie,  or  at)  separate  works,  were  either  written  by 
him&elf,  or  by  bis  |)erBonal  Mends  under  his  own  immediate 
superintendence. 

Some  of  his  mon:  naportant  prose  works  were  written  soon 
after  he  took  up  his  abode  in  Paris.  He  wrote,  in  1881,  a 
series  (if  articles  foj   the  Augsburg  Gazette  on  the  State  of 

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HBIKBIOH  HEINE.  XYll 

France,  which  he  subsequently  collected  and  published  both 
in  French  and  German.  In  1833  appeared  his  well-known 
"History  of  Modem  Literature  in  Germany/'  republished 
afterwards  under  the  title  of  "  The  Bomantic  School/'  and  in 
French  under  that  of  "  L'Allemagne/'  This  may  be  looked 
upon  as  his  most  remarkable  prose  work,  and  as  the  one  that 
most  exhibits  his  characteristic  peculiarities.  The  following 
lively  description  of  it  is  from  the  pen  of  an  eminent  French 
critic :  "  According  to  M.  Heine,  the  whole  of  the  intellectual 
''  movement  of  Germany  since  Lessing  and  Eant  has  been  a 
"death-struggle  against  Deism.  This  struggle  he  describes 
*'  with  passion,  and  it  may  be  said  that  he  heads  it  in  person. 
*'  He  ranges  his  army  in  order  of  battle,  he  gives  the  signals, 
"  and  marches  the  Titans  against  heaven, — Kant,  Fichte,  Hegel, 
"  all  those  formidable  spirits  whose  every  thought  is  a  victory, 
"  whose  every  formula  is  a  cosmogonic  houteversement,  Aroxmd 
"  them,  in  front  or  behind,  are  grouped  a  crowd  of  writers, 
"  theologiatd  and  poets,  romance  writers  and  savans.  If  one 
"of  the  combatants  stops  short,  like  Schelling,  the  author 
"  overwhelms  him  with  invectives.  If  a  timid  and  poetic  band 
"^i  dreamers,  such  as  Tieck,  Novalis,  Brentano,  and  Amim,' 
"  try  to  bring  back  this  feverish  Germany  to  the  fresh  poetry 
"of  the  middle  ages,  he  throws  himself  upon  them  and  dis- 
"  perses  them,  like  those  Cobolds  in  the  '  Book  of  Songs '  who 
"  overthrew  the  angels  of  paradise.  And  when  the  philoso- 
"  phical  conflict  is  over,  he  predicts  its  consequences  with  a  sort 
"of  savage  delirium  ....  He  compares  Kant  to  the  blood- 
**  thirsty  dictators  of  ^93,  and  proclaims  the  gospel  of  pantheism. 
"His  theory  of  the  intellectual  history  of  the  Germans  is 
*  altogether  Mse,  and  should  only  be  consulted  as  an  illustra- 
"  tion — alas,  too  positive ! — of  the  fever  at  once  mystical  and 
"  sensual  of  a  certain  period  of  our  age."  This  book  produced 
a  perfect  storm  of  fury  in  Grermany.  "  Denounced  by  Menzel 
"  and  the  pietists  as  an  emissary  of  Modem  Babylon,  cursed  by 
"  the  austere  tmtomanvuis  as  a  representative  of  Parisian  cor- 
"mption,  Heine  was  not  the  less  suspected  by  the  democrats, 
"  who  accused  him  of  treason.  To  this  was  added  official 
•*  persecution." 
Proceeding  to  his  next  work,  the  publication  of  his  "  Salon/' 

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XVlll  MSMOIB  OF 

consistiiig  of  an  interesting  series  of  essays,  &c.,  commenced 
at  Hamburg  in  18S4,  its  fourth  and  last  volume  not  appear- 
ing till  1B40.  A  long  essay  on  the  Women  of  Shakespeare 
appeared  in  1839,  and  in  1840  a  violent  personal  attack  on 
his  old  friend,  the  republican  poet  Borne,  then  only  recently 
dead, — a  work  which,  with  all  its  talent,  did  great  injury  to 
his  reputation.  His  remaining  great  prose  work,  entitled 
"  Lutezia,"  or  Paris,  consists  of  a  collection  of  valuable  articles 
on  French  politics,  arts,  and  manners,  written  by  him  as  the 
correspondent  of  the  Augsburg  Gazette  between  1840  and  1844. 
The  only  other  writings  of  his  in  prose  that  need  be  specified, 
entitled  respectively  "Confessions,"  "Dr.  Faust,"  and  the 
"  Grods  in  Exile,"  were  written  a  few  years  before  his  death. 

After  the  publication  of  the  "  Eeisebilder,"  Heine's  next 
poetical  production  was  the  charming  poem  of  "  Atta  Troll," 
which  appeared  in  1841,  written  in  a  simple  trochaic  metre, 
— "  four-footed  solemn  trochees,"  as  he  himself  expresses  it. 
This  poem  has  been  described  as  the  work  of  a  (German 
Ariosto,  combining  gaiety  and  poetry,  irony  and  imagination 
in  perfect  proportions.  Much  worldly  wisdom  is  to  be  learnt 
from  the  instructive  history  of  Atta  Troll,  the  dancing  bear  of 
the  Pyrenees.  The  striking  interlude  in  it  of  the  vision  of  Hero- 
dias  amongst  the  spirit  huntsmen  should  not  be  overlooked. 

The  marriage  of  Heine  seems  to  have  taken  place  at  about 
this  period.  His  wife,  who  is  often  spoken  of  in  his  poems  in 
terms  of  deep  affection,  and  whose  name  was  Mathilde,  was 
a  Frenchwoman  and  a  Eoman  Catholic,  and  they  were  married 
according  to  the  rites  of  that  church.  With  all  his  love  for 
Madame  Heine,  however,  he  seems  to  have  been  very  jealous 
of  her,  and  it  is  recorded  that  on  one  occasion  he  took  it  into 
his  head  that  she  had  run  away  from  him.  He  was  reassured 
by  hearing  the  voice  of  her  favourite  parrot "  Oocotte,"  which 
led  him  to  say,  that  she  would  never  have  gone  off  without 
taking  "Cocotte"  with  her.  In  spite  of  the  bitterness  of 
I  spirit  that  pervades  all  his  writings,  it  is  clear  that  he  pos- 
sessed deep  natural  affections.  His  mother  survived  him; 
and  though  ahnost  entirely  separated  from  her  for  the  last 
tweniy-five  years  of  his  life,  he  often  introduces  her  name  in 
his  works  with  expressions  of  filial  reverence.    His  last  visit 


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HEINBIOH  HEINE.  XIX 

fo  Germany  in  the  winter  of  1843  seems  to  have  been  for  the 
special  purpose  of  visiting  her  at  Hamburg,  where  she  resided. 
His  friends  fancied  that  the  "  old  woman  at  the  Dammthor  " 
(one  of  the  gates  of  Hamburg),  of  whom  he  used  to  speak, 
was  a  myth,  but  she  waa  no  other  than  his  mother.  Nothing 
can  be  more  charming  than  the  manner  in  T^hich  he  speaks 
of  both  her  and  his  wife  in  the  beautiful  little  poem  called 
"  Night  Thoughts.**    (See  page  179.) 

In  1844  he  published  a  fresh  collection  of  poems  under  the 
title  of  "  New  Poems,"  to  which  was  added  as  an  appendix 
"Germany,  a  Winter  Tale."  The  former  of  these  was  sub- 
sequently added  by  him  to  his  "  Book  of  Songs,"  and  will  be 
found  in  its  place  accordingly  in  the  present  volume,  as  well 
as  his  "New  Spring,"  which  formed  a  part  of  the  same  work. 
The  *'  Germany"  is  one  of  his  most  remarkable  works,  and 
contains  an  account  of  his  journey  to  Hamburg  the  previous 
winter  to  see  his  mother  that  has  just  been  referred  to.  None 
of  his  productions  are  more  thoroughly  impregnated  with 
the  spirit  of  satire.  Every  stage  of  his  journey,  from  its 
commencement  at  the  Prussian  frontier,  to  its  termination  at 
Hamburg,  gives  occasion  for  the  display  of  his  wit  and  sar- 
castic raillery.  It  will  be  seen  that  many  of  the  passages  in 
the  poem  were  struck  out  of  the  original  edition  by  the  ofl&cial 
Censors.  Perhai)s  the  most  amusing  portions  are  the  episode 
of  the  author  s  adventures  in  the  Cavern  of  Kyffhauser  with 
the  fiEonous  Emperor  Barbarossa  (not  omitting  their  little  con- 
versation respecting  the  guillotine),  and  the  rencontre  with  the 
Goddess  Hammonia  in  the  streets  of  Hamburg,  and  his  sub- 
sequent t^ie-h-i^te  with  her.  The  extravagance  (slightly 
course  it  must  be  confessed)  of  the  latter  scene  is  quite  worthy 
of  Babelais,  though  the  poet  takes  care  to  tell  us  that  it  is 
intended  to  imitate  Aristophanes.  The  remonstrances  to  the 
King  of  Prussia,  with  which  the  poem  concludes,  should  also 
not  be  passed  over. 

In  the  year  1848,  after  a  premonitory  attack  in  1847  that 
passed  away,  that  terrible  disease  which  eventually  destroyed 
Heine's  life,  first  assailed  him  in  an  aggravated  form.  Com- 
mencing with  a  paralysis  of  the  left  eyelid,  it  extended  pre- 
sently to  both  eyes  and  finally  terminated  in  paralysis  and 

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XX  MEMOIR  OF 

atrophy  of  the  \eg^.  The  last  time  he  ever  left  his  house  was. 
in  May,  1848.  For  eight  long  years  he  was  confined  to  his 
couch,  to  use  his  own  expression,  in  a  state  of  "  death  with- 
"  out  its  repose,  and  without  the  privileges  of  the  dead,  who 
"have  no  need  to  spend  money,  and  no  letters  or  hooks  to 
"  write."  But  despite  his  bodily  sufferings,  his  good  spirits 
never  seemed  to  leave  him,  his  love  of  raillery  did  but  in- 
crease, and  little  did  that  public  whose  interest  he  continued 
to  excite  by  the  wonderful  products  of  his  genius  know  of 
his  distressing  state. 

In  the  years  1850  and  1851,  in  the  midst  of  his  fearful 
malady,  Heine  composed  his  last  great  poetical  work  entitled 
"Eomancero."  This  singular  volume  is  divided  into  three 
Books,  called  respectively  "Histories,"  Lamentations,"  and 
"  Hebrew  Melodies."  The  first  of  these  contains  a  large  num- 
ber of  romantic  ballads  and  poems  of  the  most  dissimilar 
character,  but  all  bearing  the  stamp  of  the  author's  peculiar 
genius ;  the  second  opens  with  several  miscellaneous  pieces, 
including  some  literary  satires,  and  concludes  with  twenty- 
pieces  bearing  the  lively  title  of  "  Lazarus,"  and  comprising, 
as  some  one  has  observed,  the  journal  of  his  impressions  as  a 
sick  man.  The  "  Hebrew  Melodies  "  are  subdivided  into  three, 
entitled  by  Heine  "  Princess  Sabbath,"  "  Jehuda  ben  Halevy  " 
a  poem  itself  in  three  parts,  and  "  Disputation."  The  Jewish 
descent  and  Jewish  sympathies  of  the  poet  are  plainly  dis- 
cernible in  these  Melodies,  the  most  interesting  of  which,  and 
probably  the  best  of  the  whole  collection  contained  in  the 
"  Komancero,"  is  that  which  sets  forth  the  life  of  Jehuda  ben 
Halevy,  the  great  Hebrew  poet  of  the  middle  ages.  Some 
critics  rank  this  poem  amongst  Heine's  very  best  productions 
The  concluding  piece, "  Disputation,"  is  in  Heine's  wildest 
style,  and  seems  written  for  the  express  purpose  of  destroying 
the  pleasure  excited  by  the  one  that  ^nrecedes  it.  In  none  of 
his  works  is  his  mocking  spirit  more  plainly  discernible.  "  It 
"is  the  most  Voltairian  scene  ever  imagined  by  the  sceptical 
"  demon  of  his  mind."  No  one  can  read  this  polemical  poem 
without  seeing  how  little  Heine  himself  cared  for  any  received 
form  of  religion, — ^for  the  Christian  faith  as  professed  by  him, 
or  the  Jewish  faith  into  which  he  was  bom.    The  piece  ter- 


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HEIKRICH   HEINE.  XXI 

minates  in  Heme's  &yourite  manner,  namely,  with  an  unex- 
pected joke  in  the  last  line. 

The  collection  entitled  "  Latest  Poems"  was  written  three 
years  afterwards.  Its  name  shows  that  the  end  was  now  not 
£Eur  off.  The  hand  of  a  master  is  still  visible  in  all  these 
poems,  the  most  interesting  of  which  is  perhaps  the  "  Slave 
Ship,"  one  of  the  most  powerful  productions  of  Heine's  pen. 
In  the  year  1855,  he  published  a  French  translation  of  his 
"  New  Spring  "  in  the  Bevue  des  deux  Mondes,  And  now  the 
end  really  arrived. 

On  the  17th  February,  1856,  Henry  Heine  was  at  length 
released  from  his  sufferings  in  his  house  in  the  Avenue 
Matignon,  No.  3,  as  appears  from  the  obituary  notice.  The 
smallness  of  the  attendance  at  his  faneral  would  seem  to 
show  that  there  was  some  truth  in  the  saying  that  he  had 
many  admirers  but  few  friends.  The  only  names  of  note 
that  are  recorded  as  having  been  present  on  the  occasion  are 
Mignet,  Gautier,  and  Dumas.  And  this  was  the  man  who 
was  recognized  as  the  successor  of  Goethe  in  the  throne  of 
poetry  in  Germany,  and  whose  songs  were  already  household 
words  in  all  parts  of  that  country!  His  humour  did  not 
leave  him  till  the  very  lasi  A  few  days  before  his  death 
Hector  Berlioz  called  on  him  just  as  a  tiresome  German  pro- 
feaq^  was  leavmg  the  room  after  wearying  him  with  his 
iinin%resting  conversation.  "I  am  afraid  you  will  find  me 
"  very  stupid,  my  dear  fellow !    The  £Eu;t  is,  I  have  just  been 

"  exchanging  thoughts  with  Dr. "  was  his  remark.    Only  a 

day  or  two  before  he  expired,  he  sent  back  to  the  printer  the 
last  proofs  of  a  new  edition  of  the  "  Eeisebilder." 

Heine  left  a  singular  will  behind  him,  in  which  he  begged 
that  all  religious  solemnities  should  be  dispensed  with  at  his 
funeral^  and  that,  although  he  called  himself  a  Lutheran,  no 
Lutheran  minister  should  officiate  on  the  occasion.  He  added 
that  this  was  not  a  mere  freak  of  a  freethinker,  for  that  he 
had  for  the  last  four  years  dismissed  all  the  pride  with  which 
philosophy  had  filled  him,  and  felt  once  more  the  power  of 
religious  truth.  He  also  begged  for  forgiveness  for  any 
offence  which,  in  his  ignorance,  he  might  have  given  to  good 
manners  and  morals. 


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XXU  MEMOIR  OF 

When  the  private  papers  of  Lotus  Philippe  fell  into  the 
hands  of  the  populace  at  the  saek  of  the  Ttiileries  in  Fe- 
bruary, 1848,  it  was  discovered  that  Heine  had  for  many  years 
enjoyed  a  pension  of  some  200?.  a  year  on  the  Civil  List. 
This  discovery  gave  an  opening  to  the  republicans  for  violent 
attacks  on  him;  but  there  does  not  appear  to  have  been  any- 
thing in  the  circumstances  of  the  c&se  to  make  this  transac- 
tion discreditable  to  either  the  giver  or  the  receiver  of  the 
pension. 

Heine  is  described  as  having  lived  in  the  simplest  manner, 
occupying  three  small  rooms  on  the  third  floor,  the  manage 
comprising,  in  addition  to  his  wife  and  himself,  no  one  but 
an  old  negress  as  a  servant,  and  "C!ocotte,"  who  has  been 
already  alluded  to. 

Heine  is  beyond  question  the  greatest  poet  that  has  ap- 
peared in  Germany  since  the  death  of  Goetha  Enough  has 
been  said  in  the  course  of  this  brief  sketch  of  his  life  to  show 
the  singular,  the  unprecedented  character  of  his  genius,  and 
to  illustrate  that  combination  in  his  person  of  two  separate 
natures  that  we  have  stated  to  exist.  /What  more  touching 
trait  of  character  was  ever  heard  of,  than  the  simple  &ct  that 
although  the  last  eight  years  of  his  life  were  spent  in  a  state 
of  intolerable  agony,  he  lefb  his  mother  in  ignorance  of  his 
sufferings  to  the  very  last!  Yes,  when  stricken  with  total 
blindness,  and  when  dying  literally  by  inches,  all  his  letters 
to  the  "old  woman  at  the  Dammthor"  were  written  in  the 
most  cheerful,  happy  tone,  and  he  made  her  believe  that  his 
only  reason  for  employing  an  amanuensis  instead  of  writing 
with  his  own  hand  was  that  he  had  a  slight  affection  in  his 
^yes,  which  would  be  cured  with  a  little  care ! 

The  following  appreciation  of  the  character  of  Heine, 
written  while  he  was  still  alive,  but  when  the  shades  of  dark- 
ness and  death  were  slowly  gathering  round  him,  may  serve 
as  a  fitting  termination  to  tiiese  few  pages :— "  It  may  be  said 
"  that  Heine  bears  within  him  all  the  misery  of  a  mighiy 
''literature  that  has  fallen  from  his  ideal.  Let  this  be  hiis 
"excuse.  But  now  his  eyes  are  closing  on  this  perishable 
"  world,  whose  contradictions  and  wretchedness  provoked  his 
*'  painful  gaiety ;  another  world  is  opening  on  his  mind.  Therej 


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HEINRICH   HEINE.  XXlll 

"no  more  misery,  no  more  irritating  contrasts,  no  more  revolt- 
^'ing  disenchantments ;  there,  all  problems  are  resolved,  all 
**  struggles  cease.  If  irony,  in  the  case  of  a  capricious  and 
'*  ardent  intelligence,  could  be  the  faithful  mirror  of  things 
"  below,  there  is  no  room  save  for  confidence  and  respect  in 
**  that  spiritual  world  that  his  soul's  looks  are  fast  discovering. 
"  He  sought  for  serenity  in  that  light  raillery  which  enveloped 
"  the  whole  universe,  and  played  his  x)art  in  it  with  grace ; 
*'  but  this  serenity  was  incomplete  and  false,  and  often  suffered 
"  his  ill-cured  sorrows  to  break  forth.  True  serenity  is  a  higher 
"  thing ;  it  is  to  be  found  in  the  intelligence  and  adoration  of 
"that  ideal  which  nothing  can  affect,  that  truth  which  no 
"  shadow  can  obscure."  And  so  with  these  words  of  kindly 
qrnipathy,  Heinrich  Heine,— farewell  I 


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EARLY  P0EM8. 


SONGS  OF  LOVE. 


1.  LOVE  S  SALUTATION. 

DAELING  maiden,  who  can  be 
Ever  found  to  equal  thee  ? 
To  thy  service  joyfully 
Shall  my  life  be  pledged  by  me. 

Thy  sweet  eyes  gleam  tenderly, 

Like  soft  moonbeams  o'er  the  sea  j 
Lights  of  rosy  harmony 

O'er  thy  red  cheeks  wander  free^ 

From  thy  small  mouth,  full  of  glee, 

Rows  of  pearls  peep  charmingly ; 
But  thy  bosom's  drapery 

Veils  thy  fairest  jewelry. 

Pure  love  only  could  it  be 

That  so  sweetly  thrill*d  through  mOj 

When  I  whilome  gazed  on  thee. 
Darling  maid,  so  fair  to  see. 

2.  LOVE'S  LAMENT. 

ON  night's  secrecy  relying. 
Silently  I  breathe  my  woes ; 
From  the  haunts  of  mortals  flying, 
Where  the  cup  of  pleasure  flows. 

Down  my  cheeks  run  tears  all  burning, 

Silently,  unceasingly ; 
But  my  bosom's  fiery  yearning 

Quench'd  by  tears  can  never  be. 

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HEINE  S  POEMS. 

When  a  laughing  uroliin,  gaily 
Many  a  merry  game  I  play'd ; 

In  life's  sunshine  basking  daily.. 
Knowing  nought  of  grief  or  shade. 

For  a  garden  of  enjoyment 

Was  the  world  I  then  lived  in, 

Tending  flowers  my  sole  employmoni, 
Eoses,  violets,  jessamine. 

By  the  brook's  side,  on  the  meadow, 

Sweetly  mused  I  in  those  days ; 
Now  I  see  a  pale  thin  shadow, 
'     When  upon  the  brook  I  gaze. 

Pale  and  thin  my  grief  hath  mado  me. 
Since  mine  eyes  upon  her  fell ; 

Secret  sorrows  now  pervade  me, 
Wonderful  and  hard  to  telL 

Deep  within  my  heart  I  cherish'd 
Angel  forms  of  peace  and  love, 

Which  have  fled,  their  short  joys  perish'd, 
To  their  starry  home  above. 

Ghastly  shadows  rise  unbidden, 

Black  night  round  mine  eyes  is  thrown ; 

In  my  trembling  breast  is  hidden 
A  sad  whisp'ring  voice  unknown. 

Unknown  sorrows,  unknown  anguish 

Toss  me  wildly  to  and  fro. 
And  I  pine  away  and  languish. 

Tortured  by  an  unknown  gl(*w. 

But  the  cause  why  I  am  lying 
Eack'd  by  fiery  torments  now, — 

Why  from  very  grief  I'm  dying, — 
Love,  behold ! — The  cause  art  thou  I 


8.  YEAKNING. 

TT/ITH  sweetheart  on  arm,  all  my  comradeu  with  joy 

▼  ▼       Beneath  the  linden  trees  move ; 
But  I,  alas,  poor  desolate  boy, 
In  utter  solitude  rove 


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EABLY  POEMS. 

Mine  eye  grows  dim,  my  heart  is  oppress'd, 

When  happy  lovers  I  see ; 
For  a  sweetiieart  by  me  is  also  possessed. 

But,  alas,  far  distant  is  she. 

I  have  borne  it  for  years,  with  a  heart  fit  to  break, 
But  no  longer  can  bear  with  the  pain ; 

So  pack  up  my  bundle,  my  pilgrim's  staff  take, 
And  start  on  my  travels  again. 

And  onward  I  go  for  hundreds  of  miles, 

Till  I  come  to  a  city  renown'd ; 
A  noble  river  beneath  it  smiles. 

With  three  stately  towers  'tis  crown'd. 

And  now  my  late  sorrows  no  longer  annoy, 

Made  happy  at  last  is  my  love ; 
For  there,  with  my  sweetheart  on  arm,  I  with  joy 

Can  beneath  the  sweet  linden  trees  rove. 


4.  THE  WHITE  FLOWER. 

IN  father's  garden  there  silently  grows 
A  flow'ret  mournful  and  pale ; 
The  spring-time  returns,  the  wintOT's  frost  goes, 

Pale  flow'ret  remaineth  as  pale. 
The  poor  pale  flower  looks  still 
Like  a  young  bride  that's  ill. 

Pale  flow'ret  gently  saith  to  me — 
"  Dear  brother,  pluck  me,  I  pray !" 

I  answer  pale  flow'ret — "  That  must  not  be, 
"  I  never  will  take  thee  away. 

"  I  seek  with  anxious  care 

"  A  purple  flow'ret  fair." 

Pale  flow'ret  saith — "  Seek  here,  seek  there, 

«  Seek  e'en  till  the  day  of  thy  death, 
**  But  still  that  purple  flow'ret  feir 

"  Thoult  seek  in  vain,"  she  saith. 
**  But,  prythee,  pluck  me  now, 
'  I  am  as  ill  as  thou." 


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BRUTES  POEMS. 

Thus  whispers  pale  flow'ret,  beseeching  me  sore ; 

I  tremblingly  pluck  her,  and  lo ! 
I  find  my  heart  suddenly  bleeding  no  more, 

Mine  inward  eye  brightly  doth  glow. 
Mute  angel-rapture  blest 
Now  fills  my  wounded  breast. 

5.  PRESENTIMENT. 

YONDEE,  where  the  stars  glow  nighfclv, 
We  shall  find  those  joys  smile  brightly 
Which  on  earth  seem  far  away. 
Only  in  Death's  cold  embraces 
Life  grows  warm,  and  light  replaces 
Night's  dark  gloom  at  dawn  of  day. 


6. 

WHEN  I  am  with  my  sweetheart  kin^i, 
A  happy  youth  am  I ; 
So  great  the  wealth  within  my  mind, 
I  the  whole  world  could  buy. 

But  when  her  swanlike  arms  I  quit, 

In  that  sad  hour  of  pain, 
Away  my  boasted  wealth  doth  flit. 

And  I  am  poor  again. 


I  WOULD  the  songs  I'm  singing 
Had  little  flow'rets  been ; 
I'd  send  them  to  my  sweetheart 
For  her  to  smell,  I  ween. 

I  would  the  songs  I'm  singing 

Were  kisses  all  unseen ; 
I'd  send  them  all  in  secret 

Upon  her  cheeks  to  glean. 

I  would  the  songs  I'm  singing 

Were  little  peas  so  green ; 
I'd  make  some  capital  pea-soup 

All  in  a  soup-tureen  I 

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EikBLY  POEMS. 


8. 


OF  peace,  and  happiness,  and  heart, 
Thou,  loved  one,  long  time  hast  bereft  mo ; 
And  of  the  gifts  that  thou  hast  left  me 
Not  one  of  these  doth  form  a  part. 

For  peace,  heart,  happiness,  hast  thou 
^  To  me  a  life-long  sorrow  given, 
.With  bitter  words  commingled  even, — 
O  take  these  back,  my  loved  one,  now. 

9. 

REMEMBEE'ST  thou  those  fiery  glances 
In  which  his  trust  the  novice  plac'd  ? 
That  long-denied  first  kiss  of  passion 
The  ardent  lover  stole  in  haste  ? 

O  glances,  ye  experienced  fish-hooks, 
On  which  the  fish  is  captive  brought  I 

O  kiss,  thou  charming  rod  of  honey, 
With  which  the  bird  is  limed  and  caught  I 

10. 

THOU  spak'st  and  gav'st  a  lock  to  me 
Of  thy  dear  silken  hair ; 
"  Wear  this,  and  I  for  ever  thee 
•*  Within  my  heart  will  wear.'* 

Full  oft  have  heart  and  hair  been  call'd 

To  act  this  loving  part. 
Now  say :  is  not  thy  head  yet  bald  ? 

And  full  thy  little  heart  ? 

11. 

YOU,  loved  one,  assured  me  so  strongly, 
I  wellnigh  fancied  it  true ; 
That  you  asserted  it  was  so, 

Was  no  sign  of  folly  in  you. 
But  that  I  almost  believed  it, 
'Tis  this  that  I  so  rue. 


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HEmx's  POEMS. 


12. 

I'VE  seen  full  many  a  tragedy  play'd, 
Extracting  my  tears  like  magic ; 
But  'mongst  them  all,  that  touching  scene 
Had  an  end  by  far  the  most  tragic, 

Wherein  thou  tookedst  the  principal  part, 
While  I  at  thy  feet  was  panting, — 

How  well  thou  actedst  the  innocent  one. 
Thou  actress  most  enchanting  I 

18. 

ASK  not  what  I  have,  my  loved  one,— 
Ask  me  rather  what  I  am ; 
For  but  little  wealth  I  boast  of, 
But  I'm  gentle  as  a  lamb. 

Do  not  ask  me  how  I*m  living, 
But  for  what,  that  ask  of  me ; 

For  I  live  in  want,  and  lonely. 
Yet  I  live  alone  for  thee. 

Do  not  ask  me  of  my  pleasures, 

Ask  not  of  my  bitter  smart ; 
Pleasure  ever  flies  his  presence 

Who  doth  own  a  broken  heart. 


MISCELLANEOUS  POEMS. 

GERMANY.  1815. 

LET  me  sing  Germania's  glory  * 
Hearken  to  my  noblest  strains ! 
While  my  spirit  tells  the  story. 

Thrilling  bliss  runs  through  my  veins 

Time's  book  is  before  me  lying. 

All  things  that  have  happened  here. 
Good  with  Evil  ever  vying— 

All  before  my  gazo  stands  clear. 


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EABLY   POEMS. 

From  tlie  Frenchman's  distant  nation 

Hell  approach'd,  with  impious  hand, 
Bringing  shame  and  desecration 

On  our  much-loved  Grerman  land, 
All  our  faith  and  virtue  soiling, 

All  our  heavenly  yearnings  fled, 
All  we  deemed  of  worth,  despoiling, — 

Giving  sin  and  pain  instead. 
German  shame  to  gild  refusing. 

Dark  the  German  sun  sOon  grew, 
And  a  mournful  voice  accusing 

Pierced  the  German  oak  trees  through. 
Now  the  sun  once  more  is  glancing, 

And  the  oak  trees  roar  with  joy ; 
The  avengers  are  advancing. 

Shame  and  sorrow  to  destroy. 
And  deceit's  proud  altars  hateful 

Totter,  fall  with  hideous  sound; 
Every  German  heart  is  gratefal. 

Free  is  German  holy  ground. 
See'st  the  glare  yon  mount  illuming? 

Say,  what  can  that  wild  flamo  be  ? 
Yes !  tiiat  Are  proclaims  the  blooming 

Image  pure  of  Germany, 
From  the  night  of  sin  emerging 

Germany  uninjured  stands ; 
Wildly  is  the  spot  still  surging. 

Where  that  fair  form  burst  her  bands. 
On  the  old  oak's  stems  in  splendour 

Glorious  blossoms  fast  unfold ; 
Foreign  blossoms  fall,  and  tender 

Breezes  greet  us  as  of  old. 
All  that's  virtuous  is  returning, 

All  that's  good  appears  once  more 
And  the  German,  fondly  yearning, 

Is  exulting  as  of  yore. 
Ancient  manners,  ancient  German 

Virtues,  and  heroic  deeds  I 
Valiantly  each  son  of  Hermann* 

Waves  his  sword  and  proudly  bleeds. 
*  II16  Amunius  of  TacituB. 


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HEINES  FOEIIS. 

Heroes  never  doves  engender, 
Lionlike  is  Hermann's  race  ; 

Yet  may  love's  religion  tender 
Well  near  valour  take  its  place. 

Grermans  through  their  sorrows  lonely 
Learnt  Christ's  gentle  word  to  prize; 

Their  land  'genders  brethren  only, 
And  humanity  is  wise. 

Once  again  returns  the  glorious 
Noble  love  of  minstrel's  song, 

Well  becoming  the  victorious 
Breasts  of  German  heroes  strong, 

As  they  to  the  war  are  going 

With  the  Frank  to  cross  the  sword, 

To  take  signal  vengeance  glowing 
For  their  perfidy  abhorr'd. 

And  at  home,  no  labour  heeding, 
Woman  plies  her  gentle  hand, 

Tends  the  sacred  wounds  all  bleeding 
Li  defence  of  fatherland. 

Li  her  black  dress  robed,  entrancing 
Looks  the  beauteous  German  dame, 

Deck'd  with  flow'rs  and  jewels  glancing. 
Diamond-girded,  too,  her  frame. 

But  a  nobler,  prouder  feeling 
Through  me  at  her  vision  thrills, 

When,  beside  the  sick-bed  kneeling, 
Acts  of  mercy  she  fulfils. 

Heavenly  angels  she  resembles 

When  the  last  draught  she  supplies 

To  the  wounded  man,  who  trembles. 
Smiles  his  grateful  thanks,  and  dies. 

He  to  whom  to  die  'tis  given 

On  the  battle-field,  is  blest ; 
But  a  foretaste  'tis  of  heaven. 

Dying  on  a  woman's  breast. 

Poor,  poor  sods  of  France  I  Fate  ever 

Unto  you  unkind  has  been ; 
On  the  Seine's  banks,  beauty  never 

Save  in  search  of  gold  is  been. 


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XASLY  POBMS. 

GJerman  women  !  Grerman  women ! 

What  a  charm  the  words  convey  I 
German  women !  German  women ! 

Flourish  on  for  many  a  day  1 

All  our  daughtors  like  Louisa, 
All  our  sons  like  Frederick  be ! 

Hear  me  in  the  grave,  Louisa ! 
Ever  flourish  Germany ! 


DREAM.  1816. 

SON  of  folly,  dream  thou  ever, 
When  thy  thoughts  within  thee  burn : 
But  in  life  thy  visions  never 
To  reality  will  turn. 

Once  in  happier  days  chance  bore  me 
To  a  high  mount  on  the  Rhine ; 

Smiling  lay  the  land  before  me, 
Gloriously  the  sun  did  shine. 

Far  below,  the  waves  were  singing 

Wild  and  magic  melodies ; 
In  my  inmost  heart  were  ringing 

Blissful  strains  in  wondrous  wise. 

Now,  when  gazing  from  that  station 
On  the  land— how  sad  its  doom! 

I  but  see  a  pigmy  nation 
Crawling  on  a  giant's  tomb. 

So-oall'd  men  wear  silken  raiment. 
Deem  themselves  the  nation's  flower ; 

Honours  now  are  gain'd  by  payment, 
Bogues  possess  both  weal&  and  power. 

Of  descent  they  boast,  not  merit, 

'Tis  their  dress  that  makes  them  men ; 

Old  coats  now  alone  the  spirit 
Of  old  times  bring  back  again ; 

Wh^i  respect  and  virtue  holy 

Modestly  went  hand  in  hand ; 
When  the  youth  with  deference  lowly 

By  the  aged  took  his  stand ; 


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\0  Heine's  poems. 

When  a  hand-shake  was  more  valid 
Than  an  oath  or  written  sheet ; 

When  men,  iron-clad,  forth  sallied, 
And  a  heart  inside  them  beat. 

Our  fair  garden  borders  nourish 
Many  a  thousand  flow'rets  fair ; 

In  the  fostering  soil  they  flourish, 
While  the  sun  smiles  on  them  there. 

But  the  flower  most  fair,  most  golden, 
In  our  gardens  ne'er  is  known, — 

That  one  which,  in  days  now  olden, 
On  each  rocky  height  was  grown ; 

Which,  in  cold  hill-fortress  dwelling. 
Men  endued  with  iron  frame 

Deem'd  the  flower  aU  flowers  excelling,— 
Hospitality  its  name. 

Weary  wanderer,  never  clamber 

To  the  mountain's  fort-crown'd  brow ; 

'Stead  of  warm  and  friendly  chamber. 
Cold,  hard  walls  receive  thee  now. 

From  the  watch-tower  blow  no  warders 
Not  a  drawbridge  is  let  fall ; 

For  the  castle's  lord  and  warders 
In  the  cold  tomb  slumber  all. 

In  dark  coffins,  too,  are  sleeping 
Those  dear  maids  bards  sang  of  old ; 

Shrines  like  these  within  them  keeping 
Greater  wealth  than  pearls  and  gold. 

Strange  soft  whispers  there  are  blendet 
Like  sweet  minnesinger's  lays ; 

To  those  dark  vaults  has  descended 
The  fair  love  of  olden  days. 

,  True,  I  also  prize  our  ladies, 

For  they  blossom  like  the  May ; 
And  delightful,  too,  their  trade  is, — 
'Tis  to  dance,  stitch,  paint  all  day. 

And  they  sing,  in  rhymes  delicious^ 

Of  old  love  and  loyalty, 
Feeling  all  the  time  suspicious 

Whether  such  thintss  e'er  could  be. 


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BIABLY  POEMS.  11 

In  their  simple  minds,  our  mothers 

Used  to  think  in  days  of  yore, 
That  the  gem  above  all  others 

Fair,  man  in  his  bosom  boro. 

Very  different  from  this  is 

What  their  daughters  wisdom  call : 

In  the  present  day  our  misses  i 
Love  the  jewels  most  of  all. 

Lies,  deceit,  and  superstition 

Eule, — life's  charms  are  thrown  aside, 

Whilst  Eome*s  sordid  base  ambition 
Jordan's  pearls  has  falsified. 

To  your  dark  domain  return  you, 

Visions  of  far  happier  days ; 
O'er  a  time  which  thus  doth  spurn  you, 

Vain  laments  no  longer  raise ! 

THE  CONSECRATION. 

LONELY  in  the  forest  chapel, 
At  the  image  of  the  Virgin, 
Lay  a  gentle,  pallid  stripling, 
Bent  in  humble  adoration. 

0  Madonna  I  Let  me  ever 
On  the  threshold  here  be  kneeling ; 
Thou  wilt  never  drive  me  from  thee, 
To  the  world  so  cold  and  sinful. 

O  Madonna  I  Sunny  radiance 
Bound  thy  head's  bright  locks  is  gleaming, 
And  a  mild  sweet  smile  is  playing 
Bound  thy  fair  mouth's  holy  roses. 

O  Madonna  I  Thine  eyes'  lustre 
Lightens  me  like  stars  in  heaven ; 
While  life's  bark  doth  drift  at  random, 
Stars  lead  on  for  ever  surely, 

0  Madonna  I  Without  wavering 

1  have  borne  thy  test  of  sorrow, 
On  kind  love  relying  blindly, 
In  thy  glow  alone  e'er  glowing. 


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12  HEINE'S  POEMS. 

O  Madonna  t  This  day  hear  me, 
Full  of  mercy,  rich  in  wonders  I 
Grant  me  then  a  sign  of  favour, 
Just  one  little  sign  of  favour. 

Then  presently  happened  a  marvellous  wonder  • 
The  forest  and  chapel  were  parted  insimder ; 
The  boy  understood  not  the  miracle  strange, 
For  all  around  him  did  suddenly  change. 

In  a  brilliant  hall  there  sat  the  Madonna, 
Her  rays  were  gone,  as  he  gazed  upon  her ; 
She  bore  the  form  of  a  lovely  maid. 
Around  her  lips  a  childlike  smile  play'd. 

And  see !  fix>m  her  fair  and  flowing  tresses 
She  steals  a  lock,  as  she  thus  addresses 
In  a  heavenly  tone,  the  raptured  boy  : 
rhe  sweetest  reward  on  earth  enjoy  I 

What  attests  this  consecration  ? 

Saw'st  thou  not  the  rainbow  shedding 
Its  sublime  illumination. 

O'er  the  wide  horizon  spreading  ? 

Angels  up  and  down  are  moving, 
Loudly  do  their  pinions  flutter ; 

Breathing  music  strange  and  loving, 
Sweet  the  melodies  they  utter. 

Well  the  stripling  knows  the  yearning 
Through  his  frame  that  now  doth  quiver  j 

To  that  land  his  footsteps  turning. 
Where  the  myrtle  blooms  for  ever. 

THE  MOOR'S  SERENADE. 

TO  my  sleeping  dear  Zuleima's 
Bosom  run,  ye  tears  all  burning! 
Then  will  her  sweet  heart  for  Abdul 
'Gin  to  beat  with  tender  yearning. 

Bound  my  sleeping  dear  Zuleima's 
Ear  disport,  ye  tears  of  anguish  I 

Then  will  her  fair  head  in  vision 

Sweet  for  Abdul's  love  straight  languish. 

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EARLY  POEMS.  13 

O'er  my  sleeping  dear  Zuleima's 

Soft  hand  stream,  my  heart's  blood  gushing  I 

Then  will  her  sweet  hand  bear  on  it 
Abdul's  heart's  blood,  crimson  flushing. 

Sorrow  is,  alas,  born  voiceless. 

In  its  mouth  no  tongue  is  growing, 

It  hath  only  tears  and  sighing, 
And  blood  from  the  heart's  wounds  flowing. 

DEEAM  AND  LIFE. 

THE  day  was  glowing,  ray  heart,  too,  glow'd. 
In  silence  I  bore  my  sorrow's  load ; 
When  night  arrived,  I  hastened  then 
To  the  blossoming  rose  in  the  silent  glen. 

I  softly  approach'd,  and  mute  as  the  grave, 
While  tears  my  cheeks  did  secretly  lave, 
I  peep'd  in  the  cup  of  the  rose  so  fair, 
And  lo  I  a  bright  light  was  glimmering  there. 

By  the  rose  I  joyfully  fell  asleep. 

When  a  sweet  moddng  dream  did  over  mo  creep ; 

The  form  of  a  rosy  maid  was  reveal'd  ; 

A  rosy  bodice  her  bosom  conceal'd. 

She  gave  me  soon  a  rich  golden  store, 
To  a  golden  cottage  the  prize  I  bore ; 
Strange  goings-on  in  the  cottage  I  found, — 
Small  elves  are  dancing  in  graceful  round. 

Twelve  dancers  are  dancing,  and  taking  no  rest. 
And  closely  their  hands  together  are  press'd  ; 
And  soon  as  a  dance  has  come  to  a  close, 
Another  begins,  and  each  merrily  goes. 

And  the  music  they  dance  to  thus  sounds  in  my  ear : 

"  The  happiest  of  hours  will  ne'er  reappear, 

"  The  whole  of  thy  life  was  only  a  dream, 

'*  And  this  hour  of  pleasure  a  dream  within  dream." 

The  dream  is  over,  the  sun  is  up, 

I  eagerly  peep  in  the  rose's  cup. 

Alas  !  in  ihe  place  of  the  glimmering  light, 

A  nasty  insect  meets  my  sight 

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.#^ 


M*  Heine's  poems. 

THE  LESSON. 

MOTHEE  teUs  Httle  bee, 
Yonder  wax  taper  flee  j 
But  for  his  mother's  prayers 
Little  bee  little  cares. 
Bound  the  light  hovers  he, 
Humming  all  merrily ; 
Mother's  cry  hears  not  he, 
Little  bee  I  Little  bee  I 
Youthful  one  I   Foolish  one  I 
Poor  little  simpleton  I 
Li  the  ^me  rusheth  he, 
Little  .bee  I  Little  bee! 
Now  the  flame  flickers  high, 
In  the  flame  he  must  die  : 
*  Ware  of  the  maidens,  then, 
Sons  of  men  !  Sons  of  men  I 

'  ♦  TO  FRANCIS  V.   Z . 

I'M  drawn  to  the  North  by  a  golden  star ; 
Farewell,  brother  !  forget  me  not  when  I  am  far  ; 
To  poetry  ever  faithful  abide, 
And  never  desert  that  charming  bride. 
AM  a  pri^gss^reaBuij^.pres^ve  in  thy  breast 
The  German'^aSiguage^  so  fair^ahd^blest ;    ^ 
And  shouldst  thou  e'er  come  to  the  Northern  strand 
O  listen  awhile  at  that  Northern  strand ; 
And  list  tiQ  thou  hearest  a  ringing  remote 
That  over  the  silent  waters  doth  float. 
When  this  thou  hearest,  expect  ere  long 
The  sound  of  the  well-known  minstrel's  song. 
Then  strike  thou  in  turn  thine  echoing  chord, 
And  give  me  news  that  mkj  pleasure  afS^rd ; 
How  matters  with  thee,  dear  minstrel,  go, 
And  with  the  others  whom  L  loved  so  ; 
And  how  it  fares  with  the  lovely  girl 
Who  set  so  many  young  hearts  in  a  whirl. 
And  filled  so  many  with  yearnings  divine— :- 
The  blossoming  rose  on  the  blossoming  Bhina 
And.  give  me  news  of  my  fatherland  too, 
If  still  'tis  the  land  of  affection  true ; 
If  still  the  old  God  in  Germany  lives, 
And  none  to  the  Evil  One  homage  now  gives. 


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EABLY  POEMa  15 

And  when  thy  sweet  song  thus  lovingly  rings, 
And  joyous  stories  with  it  thus  brings 
Far  over  the  waves  to  the  distant  strand, 
The  bard  will  rejoice  in  the  far  North  land. 

A  PROLOGUE  TO  THE  HARTZ-JOUBNEY. 

ALL  I  saw  and  heard  when  travelling, 
All  that  soul  and  heart  found  pleasing, 
All  that  gave  me  food  for  cavilling, 
All  that  tedious  was  or  teasing  ; 

Solemn  jostlings,  wild  excitement, 

Both  of  simpletons  and  sages, — 
All  shall  swell  the  long  indictment 

Of  my  travels  in  these  pages. 

Give  not  travels  life  twice  over  ?  . 

When  at  home  one  lives  once  only ; 
Wouldst  thou  nobler  ends  discover. 

Thou  must  leave  thy  closet  lonely. 

On  the  world's  wide  stage,  each  player 

Is  a  mimic  or  a  puppet. 
Bides  his  hobby  his  own  way,  or 

Bids  the  others  clamber  up  it. 

If  weVe  laughed  at  by  our  neighbour. 

Biding  in  this  curious  fashion, 
Let  us  lum  in  turn  belabour, 

Jeering  him  without  compassion. 

Bead  these  travels  in  the  manner 

And  the  sense  in  which  Tm  writing ; 
Each  one  has  his  fav'rite  banner 

Under  which  he  fancies  fighting. 

DEPEND  NOT. 

DEFEND  it  not,  defend  it  not, 
This  wretched  world  below ; 
Defend  its  gaping  people  not, 

YTho  care  for  nought  but  pomp  and  show 

The  tedious  ones,  defend  them  not, 

Who  cause  us  such  ennui ;  * 

The  learned  ones,  defend  them  not, 
In  their  o'erpow'ring  pedantry. 

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16  Heine's  poems. 

The  women,  too,  defend  them  not. 

Though  gobd  ones  may  be  there  ; 
The  best  amongst  them  scometh  not 

The  man  she  loves  not,  to  ensnare. 
And  then  my  friends — defend  them  not : 

Count  not  thyself  one  now  ; 
For  thou  those  friends  resemblest  not, — 

No !  firm,  and  good,  and  true  art  thou 

A  PARODY. 

INDEED  they  have  wearied  me  greatly, 
And  made  me  exceedingly  sad, 
One  half  with  their  prose  so  wretched, 

The  other  with  poetry  bad. 
Their  terrible  discord  has  scattered 

What  little  senses  I  had, 
One  half  with  their  prose  so  wretched, 

The  other  with  poetry  bad. 
But  *mongst  the  whole  army  of  scribblers. 

They  most  have  stirr'd  up  my  bile, 
Who  write  in  neither  prosaic 

Nor  true  poetical  style. 

WALKING  FLOWERS  AT  BERLIN. 

YES !  under  the  lindens,  my  dear  friend, 
Thy  yearnings  may  satisfied  be ; 
The  fairest  of  womankind  here,  friend, 

All  walking  together,  thou'lt  see. 
How  charming  they  look,  how  delicious, 

In  gay  silken  garments  all  dress'd  I 
A  certain  poet  judicious 

"  Walking  flowers  "  has  named  them  in  jest 
How  very  charming  each  bonnet  I 

Each  Turkish  shawl,  how  it  gleams  I 
Each  cheek,  what  a  bright  glow  upon  it  1 

Each  neck,  how  swanlike  it  seems ! 

EVENING  SC»NGS. 
1. 

WITHOUT  any  aim,  forth  I  saUied, 
And  roamed  by  the  pond  o'er  the  lea ; 
The  charming  flowers  looked  pallid, 
And  spectre-like  gazed  upon  md. 


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EARLY  POEMS.  17 

U{K>n  me  they  gazed,  and  to  chattel 

And  tell  my  dull  tale  I  began ; 
They  ask'd  me,  what  was  the  matter 

With  me,  poor  sad-looking  man. 

The  truth,  I  valiantly  said  it, 

No  love  in  the  world  can  I  find  ; 
And  as  I  have  lost  all  my  credit, 

With  want  of  cash  'tis  combined. 

2. 

AND  over  the  pond  are  sailing 
Two  swans  all  white  as  snow ; 
Sweet  voices  mysteriously  wailing 
Pierce  through  me  as  onward  they  go. 

They  sail  along,  and  a  ringing 

Sweet  melody  rises  on  high, 
And  when  the  swans  begin  singing, 

They  presently  must  die. 

3. 

WHEN  in  sorrow,  they  dare  not  show  it, 
However  mournful  their  mood. 
For  the  swan,  like  the  soul  of  the  poet. 
By  the  dull  world  is  ill  understood. 

And  in  their  death-hour  they  waken 

The  air,  and  break  into  song ; 
And,  imless  my  ears  are  mistaken. 

They  sing  now,  while  sailing  along. 

4. 

THE  cloudlets  arc  lazily  sailing 
O'er  the  blue  Atlantic  sea ; 
And  mid  the  twilight  there  hovers 
A  shadowy  figure  o'er  me. 

Full  deep  in  my  soul  it  gazes, 

With  old-time-recalling  eye, 
Like  a  glimpse  of  joys  long  buried, 

And  happiness  long  gone  by. 

Familiar  the  vision  appeareth, 

Methinks  I  know  it  full  well ; 
"Tis  the  much-loved  shadow  of  Mary. 

Who  on  earth  no  longer  doth  dwell. 

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18  Heine's  poems. 

She  beckons  in  friendly  silence, 
And  clasps  me  with  gentle  despair ; 

But  I  seize  hold  of  my  glasses, 
To  have  a  better  stare  I 


SONNETS. 

1.  TO  AUGUSTUS  WILLIAM  VON  SOHLEGEL. 

^P  HE  worst  of  worms :  the  dagger  thoughts  of  doubt — 
A      The  worst  of  poisons :  to  mistrust  one's  power — 

These  struggled  my  life's  marrow  to  devour ; 
I  was  a  shoot,  whose  props  wore  rooted  out. 

Thou  pitiedst  the  poor  shoot  in  that  sad  hour. 
And  bad'st  it  climb  thy  kindly  words  about ; 
To  thee,  great  Master,  owe  I  thanks  devout, 

Should  the  weak  shoot  e'er  blossom  into  flower. 
0  still  watch  o'er  it,  as  it  grows  apace. 
That  as  a  tree  the  garden  it  may  grace 

Of  that  fair  fay,  whose  favourite  child  thou  wert 

My  nurse  used  of  that  garden  to  assert 
That  a  strange  ringing,  wondrous' sweet,  there  dwells, 
Each  flower  can  speak,  each  tree  with  music  swells. 

2.  TO  THE  SAME. 

CONTENTED  not  with  thine  own  property, 
The  Rhine's  fair  Nibelung-treasure  thou  didst  steal. 

The  wondrous  gifts  the  Thames'  far  banks  conceal, — 
The  Tagus'  flowers  were  boldy  pluck'd  by  thee, 

Thou  mad'st  the  Tiber  many  a  gem  reveal, 
The  Seine  paid  tribute  to  thine  industry. 
Thou  pierced'st  e'en  to  Brama's  sanctuary, 

Pearls  from  the  Granges  taking  in  thy  zeaL 
Thou  greedy  man,  I  pray  thee  be  content 
With  ttiat  which  seldom  unto  man  is  lent : 

Instead  of  adding  more,  to  spend  prepare ! 
And  with  the  treasures  whicli  tiiou  with  such  ease 
From  North  and  South  accustom'd  wert  to  seize. 

Enrich  the  scholar  and  the  joyful  heir. 


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EARLY  POEMS.  19 

3.  TO  COUNCILLOB  GEOBGE  S ,  OP  GOTTINGEN 

THOUGH  the  demeanour  be  imperious,  proud. 
Yet  round  the  lips  may  gentleness  play  still ; 

Though  the  eye  gleam  and  every  muscle  thrill, 
Yet  may  the  voice  with  calmness  be  endow'd. 
Thus  art  thou  in  the  rostrum,  when  aloud 

Thou  speak' st  of  governments  and  of  the  skill 

Of  cabinets,  and  of  the  people's  will, 
Of  Germany's  long  strifes  and  ends  avow'd. 
Ne'er  be  thine  image  blotted  from  my  mind  I 

In  times  of  barbarous  self-love  like  these, 

How  doth  an  image  of  such  greatness  please ! 
What  thou,  in  fashion  fatherly  and  kind, 

Spak'st  to  my  heart,  while  hours  flew  swiftly  by, 

Deep  in  my  heart  I.  still  bear  faithfully. 

4.  TO  J.  B.  BOUSSEAU. 

THY  friendly  greetings  open  wide  my  breast. 
And  the  dark  chambers  of  my  heart  unbar  ; 

Home  visions  greet  me  like  some  radiant  star, 
And  magic  pinions  fan  me  into  rest. 
Once  more  the  Ehine  flows  by  me,  on  its  crest 

Of  waters  mount  and  castle  mirror'd  are ; 

On  vine-clad  hills  gold  clusters  gleam  afar. 
Vine-dressers  climb,  while  shoot  the  flow'rets  blest. 
Could  I  but  see  thee,  truest  friend  of  all, 

Who  still  dost  link  thyself  to  me,  as  clings 
The  ivy  green  around  a  crumbling  wall ! 
Could  I  but  be  with  thee,  and  to  thy  song 

In  silence  listen,  while  the  redbreast  sings, 
And  the  Ehine's  waters  softly  flow  along  ! 

5. 

ATOETUEE-CHAMBEE  was  the  world  to  me, 
Where  I  suspended  by  the  feet  did  hang ; 
Hot  pincers  gave  my  body  many  a  pang, 
A  vice  of  iron  crush'd  me  fearfully. 
I  wildly  cried  in  nameless  agony. 

From  mouth  and  eyes  the  blood  in  torrents  sprang,— 
A  maid  passed  by,  who  a  gold  hammer  swang. 
And  presently  the  coup-de-grace  gave  she. 


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20  Heine's  poems. 

My  quivering  limbs  she  scans  with  eager  eye, 
My  tongue  protruding,  as  death's  hour  draws  nigh, 
From  out  my  bleeding  mouth, — a  ghastly  sight, 
My  heart's  wild  pantings  hears  she  with  delight ; 
My  last  death-rattle  music  is  the  while 
To  her,  who  stands  with  cold  and  mocking  smile. 


6.  THE  NIGHT  WATCH  ON  THE  DRACHENFEI  S. 
TO  FRITZ  VON  B . 

^nnWAS  midnight  as  we  scaled  the  mountain  height 
-L    The  wood  pile  'neath  the  walls  the  flames  devour 'd. 

And  as  my  joyous  comrades  roimd  it  cower'd, 
They  sang  of  Germany's  renown  in  fight. 
Her  health  we  drank  from  Khine  wine  beakers  bright, 

The  castle-spirit  on  the  summit  tower'd, 

Dark  forms  of  armed  knights  around  us  lower 'd, 
And  women's  misty  shapes  appear'd  in  sight. 
And  from  the  ruins  there  arose  low  moans. 
Owls  hooted,  rattling  sounds  were  heard,  and  groans ; 

A  furious  north  wind  bluster'd  fitfully. 
Such  was  the  night,  my  friend,  that  I  did  pass 
On  the  high  Drachenfels, — but  I,  alas, 

A  wretched  cold  and  cough  took  home  with  me ! 


7.  IN  FKITZ  STEINMANN'S  ALBUM. 

THE  bad  victorious  are,  the  good  lie  low ; 
The  myrtles  are  replaced  by  poplars  di*y, 

Through  which  the  evening  breezes  loudly  sigh. 
Bright  flashes  take  the  place  of  silent  glow. — 
In  vain  Parnassus'  heights  you'll  plough  and  sow, 

Image  on  image,  flower  on  flower  pile  high, 

In  vain  you'll  smuggle  till  you're  like  to  die, 
Unless,  before  the  egg  is  laid,  you  know 
How  to  cluck-cluck ;  and,  bulls'  horns  putting  ocj 
Learn  to  write  sage  critiques,  both  pro  and  con. 

And  your  own  trumpet  blow  with  decent  pride. 
Write  for  the  mob,  not  for  posterity, 
Let  blustering  noise  your  poems'  lever  be, — 

You'll  then  be  by  the  public  deified. 


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EIRLY   POEMS.  21 


8.  TO  HEB. 


^pflE  flow'rets  red  and  white  that  I  hold  here, 
-JL      Which  blo8som*d  erst  from  out  the  heart's  dee  > 
v^ound. 

Into  a  lovely  nosegay  I  have  bound. 
And  offer  unto  thee,  my  mistress  dear. 

By  its  acceptance  be  thy  bard's  love  crown'd  1 
f  cannot  from  this  earth's  scene  disappear, 
Till  I  have  left  a  sign  of  love  sincere. 

Eemember  me  when  I  my  death  have  found. 
Yet  ne'er,  O  mistress,  shalt  thou  pity  me; 

My  life  of  grief  was  enviable  e'en, — 
For  in  my  heart  I  bore  thee  lovingly. 
And  greater  bliss  shall  soon  be  mine,  when  I 

Shall,  as  thy  guardian  spirit,  watch  unseen, 
Thy  heart  with  peaceful  greetings  satisfy. 

9.  GOETHE'S  MONUMENT  AT  FRANKFOKT-ON-THE 
MAIN.  1821. 

GOOD  German  men,  maids,  matrons,  pray  give  ear 
Collect  subscribers  with  the  utmost  speed, 

The  worthy  folk  of  Frankfort  have  agreed 
To  build  a  monument  to  Groethe  here. 
*'  At  fair  time  "  (think  they)  "  this  will  make  it  clear 

"  To  foreign  teaders  that  we're  of  his  breed, 

*•  That  'twas  our  soU  that  nurtured  such  fair  seed, 
•*  And  then  in  trade  they'll  trust  us  without  fear." 
O  touch  the  bard's  bright  wreath  of  laurel  never, 

And  keep  your  money  in  your  pockets  too ; 
'Tis  Goethe's,  his  own  monument  to  raise. 
He  dwelt  amongst  you  in  his  infant  days, 

But  half  a  world  now  severs  him  from  you. 
Whom  a  stream  doth  from  Sachsenhau^en*  se^er  f 

10.  DRESDEN  POETRY. 

VT  Dresden  on  the  Elbe,  that  handsome  city, 
Where  straw  hats,  verses,  and  cigars  are  made, 
They've  buUt  (it  well  may  make  us  feel  afraid) 
A  music-club  and  music  warehouse  pretty. 

*  A  suburb  of  Frankfort  on  the  further  side  of  the  Mdn. 

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22  hi;ine's  poems. 

There  meet  the  gentlemen  and  ladies  witty , 

Herr  Kuhn,*  Miss  Nostitz* — adepts  at  the  trade, - 
Spout  verses,  caUing  action  to  their  aid. 

How  grand  I     Avaunt,  ye  critics ! — ^more's  the  pity  I 

Next  day  the  paper  tells  ns  all  the  facts, 

Brightest  brightness  flies,  Child'sf  childishness  is 

childlike. 
The  critic's  supplement  is  mean  yet  wildlike. 

Amoldi^  takes  the  cash,  as  salesman  acts ; 
Then  Bdttiger*  appears,  with  noise  infernal — 
'Tis  a  true  oracle,  that  Evening  Journal  1 


11.  BBEADLESS  ART. 

HOW  soon  my  poverty  would  ended  be, 
Could  I  the  pencil  use,  and  paint  away, 

The  walls  of  castles  proud  and  churches  gay 
Adorning  with  my  pictures  merrily  I 
How  soon  would  wealth  replace  my  penury, 

Could  I  the  fiddle,  flute,  and  piano  play. 

And  with  such  elegance  perform  each  day. 
That  lords  and  ladies  all  applauded  me ! 
But  ah  I  in  Mammon's  smiles  I  ne'er  had  part, 

For  I  have  foUow'd  thee  alone,  alas  I 
Thee,  Poetry,  most  thankless,  breadless  art ! 
When  others  (how  I'm  blushing,  now  I've  said  it  I) 

Drink  their  champagne  from  out  a  brimming  glass, 
I  needs  must  go  without,  or  drink  on  credit  I 

♦  German  litterateurs  of  more  or  less  note, 
t  In  the  original,  HeU  and  Kindj  well-known  wniere.    It  i 
neoeisaiy  to  tnuoalate  the  names  for  the  sake  of  the  pun. 


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23 


BOOK  OF  SONGS. 


PBEFACK 

THIS  is  the  olden  fairy  wood ! 
The  linden  blossoms  smell  sweetly, 
The  strange  mysterious  light  of  the  moon 
Enchants  my  senses  completely. 

I  onward  went,  and  as  I  went, 

A  voice  above  me  was  ringing; — 
'Tis  surely  the  nightingale's  notes  that  I  hear, 

Of  love  and  love's  sorrows  she's  singing. 

She  sings  of  love  and  love's  sorrows  as  well. 

She  sings  of  smiling  and  aching. 
She  sadly  exults,  she  joyfully  sobs, 

Forgotten  visions  awaking. 

I  onward  went,  and  as  I  went, 

I  saw  before  me  lying, 
On  open  ground,  a  castle  vast, 

With  gables  in  loftiness  vying. 

The  windows  were  closed,  and  all  things  appear'd 
To  stillness  and  sadness  converted ; 

It  seem'd  as  though  silent  death  had  his  home 
Within  those  walls  deserted. 

A  sphinx  was  lying  before  the  door, 

Part  comical,  part  not  human ; 
Its  body  and  paws  a  lion's  were. 

With  the  breasts  and  head  of  a  woman. 

A  woman  fair  t  her  white  eyes  spoke 

Of  yearnings  wild  but  tender ; 
Her  lips,  all  mute,  were  closely  arch'd, 

And  smiled  a  silent  surrender. 


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24  Heine's  poems. 

The  nightingale  so  sweetly  sang, 

I  found  it  in  vain  to  resist  it — 
I  kiss'd  the  beauteous  face,  and,  ah  I 

Was  ruined  as  soon  as  I  kissed  it. 

The  marble  figure  with  life  was  fiU'd, 
The  stone  began  sighing  and  groaning  ; 

She  drank  my  kisses*  tremulous  glow 
With  thirsty  and  eager  moaning. 

She  well  nigh  drank  my  breath  away, 

And  then,  with  sensual  ardour. 
Embraced  me,  while  her  lion's  paws  press'd 

My  body  harder  and  harder. 

O  blissful  torment  and  rapturous  woe  I 
The  pain,  like  the  pleasure,  unbounded  I 

For  while  the  mouth's  kisses  filled  me  with  joy, 
The  paws  most  fearfully  wounded. 

The  nightingale  sang :  "  O  beauteous  sphinx  I 
*'  O  loved  one,  explain  the  reason 

"  Why  all  thy  raptures  with  pains  of  death 
"  Are  mingled,  in  cruel  treason  ? 

^*  O  beauteous  sphinx!  explain  to  me 

"  The  riddle  so  fiill  of  wonder  I 
"  I  over  it  many  a  thousand  years 

**  Have  never  ceased  t©  ponder." 


0 


YOUTHFUL  S0BB0W8. 

1817-21. 

I.  VISIONS. 
1. 
F  love's  wild  glow  I  dreamt  in  former  days, 


Of  mignonette,  fair  locks,  and  myrtle  twinii  g, 
Of  lips  so  sweet,  with  bitter  words  combining. 
Of  mournful  melodies  of  mournful  lays. 

Those  dreams  have  long  been  scatter'd  far  and  banisird. 
My  dearest  vision  fled  for  evermore. 
And,  save  the  burning  glow  I  used  to  pour 

Into  my  tender  numbers,  all  is  vanish'd. 


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BOOK  OF  SONQS.  25 

Tliou  ling'rest  still,  deserted  song  I     Now  go, 

And  seek  that  long-lost  vision ;  shouldst  thou  meet  it 
On  my  behalf  in  loving  fashion  greet  it, — 

An  airy  breath  to  that  dim  shade  I  blow. 


ADEEAM  both  strange  and  sad  to  see 
Once  startled  and  delighted  me ; 
The  dismal  vision  hamits  me  still, 
And  in  my  heart  doth  wildly  thrill. 

There  was  a  garden  wondrous  fair, — 
I  fain  would  wander  gladly  there ; 
The  beauteous  flowers  upon  me  gazed, 
And  high  I  found  my  rapture  raised. 

The  birds  were  twittering  above 
Their  joyous  melodies  of  love ; 
The  sun  was  red  with  rays  of  gold, 
The  flowers  all  lovely  to  behold. 

Sweet  fragrance  all  the  herbs  exhale, 
And  sweetly,  softly  blows  the  gale ; 
And  all  things  glisten,  all  things  smile, 
And  show  their  loveliness  the  while. 

Amid  that  bright  and  flowery  land 
A  marble  fountain  was  at  hand, 
And  there  I  saw  a  maiden  fair 
Washing  a  garment  white  with  care. 

Her  cheeks  were  sweet,  her  eyes  were  mild, 
Fair  hair'd  and  saintly  look'd  the  child. 
And  as  I  gazed,  she  seem'd  to  be 
So  strange,  yet  so  well  known  to  me. 

The  beauteous  girl,  who  made  all  speed, 
A  song  was  humming,  strange  indeed  : 
"  Water,  water,  quickly  run, 
'*  Let  the  washing  soon  be  done." 

I  went  and  stood  then  in  her  way. 
And  whispered  gently :  "  Prythee  say, 
"  Thou  maiden  sweet  and  wondrous  fair, 
"  For  whom  dost  thou  this  dress  prepare  ?" 


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26  heinb's  poems. 

Then  spake  she  quickly :  "  Beady  be  1 
"  rm  washing  tlune  own  shroud  for  thee  '"— 
Scarce  had  her  lips  these  words  let  fall, 
Like  foam  the  vision  yanish*d  all. 

And  still  entranced,  ere  long  I  stood 
Within  a  desert,  gloomy  wood : 
To  reach  the  skies  the  branches  sought : 
I  stood  amazed,  and  thought  and  thought. 

And  hark  I  what  hollow  echoing  sound 
Like  axe-strokes  fills  the  air  around 
Through  waste  and  wood  I  speed  apace, 
Until  I  reach  an  open  place. 

In  the  green  plain  before  me  spread 
A  mighty  oak  tree  rear'd  its  head ; 
And  lo !  the  maiden,  strange  to  see, 
Was  felling  with  an  axe  the  tree. 

With  blow  on  blow  a  song  she  sings 
Unceasing,  as  the  axe  she  swings  : 
"  Iron  glittering,  iron  bright, 
"  Hew  the  oaken  chest  aright." 

I  went  and  stood  then  in  her  way. 
And  whispered  gently :  "  Prythee  say, 
'^  Thou  sweet  and  wondrous  maiden  mine, 
'*  For  whom  dost  hew  the  oaken  shrine?'* 

Then  spake  she  quickly :  "  Time  is  short, 
"  To  hew  thy  coffin  is  my  sport  I'* — 
Scarce  had  her  lips  these  words  let  fall. 
Like  foam  the  vision  vanish*d  all. 

Bleak,  dim  was  all  above,  beneath, 
Around  was  barren,  barren  heath  : 
I  felt  in  strange  mysterious  mood. 
And  shuddering  inwardly  I  stood. 

And  as  I  roam'd  on  silently, 
A  whitish  streak  soon  caught  mine  eye ; 
I  hasten'd  tow'rd  it,  and  when  there, 
Behold,  I  found  the  maiden  fair ! 

On  wide  heath  stood  the  snowy  maid. 
Digging  the  ground  with  sexton's  spado  j 
Scarce  dared  I  gaze  on  her  aright, 
So  fair  yet  fearful  was  the  sight. 

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BOOK  OP  BONOS.  27 

The  beanteous  girl,  who  made  all  speed, 
A  song  was  humming,  strange  indeed  : 
•'  Spade,  O  spade,  so  sharp  and  tried, 
"  Dig  a  pit  both  deep  and  wide."   , 

I  went,  and  stood  then  in  her  way, 
And  whisper'd  gently  :  "Prythee  say, 
"  Thou  maiden  sweet  and  wondrous  fair, 
**  What  means  the  pit  that's  lying  there  ^" 

Then  spake  she  quickly :  **  Silent  be  1 
"  A  cold,  cold  grave  I  dig  for  thee." 
And  when  the  fair  maid  thus  replied, 
Its  mouth  the  pit  straight  opened  wide. 

And  when  the  pit  was  full  in  view, 
A  chilling  shudder  pierced  me  through, 
And  in  the  grave  so  dark  and  deep 
Headlong  I  fell,  and — woke  from  sleep. 

3.  . 

IN  midnight  vision  I  myself  have  spied, 
As  for  some  festival,  in  ruffles  dress'd. 

In  a  black  gala-coat  and  silken  vest ;  — 
My  sweet  and  trusting  love  with  scorn  I  eyed ; 
And  bow*d  low  down,  and  said  "  Art  thou  a  bride  V* 

"  I  wish  thee  joy,  dear  Madam,  I  protest !" 

And  yet  my  lips  reluctantly  expressed 
The  words  so  cold  and  tauntingly  applied. 
And  bitter  tears  then  suddenly  'gan  falling 

From  her  dear  eyes,  and  in  a  sea  of  weeping 
Wellnigh  dissolved  her  im&ge  so  enthralling. 
O  lovely  eyes,  ye  stars  of  love  so  kindly. 

What  though  ye,  when  awake,  and  e'en  when  sleeping 
Deceived  me  oft,  I  trust  ye  still  as  blindly  1 


IN  dream  I  saw  a  tiny  manikin. 
Who  went  on  stilts,  with  steps  a  yard  apart  • 
White  was  his  linen,  and  his  dress  was  smart, 
But  he  was  coarse  and  most  unclean  within. 
Yes,  worthless  inwardly,  and  full  of  sin ; 
Worthy  to  se^m  outside  was  his  great  art, 
Of  courage  he  discoursed,  as  from  his  heart, 
Defiant,  Btubbom,  'neath  a  veil  but  thin. 


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28  Heine's  poems. 

"  And  know*st  tliou  who  he  is  ?  Como  here  and  see  I'* 
So  spake  the  dream-god,  slily  showing  me 

Within  a  mirror's  frame  this  vision  then. 
Tlie  manikin  before  an  altar  stood, 
My  love  beside  him,  both  said  "  Yes,  they  would," 

And  thousand  laughing  devils  cried  "  Amen  l" 


WHY  Rtirs  and  chafes  my  madden 'd  blood  ' 
Why  bums  my  heart  in  furious  mood  ^ 
My  blood  fast  boils,  and  foams  and  fumes, 
And  passion  fierce  my  heart  consumes. 

My  mad  blood  boils  in  foaming  stream, 
Because  I've  dreamt  an  evil  dream  : 
Night's  gloomy  son  appeared  one  day, 
And  bore  me  in  his  arms  away. 

To  a  bright  house  soon  brought  he  me. 
Where  sounded  harp  and  revelry. 
And  torches  gleam'd  and  tapers  shone — 
The  hall  I  entered  then  alone. 

I  saw  a  merry  wedding  feast, 

The  glad  guests  round  the  table  pressed ; 

And  when  the  bridal  pair  I  spied, 

0  woe  I  my  mistress  was  the  bride. 

There  was  my  love,  and  strange  to  say, 
A  stranger  claim'd  her  hand  to-day. 
Then  close  behind  her  chair  of  honour 

1  silent  stood  and  gazed  upon  her. 

The  music  sounded — still  I  stood ; 
Their  joy  but  swcll'd  my  mournful  mood  ; 
The  bride  she  look'd  so  highly  blest. 
Her  hand  the  while  the  bridegroom  press'd. 

The  bridegroom  next  fill'd  full  his  cup. 
And  from  it  drank,  then  gave  it  up 
Unto  the  bride ;  she  smiled  a  thank  ; 
O  woe  I  my  red  blood  'twas  she  drank. 

The  bride  a  rosy  apple  took, 
And  gave  it  him  with  smiling  look  ; 
He  took  his  knife,  and  cut  a  part ; 
O  woe  I  it  was  indeed  my  heart. 


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BOOK  OF  soNas.  29 

Tliey  lovingly  eacli  other  eyed, 
The  bridegroom  boldly  clasp'd  the  bride. 
And  kissed  her  on  her  cheeks  so  red ; 
O  woe !  cold  death  kiss'd  me  instead. 

Like  lead  my  tongue  within  me  lay, 
Vainly  I  strove  one  word  to  say ; 
A  noise  was  heard, — the  dance  began, 
The  bridal  pair  were  in  the  van. 

Whilst  I  stood  rooted  to  the  ground, 

The  dancers  nimbly  whirl'd  around ; 

The  bridegroom  spoke  a  whisper'd  word, — 

She  blush'd,  well  pleased  with  what  she  heard. 


6. 

IN  blissful  dream,  in  silent  night, 
There  came  to  me,  with  magic  might. 
With  magic  might,  my  own  sweet  love, 
Into  my  Httle  room  above. 

I  gazed  upon  the  darling  child, 
I  gazed,  and  she  ail-gently  smiled, 
And  smiled  until  my  heart  swell'd  high. 
When  stormlike  daring  words  breath'd  I : 

**  Take,  take  thou  everything  that's  mine, 

''  My  All  will  I  to  thee  resign, 

"  If  I  may  be  thy  paramour 

"  From  midnight  tiU  the  morning  hour." 

Then  on  me  gazed  the  beauteous  maid, 
With  looks  that  inward  strife  betrayed, 
So  sweet,  so  sad,  while  thus  she  said  : 
**  Give  me  thy  hope  of  heaven  instead !" 

"  My  life  so  sweet,  my  youth  fal  blood, 
"  I'U  give  with  cheerful  joyous  mood, 
"  For  thee,  O  maiden  angel-fair, — 
"  But  hope  of  heaven  hereafter — ne'er  !** 

My  daring  speech  flow'd  readily. 
Yet  ever  fairer  blossom'd  she, 
And  still  the  beauteous  maiden  said 
•*  Give  me  thy  hope  of  heaven  instead !" 

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Heine's  poems. 

These  words  fell  on  me  heavily, 
Then  rush'd,  like  some  fierce  flowing  aet> 
Down  to  my  spirit's  depth  most  deep, — 
I  scarce  had  power  my  breath  to  keep. 

There  came  a  band  of  angels  white, 
Graced  with  a  golden  halo  bright, 
But  wildly  followed  in  their  track 
A  grisly  train  of  goblins  black. 

They  wrestled  with  the  angels  white, 
And  drove  away  those  angels  bright, 
And  then  the  gloomy  squadron  too 
Melted  like  morning  mist  from  view.-— 

Fain  had  I  died  of  rapture  there, 
My  arms  upheld  my  maiden  fair ; 
She  nestled  near  me  like  a  roe^ 
But  also  wept  with  bitter  woe. 

Sweet  maiden  wept ;  well  knew  I  why, 
Her  rosy  mouth  to  peace  kiss'd  I : 
"  O  still,  sweet  love,  that  tearful  flood, 
"  Surrender  to  my  loving  mood  I 

"  Surrender  to  my  loving  mood !" — 
When  sudden  froze  to  ice  my  blood ; 
The  earth  beneath  me  groan'd  and  sigh'd, 
A  yawning  chasm  opened  wide. 

And  from  the  chasm's  gloomy  veil 

Eose  the  black  troop, — sweet  love  tum'd  pale ; 

My  arms  were  of  sweet  love  bereft, 

And  I  in  solitude  was  left. 

The  gloomy  troop  around  me  danced 
In  wondrous  circle,  then  advanced, 
And  seized  and  bore  me  to  the  ground, 
While  scornful  laughter  rose  around. 

And  still  the  circle  narrower  grew. 
And  ever  humm'd  the  fearful  crew : 
•*  Thy  hope  of  heaven  was  pledg'd  by  thee, 
•*  Thou'rt  ours  for  all  eternity  V* 


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BOOK  OF  SONOB.  31 


THOU  now  hast  the  money, — ^why  longer  delay  ? 
Thou  dark  scowling  fellow,  why  lingering  stay  ? 
I  sit  in  my  chamber,  and  patiently  wait. 
And  midnight  is  near,  but  the  bride  is  still  late. 

From  the  churchyard  the  shuddering  breezes  arise ; — 
Ye  breezes,  O  say,  has  my  bride  met  your  eyes  ? 
Pale  demons  come  round  me,  and  hard  on  me  press, 
Make  curtsies  with  grinning,  and  nod  their  "  O  yes  l" 

Quick,  tell  me  the  message  you're  coming  about, 
Black  villain,  in  liv*ry  of  fire  trick' d  out  I 
My  mistress  sends  word  that  she  soon  will  be  here ; 
In  a  car  drawn  by  dragons  she'll  shortly  appear. 

Dear  grey  little  man,  say,  what  would'st  thou  to-day  ? 
Dead  master  of  mine,  what's  thy  business,  pray  ? 
He  gazes  upon  me  with  mute  mournful  mien, 
Shakes  his  head,  turns  away,  and  no  longer  is  seen. 

His  tail  wags  the  shaggy  old  dog,  and  he  whines ; 
All  brightly  the  eye  of  the  black  tom-cat  shines ; 
The  women  are  howling  with  long  flowing  hair, — 
Why  sings  my  old  nurse  my  old  cr^idle-song  there  ? 

Old  nurs^sto^  at  home,  to  %i«son^i»  attend, 
The  eia^peia  is  long  at  an  end ; 
To-day  I  am  keeping  my  gay  wedding  feast ; 
Only  watch  the  arrival  of  each  gallant  guest  I 

Only  watch  them  I  Good  sirs,  how  polite  is  your  band ! 
Ye  carry  your  heads,  'stead  of  hats,  in  your  hand  ; 
With  your  clattering  bones,  and  like  gallows-birds 

dress'd, 
Why  arrive  here  so  late,  when  the  wind  is  at  rest  ? 

The  old  witch  on  her  broomstick  comes  galloping  on : 
Ah,  bless  me,  good  mother,  I'm  really  thy  son. 
The  mouth  in  her  pale  face  beginning  to  twitch, 
*'  For  ever,  amen,*'  soon  replies  the  old  witch. 

Twelve  wither  d -musicians  come  creeping  along. 
The  limping  blind  fiddler  is  seen  in  the  throng 
Jackpudding  dress'd  out  in  his  motley  array. 
On  the  gravedigger's  back  is  grimacing  away 


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32  HEINE  S  POEMS. 

Witli  dancing  twelve  nuns  from  the  convent  ad  vane  ;, 
The  leering  old  procuress  leading  the  dance  ; 
Twelve  merry  young  priests  follow  close  in  their  train, 
And  sing  their  lewd  songs  in  a  church-going  strain. 

Till  you're  black  in  the  face,  good  old  clothesman,  d:>n't 

Your  far-coat  will  nothing  avail  you  in  hell ; 
'Tis  heated  for  nought  all  the  year  with  odd  things, — 
'Stead  of  wood,  with  the  bones  of  dead  beggars  ami 
kings. 

The  girls  with  the  flowers  seem'd  hunchback'd  and  bent, 
Tumbling  head  over  heels  in  the  room  as  they  went ; 
With  your  faces  like  owls,  and  a  grasshopper's  leg. 
That  rattling  of  bones  discontinue,  I  beg. 

The  squadrons  of  hell  all  appear  in  their  shrouds, 
And  bustle  and  hustle  in  fast-swelling  crowds ; 
The  waltz  of  damnation  resounds  in  the  ear, — 
Hush,  hush !  my  sweet  love  is  at  length  drawing  near. 

Now,  rabble,  be  quiet,  or  get  you  away  ! 
I  scarcely  can  hear  e'en  one  word  that  I  say ; 
Hark !  Is't  not  the  sound  of  a  chariot  at  hand  ? 
Quick,  open  the  door  I     Why  thus  loitering  stand  ? 

Thou  art  welcome,  my  darling!. how  goes  it,  my  sweet  ? 
You're  welcome,  good  parson  I^^gJS^  V^  I  entreat  I 
Good  parson,  with  hoof  of  a  horse  and  with  tail, 
I'm  your  dutiful  servant,  and  wish  you  all  hail ! 

Dear  bride,  wherefore  stand'st  thou  so  pale  and  so 

dumb? 
The  parson  to  join  us  together  has  come  ; 
Full  dear,  deai*  as  blood,  is  the  fee  I  must  pay, 
And  yet  to  possess  thee  is  merely  child's  play. 

Kneel  down,  my  sweet  bride,  by  my  side  pry  thee  kneel 
She  kneels  and  she  sinks, — O  what  rapturu  I  feel !  — 
She  sinks  on  my  heart,  on  my  fest-heaving  breast ; 
With  shuddering  pleasure  I  hold  her  close  press'd. 

Like  billows  her  golden  locks  circle  the  pair, 
'Gainst  my  heart  beats  the  heart  of  the  maiden  so  fail  ^ 
They  beat  with  a  union  of  sorrow  and  love, 
And  soar  to  the  regions  of  heaven  above 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  33 

While  our  hearts  are  thus  floating  in  rapture's  wide  sea, 
In  God's  holy  realms,  all  untrammell'd  and  free, 
On  our  heads,  as  a  terrible  sign  and  a  brand. 
Has  hell  in  derision  imposed  her  grim  hand. 

In  propria  persona  the  dark  son  of  night 
As  parson  bestows  the  priest's  blessing  to-night ; 
From  a  bloody  book  breathes  he  the  formula  terse, 
£ach  prayer  execration,  each  blessing  a  curse. 

A  crashing  and  hissing  and  howling  is  heard, 
Like  rolling  of  thunder,  like  waves  wildly  stirr'd ; 
When  sudden  a  bluish-tinged  light  brightly  flames, 
"  For  ever,  amen  I"  the  old  mother  exclaims. 


10  AME  from  the  house  of  my  mistress  dear, 
And  wander'd,  haK  frenzied,  in  midnight  fear. 
And  when  o'er  the  churchyard  I  mournfully  trod, 
In  solemn  silence  the  graves  seem'd  to  nod. 

The  musician's  old  tombstone  seem'd  nodding  to  be ; 
'Tis  the  flickering  light  of  the  moon  that  I  see. 
There's  a  whisper  "  Dear  brother,  I  soon  shall  be  here  I' 
Then  a  misty  pale  form  from  the  tomb  doth  appear. 

The  musician  it  was  who  arose  in  the  gloom, 
And  porch'd  himself  high  on  the  top  of  the  tomb ; 
The  chords  of  his  lute  he  struck  with  good  will, 
And  sang  with  a  voice  right  hollow  and  shrill : 

"Ah,  know  ye  still  the  olden  song, 

"  That  thrill'd  the  breast  with  passion  strong, 

*'  Ye  chords  so  dull  and  unmoving  ? 
"  The  angels  they  call  it  the  joys  of  heaven, 
**  The  devils  they  cail  it  hell's  torments  even, 

"  And  mortals  they  call  it — loving  I" 

The  last  word's  sound  had  scarcely  died. 

When  all  the  graves  their  mouths  open'd  wide ; 

Many  airy  figures  step  forward,  and  each 

The  musician  draws  near,  while  in  chorus  they  screech 

"  Love,  O  love,  thy  wondrous  might 
"  Brought  us  to  this  dreary  plight, 
"  Closed  our  eyes  in  endless  night, — 
"  To  disturb  us  why  delight  ?" 

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34  Heine's  poems. 

Thus  howl  they  confosedly,  hissing  and  groaning, 
With  roaring  and  sighing  and  crashing  and  moaning ; 
The  mad  troop  the  musician  surround  as  before, 
And  the  chords  the  musician  strikes  wildly  once  more: 

"  Bravo !  bravo !     How  absurd  I 

"  Welcome  to  ye  I 
'  "  Plainly  knew  ye 
"  That  I  spake  the  magic  word  I 

"  As  we  pass  the  livelong  year 
'*  Still  as  mice  in  prison  drear, 
"  Let's  to-day  be  fiill  of  cheer  I 

"  First,  though,  please 
"  See  that  no  one  else  is  here ; 
"  Fools  were  we  as  long  as  living, 
"  To  love's  maddening  passion  giving 

"  All  our  madden'd  energies. 
"  Let,  by  way  of  recreation, 
"  Each  one  give  a  true  narration 

**  Of  his  former  history, — 
"  How  devoured, 
"  How  o'erpower'd 

"  Li  love's  fr^tic  chase  was  he." 

Then  as  light  as  the  air  from  the  circle  there  broke 
A  wizen'd  thin  being,  who  hummingly  spoke : 

"  A  tailor  was  I  by  profession 

"  With  needle  and  with  shears ; 
"  None  made  a  better  impression 

"  With  needle  and  with  shears. 

*'  Then  came  my  master's  daughter 

"  With  needle  and  with  shears, 
*'  And  pierced  my  sorrowing  bosom 

*'  With  needle  and  with  shears.^* 

In  right  merry  chorus  the  spirits  then  laughed ; 
In  solemn  silence  a  second  stepp'd  affc : 

"  Great  Binaldo  Binaldini, 
"  Schinderhanno,  Orlandini, 
"  And  Charles  Moor  especially, 
''  Were  my  patterns  made  by  ma 


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BOOK  OF  SON0S.  35 

**  Like  those  mighty  heroes,  I 
"  Fell  in  love,  I'll  not  deny, 
*^  And  the  fairest  woman  most 
^'  Haunted  me  like  any  ghost. 

"  Sighing,  cooing  like  a  dove, 
"  I  was  driven  mad  with  love, 
"  And  my  fingers,  by  ill-luck, 
"  In  my  neighbour's  pocket  stuck 

**  But  the  constable  abused  me, 
**  And  most  cruelly  ill-used  me, 
"  And  I  sought  to  hide  my  grief 
**  In  my  neighbour's  handkerchief, 

"  Then  their  arms  policemen  placed 
"  Quietly  around  my  waist, 
"  And  the  bridewell  then  and  there 
**  Took  me  'neath  its  tender  care. 

"  There,  with  thoughts  of  love  quite  full, 
*'  Long  time  sat  I,  spinning  wool, 
"  Till  Binaldo's  ghost  one  day 
"  Came  and  took  my  soul  away.'* 

In  right  merry  chorus  the  spirits  then  laughed ; 
A  third,  all-berouged  and  bedizen'd,  stepp'd  aft : 

'^  As  monarch  I  ruled  on  the  stage, 

"  The  part  of  the  lover  played  I, 
'*  Oft  bellowed  *  Ye  Gods,'  in  a  rage, 

'^  Breath'd  many  a  heart-rending  sigh. 
'*  I  play'd  Mortimer's  part  best,  methinks, 

"  Mfuia  was  always  so  fair  ; 
''  But  despite  the  most  natural  winks, 

"  She  never  gave  heed  to  my  prayer. 
"  Once  when  I,  with  desperate  look, 

**  *  Maria,  thou  holy  one  T  cried, 
"  The  dagger  I  hastily  took, 

"  And  plunged  it  too  deep  in  my  side." 

In  right  merry  chorus  the  spirits  then  laugh'd  ; 
A  fourth  in  a  white  flowing  garment  stepp'd  aft . 

*'  Ex  caikedrd  kept  prating  the  learned  professor, 
"  He  prated,  and  I  went  to  sleep  all  the  while ; 

**  Yet  my  pleasure  had  certainly  not  been  the  lesser, 
"  Had  I  revell'd  instead  in  his  daughter's  sweet  smile 


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36  Heine's  poems. 

"  From  the  window  she  oft  to  me  tenderly  beckoned, 
"  That  flower  of  flowers,  my  life's  only  light ; 

"  ^'et  that  flower  of  flowers  was  pluck'd  in  a  second 
*'  By  a  stupid  old  blockhead,  an  opulent  wight. 

"  Then  cursed  I  all  women  and  rogues  of  high  station, 
"  And  mingled  some  poisonous  herbs  in  my  wine, 

*'  And  held  with  old  Death  a  jollification, 

'*  While  he  said  :  '  Your  good  health !  from  this 
moment  you're  mine  I' " 

In  right  merry  chorus  the  spirits  then  laugh'd ; 

A  fifth,  with  a  rope  round  lus  neck,  next  stepp'd  aft : 

*'  There  boasted  and  bragg'd  a  count,  over  his  wine, 
*'  Of  his  daughter  so  fair,  and  his  jewels  so  fine. 
•*  What  care  I,  Sir  Count,  for  thy  jewels  so  fine  ? 
"  Far  rather  would  I  that  thy  daughter  were  mine  1 

"  *Tis  true  under  bar,  lock,  and  key  they  both  lay, 
''  And  the  Count  many  servants  retained  in  his  pay 
**  What  cared  I  for  servants,  for  bar,  lock,  or  key  ? 
*'  [Jp  the  rungs  of  the  ladder  I  mounted  with  glee. 

''  To  my  mistress's  window  I  climb'd  with  good  cheer, 
"  Where  curses  beneath  me  saluted  my  ear. 
"  *  Stop,  stop,  my  fine  fellow  I  I  too  must  be  there, 
*•  *  I'm  likewise  in  love  with  the  jewels  so  fidr.' 

"  Thus  jested  the  Count,  while  he  grappled  me  tight, 
"  His  servants  came  round  me  with  shouts  of  delight. 
** '  Pooh,  nonsense,  you  rascals  I     No  robber  am  I, 
•'  *  I  but  came  for  my  mistress— 'tis  really  no  lie.' 

"  In  vain  was  my  talking,  in  vain  what  I  said, 
"  They  got  ready  the  rope,  threw  it  over  my  head, 
''  And  the  sun,  when  he  rose,  with  amazement  extreme 
"  Found  me  hanging,  alas,  from  the  gallows'  high 
beam  I" 

In  right  merry  chorus  the  spirits  then  laugh'd ; 

A  sixth,  with  his  head  in  his  hand,  next  stepp'd  aft ; 

'^  Love's  torments  made  me  seek  the  chace ; 
'^  Bifle  in  hand,  I  roam'd  apace. 
"  Down  from  the  tree,  with  hollow  scoff, 
"  The  raven  cried :  *  head  off !  head  off  1' 


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SOCK  OF  SONOS.  37 

**  O,  could  I  only  see  a  dove, 

••  I'd  take  it  home  for  my  sweet  love ! 

•*  Thus  thought  I,  and  midst  bush  and  teeo 

'*  With  sportsman's  eye  sought  ccurefully. 

"  What  billing's  that  ?     What  gentle  cooing  V 

•*  It  sounds  like  turtle  doves'  soft  wooing. 

"  I  stole  up  slily,  cock'd  my  gun, 

**  And,  lo,  my  own  sweet  love  was  one  I 

"  It  was  indeed  my  dove,  my  bride ; 

**  A  stranger  clasp'd  her  waist  with  pride. 

"  Old  gun,  now  let  thy  aim  be  good  I — 

**  The  stranger  welter'd  in  his  blood. 

"  Soon  through  the  wood  I  had  to  pass, 

"  With  hangmen  by  my  side,  alas ! 

"  Down  from  the  tree,  with  bitter  scoff, 

"  The  raven  cried :  '  head-off  I  head-off!' " 
In  right  merry  chorus  the  spirits  then  laughed ; 
At  length  the  musician  in  person  stepp'd  aft : 

"  I've  sung  my  own  song,  friends,  demurely, 
"  That  charming  song  s  at  an  end ; 

"  When  the  heart  is  once  broken,  why  surely 
"  The  song  may  homeward  wend !" 
Then  began  the  wild  laughter  still  louder  to  sound, 
And  the  pale  spectral  troop  in  a  circle  swept  roimd. 
From  the  neighbouring  church-tow'r  the  stroke  of 

«  One  I"  feU, 
And  the  spirits  rush'd  back  to  their  graves  with  a  yell 


I  WAS  asleep,  and  calmly  slept. 
All  pain  and  grief  allay'd ; 
A  wondrous  vision  o'er  me  crept, 

There  came  a  lovely  maid. 
As  pale  as  marble  was  her  face, 

And,  O,  so  passing  fair  I 
Her  eyes  they  swam  with  pearl-like  grace, 

And  strangely  waved  her  hair. 
And  softly,  softly  moved  her  foot 

The  pale-as-marble  maid ; 
And  on  my  heart  herself  she  put, 

The  pale-as-marble  maid. 


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3S  Heine's  poems. 

How  shook  and  throbbed,  half  sad,  haK  blest. 

My  heart,  which  hotly  bmm'd  I 
But  neither  shook  nor  throbb'd  her  breast, 

Which  into  ice  seem'd  tum'd. 

''  It  neither  shakes  nor  throbs,  my  breast, 

*'  And  it  is  icy  cold ; 
"^  And  yet  I  know  love's  yearning  blest, 

*'  Love's  mighty  pow'r  of  old.  • 

"  No  colour's  on  my  lips  and  cheek, 
"  No  blood  my  veins  doth  swell ; 

'^  But  start  not,  thus  to  hear  me  speak, 
"  I  love  thee,  love  thee  well !" 

And  wilder  still  embraced  she  me, 

And  I  was  sore  afraid ; 
Then  crow'd  the  cock, — straight  vanish'd  she, 

The  pale-a&-marble  maid. 


10. 

I  OFT  have  pale  spectres  before  now 
Conjured  with  magical  might ; 
They  refuse  to  return  any  more  now 
To  their  former  dwelling  of  night. 

The  word  that  commands  their  submissicm 

I  forgot  in  my  terror  and  fear ; 
My  own  spirits  now  seek  my  peidition, 

Within  their  prison-house  drear. 

Dark  demons,  approach  not  a  finger ! 

Away,  nor  to  torment  give  birth  I 
Full  many  a  joy  still  may  linger 

In  the  roseate  light  of  this  earth. 

I  needs  must  be  evermore  striving 

To  reach  the  flower  so  fair ; 
0,  what  were  the  use  of  my  living 

If  I  may  cherish  her  ne'er  ? 

To  my  glowing  heart  fain  would  I  press  her. 
Would  clasp  her  for  once  to  my  breast. 

On  her  lips  and  her  cheeks  once  caress  her, 
With  sweetest  of  torments  be  blest. 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  39 

If  once  from  her  mouth  I  could  hear  it, 
Gould  hear  one  fond  whisper  bestow'd, 

I  would  foUow  thee,  beckoning  Spirit, 
Yea,  e*en  to  thy  darksome  abode. 

The  spirits  have  heard,  and  draw  nigh  me, 

And  nod  with  terricle  glee  : 
Sweet  love,  wim  an  answer  supply  me, — 

Sweet  lovo,  J  lovest  thou  me  ? 


2.  SONGS. 

1. 

EVEEY  morning  rise  I,  crying  : 
Comes  my  lovo  to-day  ? 
Then  sink  down  at  evening,  sighing : 
She  is  still  away ! 

Sleepless  and  oppress'd  with  sorrow. 

All  night  long  I  lie 
Dreaming,  half  asleep  ;  the  morrow 

Sadly  wander  I. 


I'M  driven  hither  and  thither  along ! 
But  yet  a  few  hours,  I  shall  see  her  again, 
Herself,  the  most  fair  of  the  fair  maiden-train  ;~ 
JTruBjieart,  what  means  thy  throbbing  so  strong  ? 

The  Kours  are  only  a  slothful  race  I 
Lazily  they  move  each  day. 
And  with  yawning  go  their  way  ; — 

Hasten  on,  ye  slothM  race  I 

Wild-raging  eagerness  thrills  me  indeed ; 

Never  in  love  have  the  hours  delighted ; 

So,  in  a  cruel  bond  strangely  united, 
Slily  deride  they  the  lovers'  wild  speed. 

8. 

BY  nought  but  sorrow  attended, 
I  wander'd  under  the  trees ; 
That  olden  yision  descended. 
And  stole  to  my  heart  by  degrees. 


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40  Heine's  poems. 

Who  taught  you  the  word  ye  are  singmg, 
Ye  birds  in  the  branches  on  high  ? 

0  hush  !  when  my  hf^rt  hears  it  ringing, 
It  makes  it  more  mournfully  sigh. 

"  A  fair  young  maiden  'twas  taught  it, 
*'  Who  came  here,  and  sang  like  a  bird ; 

"  And  so  we  birds  easily  caught  it, 
**  That  pretty,  golden  word.*' 

No  more  shall  this  story  deceive  me. 

Ye  birds,  so  wondrously  sly : 
Of  my  sorrow  ye  fain  would  bereave  me, 

On  your  friendship  I  cannot  rely. 

4. 

SWEET  love,  lay  thy  hand  on  my  heart,  and  tell 
If  thou  hearest  the  knocks  in  that  narrow  cell  ? 
There  dwells  there  a  carpenter,  cunning  is  he, 
And  slily  he's  hewing  ^  cof&n  for  me. 

He  hammers  and  knocks  by  day  and  by  night. 
My  slumber  already  has  banish'd  outright ; 
Oh,  Master  Carpenter,  prythee  make  haste, 
That  I  some  slumber  at  length  may  taste. 


BEAUTEOUS  cradle  of  my  sorrow, 
Beauteous  grave  of  all  my  peace, 
Beauteous  town,  we  part  to-morrow, 
Fare  thee  well,  our  ties  must  cease  I 

Fare  thee  well,  thou  threshold  holy. 
Where  my  loved  one  sets  her  feet  1 

Fare  thee  well,  thou  spot  so  holy. 
Where  we  chanced  at  first  to  meet ! 

Would  that  we  had  been  for  ever 
Strangers,  queen  of  hearts  so  fair ! 

Then  it  would  have  happened  never 
That  I'm  driven  to  despair. 

Ne'er  to  stir  thy  bosom  thought  I, 
For  thy  love  I  never  pray'd ; 

Silently  to  live  but  sought  I 

Where  thy  breath  its  balm  convey 'd 


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BOOK  OF  BONOS.  il 

Yet  thou  spum'st  me  in  my  sadness, 

Bitter  words  thy  mouth  doth  speak, 
In  my  senses  riots  madness. 

And  my  heart  is  faint  and  weak 

And  my  limbs,  in  wanderings  dreary, 

Sadly  drag  I,  full  of  gloom^ 
Till  I  lay  my  head  all  weary 

In  a  dully  distant  tomb. 

PATIENCE,  surly  pilot,  shortly  i^     kc  c^^\' 
To  the  port  I'll  follow  you ;  H^- 

From  two  maidens  I'm  departing,  ^ 

From  my  love  and  Europe  too.. 

Blood-spring,  from  mine  eyes  'gin  running. 

Blood-spring,  from  my  body  flow, 
So  that  I  tiien,  with  my  hot  blood, 

May  write  down  my  tale  of  woe. 

Ah,  my  body,  wherefore  shudder 

Thus  to-day  my  blood  to  see  ? 
Many  years  before  thee  standing 

Pale,  heart-bleeding,  saw'st  thou  me! 

KnoVst  thou  still  the  olden  story 

Of  the  snake  in  Paradise, 
Who,  a  cursed  apple  giving. 

Caused  our  parents  endless  sighs  ? 

Apples  brought  all  evils  on  us, 

Death  through  Eve  by  apples  came ; 
Flames  on  Troy  were  brought  by  Eris, — 

Both  thou  broughtest,  death  and  flame  i 

7. 

HILL  and  castle  fair  are  glancing 
O'er  the  clear  and  glassy  Bhme, 
And  my  bark  is  gaily  dancing 
In  the  sunlight  all-divine. 

On  the  golden  waters,  breaking 

Sportively,  my  calm  eyes  rest ; 
Gently  are  the  feelings  waking 

That  I  nourish'd  in  my  breast 


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42  Heine's  poesis. 

With  a  fond  and  kindly  greeting, 
Lure  me  those  deep  waters  bright, 

Yet  I  know  their  smoothness  cheating 
Hides  beneath  it  death  and  night. 

Joy  above,  below  destruction, — 

Thou'rt  my  loved  one's  image,  stream! 

Blissfol  is  her  smile's  seduction. 
Kind  and  gentle  can  she  seem. 

8. 

FIBST  methought  in  my  affliction, 
I  can  never  stand  the  blow. — 
Yet  I  did — strange  contradiction ! 
How  I  did,  ne'er  seek  to  know. 

9.         , 
"Vrr  ITH  rose  and  cypress  and  tinsel  gay, 

▼  ▼       I  ffdn  would  adorn  in  a  charming  way 
This  book,  as  though  a  coffin  it  were, 
And  in  it  my  olden  songs  inter. 

O,  could  I  but  bury  love  also  there  I 
On  love's  grave  grows  rest's  floweret  fair  ; 
'Tis  there  'tis  pluck'd  in  its  sweetest  bloom, — 
-For  me  'twill  not  blossom  till  in  my  tomb. 

Here  now  are  the  songs  that  formerly  rose. 
As  wild  as  the  lava  from  Etna  that  flows. 
From  out  the  depths  of  my  feelings  true. 
And  glittering  sparks  around  them  threw ! 

Like  corpses  now  lie  they,  all  silent  and  dumb, 
And  cold  and  pallid  as  mist  they've  become ; 
But  the  olden  glow  their  revival  will  bring    * 
When  the  spirit  of  love  waves  o'er  them  its  wing 

In  my  heart  a  presentiment  loudly  cries  : 
The  spirit  of  love  will  over  them  rise  : 
This  book  will  hereafter  come  to  thy  hand, 
My  sweetest  love,  in  a  distant  land. 

Then  the  spell  on  my  song  at  an  end  will  be, 
The  pallid  letters  will  gaze  on  thee, 
Imploringly  gaze  on  thy  beauteous  eyes. 
And  whis2)er  with  sadness  and  loving  sighs. 


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BOOK  OF  SONGHS.  4^ 

3.  R0MANCE8. 

1.    THE  MOURNFUL  ONE. 

EVEEY  lieaart  with  pain  is  smitten 
When  they  see  the  stripling  fuli^ 
Who  upon  his  face  bears  written 
Grief  and  sorrow's  mournful  tale. 

Breezes  with  compassion  lightly 

Fan  his  burning  brow  the  while. 
And  his  bosom  many  a  sprightly 

Damsel  fair  would  fain  begtiile. 

From  the  city's  ceaseless  bustle 

To  the  wood  for  peace  he  flies. 
Merrily  the  leaves  there  rustle, 

Merrier  still  the  bird's  songs  rise. 

But  the  merry  song  soon  ceases, 

Sadly  rustle  leaf  and  tree, 
When  he,  while  his  grief  increases, 

Nears  the  forest  mournfully. 

2.    THE  MOUNTAIN  ECHO. 

AT  sad  slow  pace  across  the  vale 
There  rode  a  horseman  brave : 
Ah  1  travel  I  now  to  my  mistress's  aruie^ 
"  Or  but  to  the  darksome  grave  ?" 
The  echo  answer  gave : 
"  The  darksome  grave !" 

And  farther  rode  the  horseman  on, 

With  sighs  his  thoughts  express'd : 
'*  If  I  thus  early  must  go  to  my  grave, 
"  Yet  in  the  grave  is  rest." 
The  answering  voice  confess'd : 
"  The  grave  is  rest  I" 

Adown  the  horseman's  fiirrow'd  cheek 

A  tear  fell  on  liis  breast : 
"  If  rest  I  can  only  find  in  the  grave, 
**  For  me  the  grave  is  best." 

The  hollow  voice  confess'd : 
"The  grave  is  best!" 


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44  Heine's  poems. 

3.    THE  TWO  BROTHERS. 

ON  the  mountain  summit  darkling 
Lies  the  castle,  veiled  in  night ; 
Lights  are  in  the  valley  sparkling, 
Clashing  swords  are  gleaming  bright 

Brothers  'tis,  who  in  fierce  duel 
Fight,  with  wrath  to  fury  fann'd ; 

Tell  me  why  these  brothers  cruel 
Strive  thus  madly,  sword  in  hand  ? 

By  the  eyes  of  Countess  Laura 
Were  they  thus  in  strife  array'd ; 

Both  with  glowing  love  adore  her, — 
Her,  the  noble,  beauteous  maid. 

Unto  which  now  of  the  brothers 

Is  her  heart  the  most  inclined  ? 
She  her  secret  feelings  smothers, — 

Out,  then,  sword,  the  truth  to  find ! 

And  they  fight  with  rage  despairing, 
Blows  exchange  with  savage  might ; 

Take  good  heed,  ye  gallants  daring, — 
Mischief  walks  abroad  by  night. 

Woe,  O  woe,  ye  brothers  cruel ! 

Woe,  O  woe,  thou  vale  abhorr'd ! 
Both  fall  victims  in  the  duel, 

Falling  on  each  other's  sword. 

Baces  are  to  dust  converted. 

Many  centuries  have  flown, 
And  the  castle,  now  deserted, 

Sadly  from  the  mount  looks  down. 

But  at  night-time  in  the  valley 

Wondrous  forms  appear  again ; 
At  the  stroke  of  twelve,  forth  sally 

To  the  fight  the  broiiiers  twain. 

4.  POOB  PETEB. 
I. 

WHILE  Hans  and  Grottel  are  dancing  witli  glee, 
And  ea-ch  of  them  loudly  rejoices. 
Poor  Peter  looks  as  pale  as  can  be, 
And  perfectly  mute  his  voice  is. 


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BOOK   OP   SONGS.  45 

Wliile  Hans  and  Grettel  are  bridegroom  and  bride, 

And  glitter  in  smart  ostentation, 
Poor  Peter  must  still  in  his  working  di'ess  bide, 

And  bites  his  nails  with  vexation. 
Then  softly  Peter  said  to  himself, 

As  he  gazed  on  the  couple  sadly  : 
**  Ah,  had  I  not  been  such  a  sensible  elf, 

"  It  had  fared  with  my  life  but  badly  !** 

II. 
"  TX^ITHIN  my  breast  there  sits  a  woe 

T  T     "  That  seems  my  breast  to  sever 
'*  Where'er  I  stand,  where'er  I  go, 

"  It  drives  me  onward  ever. 
"  It  makes  mo  tow'rd  my  loved  one  fly, 

"  As  if  she  could  restore  me  ; 
"  Yet  when  I  gaze  upon  her  eye, 

"  My  sorrows  rise  before  me. 
"  I  clamber  up  the  mountain  now, 

"  In  lonely  sorrow  creeping, 
"  And  standing  silent  on  its  brow, 

"  I  cannot  cease  from  weeping." 

III. 

POOE  PETEK  slowly  totters  by. 
Pale  as  a  corpse,  and  stealthily ; 
The  very  people  in  the  street 
Stand  still,  when  his  sad  form  they  meet. 
The  maidens  whisper'd  as  they  pitied : 
"  The  grave  he  has  this  moment  quitted." 
Ah  no,  my  dear  young  maidens  fair. 
He's  just  about  to  lie  down  there  I 
As  he  is  of  his  love  bereft. 
The  grave's  the  best  place  that  is  left. 
Where  he  his  aching  heart  may  lay. 
And  sleep  until  the  Judgment  Day. 

5.    THE  PRISONEE'S  SONG. 

WHEN  my  grandmother  once  had  bewitch'd  a  i>ooi 
girl, 
The  mob  would  have  burnt  her  quite  readily  ; 
But  though  fiercely  the  judge  his  mustachios  might  twirl. 
She  refused  to  confess  her  crime  steadily. 

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16  Heine's  poems. 

And  when  in  the  caldron  they  held  her  fast, 

She  shouted  and  yoU'd  like  a  craven ; 
But  when  the  black  vapour  arose,  she  at  last 

Flew  up  in  the  air  as  a  raven. 

My  black  and  feathery  grandmother  dear, 

O  visit  me  soon  in  this  tower ! 
Quick,  fly  through  tho  grating,  and  come  to  me  hero, 

And  bring  me  some  ^es  to  devour  I 

My  black  and  feathery  grandmother  dear, 

O  prythee  protect  me  from  sorrow  I 
For  my  aunt  will  be  picking  my  eyes  out,  I  fear, 

When  I  merrily  soar  hence  to-morrow. 

6.    THE  GBENADIEBS. 

TWO  grenadiers  travelled  tow'rds  France  one  day, 
On  leaving  their  prison  in  Russia, 
And  sadly  they  hung  their  heads  in  dismay 
When  they  reach'd  the  frontiers  of  Prussia. 

For  there  they  first  heard  the  story  of  woe, 

That  France  had  utterly  perish'd. 
The  grand  army  had  met  with  an  overthrow. 

They  had  captured  their  Emperor  cherish'd. 

Then  both  of  the  grenadiers  wept  full  sore 

At  hearing  the  terrible  story ; 
And  one  of  them  said :  ''  Alas  I  once  more 

"  My  wounds  are  bleeding  and  gory.'* 

The  other  one  said :  "  The  game's  at  an  end, 

"  With  thee  I  would  die  right  gladly, 
"  But  I've  wife  and  child,  whom  at  home  I  should  tend, 

"  For  without  me  they'll  fare  but  badly. 

"  What  matters  my  child,  what  matters  my  wife  ? 

"  A  heavier  care  has  arisen ; 
*•  Let  them  beg,  if  they're  hungry,  all  theii'  life,— 

"  My  Emperor  sighs  in  a  prison  I 

"  Dear  brother,  pray  grant  me  this  one  last  prayer : 

"  If  my  hours  I  now  must  number, 
**  O  take  my  corpse  to  my  country  fair, 

**  That  there  it  may  peacefully  slumber. 


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BOOK  OF   SONOS.  47 

*•  Tho  legion  of  honour,  with  ribbon  red, 

'*  Upon  my  bosom  place  thou, 
**  Aid  put  in  my  hand  my  musket  dread, 

'*  And  my  sword  aroimd  me  brace  thou. 

"  And  so  in  my  grave  will  I  silently  lie, 
"  And  watch  like  a  guard  o'er  the  forces, 

"  Until  the  roaring  of  cannon  hear  I, 
''  And  the  trampling  of  neighing  horses. 

''  My  Emperor  then  will  ride  over  my  grave, 
"  While  the  swords  glitter  brightly  and  rattle  ; 

**  Then  armed  to  the  teeth  will  I  rise  from  the  grave, 
"  For  my  Emperor  hasting  to  battle  I" 

7.    THE  MESSAGE. 

GOOD  servant !  up,  and  saddle  quick, 
And  leap  upon  thy  steed. 
And  to  King  Duncan's  castle  then 
Through  plain  and  forest  speed. 

Into  the  stable  creep,  and  wait, 

'Till  by  the  helper  spied  ; 
Then  say :  "  Of  Duncan's  daughters,  which 

"  Has  just  become  a  bride  ?" 

And  if  he  says :  "  The  brown  one  'tis," 
The  news  bring  quickly  home ; 

But  if  he  says :  "  The  fair  one  'tis," 
More  slowly  thou  mayst  come. 

Then  go  to  the  ropemaker's  shop, 

And  buy  a  rope  for  me ; 
And  riding  slowly,  bring  it  here. 

And  mute  and  silent  be. 

8.   TAKING  THE  BRIDE  HOME. 

I'LL  go  not  alone,  my  sweetheart  dear  I 
With  me  thou  must  go  now 
To  the  cheery,  old,  and  cosy  room 
In  the  dreary  cold  abode  of  gloom. 
Where  at  the  door  my  mother  keeps  guard, 
And  for  her  son's  return  looks  hard. 


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I 

48  heike's  poems.  i 

"  Away  from  me,  thou  gloomy  man !  i 

"  Who  bid  thee  come  hither  ? 
"  Thy  hand's  like  ice,  thine  eye  glows  bright, 
"  Thy  breath  is  burning,  thy  cheek  is  white ;  — 
"  But  I  would  rather  my  time  beguile 
"  With  smell  of  roses  and  sun's  sweet  smile." 

The  roses  may  smell,  and  the  sun  may  shine, 

My  darling  sweetheart ! 
Throw  thy  spreading  white  veil  thy  figure  around, 
Make  the  chords  of  the  echoing  lyre  resound. 
And  sing  a  wedding  song  to  me ; 
The  night-wind  pipes  the  melody. 


9.  DON  RAMIRO. 

'  T^ONNA  CLARA  I  Donna  Clara  I 
-L'     "  Through  long  years  the  hotly-loved  one 
**  Thou  hast  will'd  now  my  destruction, 
"  Will'd  it,  too,  without  compassion, 

**  Donna  Clara !  Donna  Clara ! 
"  Very  sweet  the  gift  of  life  is ! 
"  But  beneath  us  all  is  fearful, 
*'  In  the  tomb  so  dark  and  chilly. 

'*  Donna  Clara,  joy  !  to-morrow 
*'  Will  Fernando  at  the  altar 
"  As  his  wedded  bride  salute  thee, — 
"  Wilt  thou  ask  me  to  the  wedding  ?" 

"  Don  Eamiro  !  Don  Eamiro ! 
"  Bitterly  thy  words  are  sounding, 
"  Bitt'rer  than  yon  stars'  decree  is, 
"  Scoffing  at  my  heart's  own  wishes. 

"  Don  Ramiro  I  Don  Ramiro ! 
'*  Shake  thy  gloomy  sadness  from  thee ; 
"  On  the  earth  are  many  maidens, 
*'  But  by  God  have  we  been  parted. 

'*  Don  Ramiro,  who  so  bravely 
"  Many  Moors  hast  overpower'd, 
''  Overpower  now  thyself  too, — 
^  Come  to-morrow  to  my  wedding.* 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  49 

"  Doima  Clara !  Donna  Clara  I 
"  Yes,  I  swear  it,  yes,  I'll  come  there  ! 
**  And  the  dance  will  lead  off  with  thee ; — 
*'  So  good  night,  111  come  to-morrow.''' 

'•  So  good  night  !** — The  window  rattled ; 
Sighing  stood  below  Bamiro, 
Seeming  tum'd  to  stone  long  stood  ho  ; 
Then  he  vanished  in  the  darkness. 

Lastly,  after  lengthen'd  conflict, 
Night  to  day  in  turn  surrendered ; 
Like  a  blooming  flowery  garden 
Lies  extended  fair  Toledo. 

Palaces  and  splendid  buildings 
Glitter  in  the  radiant  sunlight. 
And  the  churches'  domes  so  lofty 
Glisten  proudly,  as  though  gilded. 

Humming  like  a  busy  beehive. 
Merrily  the  bells  are  sounding ; 
Sweetly  rise  the  solemn  psalm-tunes 
From  the  Gcd-devoted  churches. 

But  look  yonder!  but  look  yonder! 
Where  from  out  the  market  chapel, 
Midst  the  heaving  crowd  and  uproar, 
Streams  the  throng  in  chequer 'd  masses 

Glittering  knights  and  stately  ladies 
In  gay  courtly  dresses  sparkle, 
And  the  clear-toned  bells  are  ringing. 
And  the  organ  peals  between  times. 

But  with  reverence  saluted. 
In  the  people's  midst  are  walking, 
Nobly  clad,  the  youthful  couple, 
Donna  Clara,  Don  Fernando. 

To  the  bridegroom's  palace  entrance 
Slowly  moves  the  gay  procession ; 
There  begin  the  ceremonies, 
Stately,  and  in  olden  fashion. 

Knightly  games  and  merry  feasting 
Interchange  with  loud  rejoicing ; 
Swiftly  fly  the  hours  thus  gladly 
Till  the  shades  of  night  have  fallen. 

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1 


50  Heine's  poems. 

And  the  wedding-guests  assemble 

In  the  hall,  to  hold  the  dances, 

And  their  chequer'd  gala  dresses 

Midst  the  glittering  lights  are  sparklisg. 

On  a  high-exalted  dais 
Bride  and  bridegroom  are  reclining, 
Donna  Clara,  Don  Fernando, 
Holding  loving  conversation. 

In  the  hall  are  gaily  moving 
All  the  festal  crowd  of  people. 
And  the  kettle-drums  sound  loudly, 
And  the  trumpets,  too,  are  crashing. 

"  Wherefore,  O  my  heart*s  fair  mistress. 
'*  Are  thy  glances  so  directed 
"  Tow'rd  the  hall's  most  distant  corner  ?* 
Thus  the  knight  exclaim'd  with  wonder. 

"  Seest  thou  not,  then,  Don  Fernando, 
"  Yonder  man  in  dark  cloak  hidden  ?" 
And  the  knight  with  smiling  answered  : 
**  Ah,  'tis  nothing  but  a  shadow." 

But  the  shadow  soon  approach'd  them, 
And  a  man  was  in  the  mantle, 
And  Ramiro  recognising, 
Clara  greeted  him  with  blushes. 

And  the  dancing  has  begun  now. 
And  the  dancers  whirl  round  gaily 
In  the  waltz's  giddy  mazes, 
And  the  ground  beneath  them  trembles. 

*'  Gladly  will  I,  Don  Ramiro, 
**  In  the  dance  become  thy  partner, 
''  But  thou  didst  not  well  to  come  here 
"  In  a  black  and  nightlike  mantle." 

But  with  eyes  all  fix'd  and  piercing 
Looks  Ramiro  on  the  fair  one ; 
Clasping  her,  with  gloom  thus  speaks  ho. 
"  At  thy  bidding  have  I  come  here  I" 

And  the  pair  of  dancers  vanish 
In  the  dance's  giddy  mazes. 
And  the  kettle-drums  sound  loudly, 
And  the  trumpets,  too,  are  crashing. 


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BOOK  OF   SONGS.  51 

"  Snow-white  are  thy  cheeks,  Eamiro," 
Clara  speaks  with  secret  trembling. 
"  At  thy  bidding  have  I  come  here !" 
In  a  hollow  voice  replies  he. 

In  the  hall  the  wax-lights  glimmer 
Through  the  ebbing,  flowing  masses,  • 

And  the  kettle-drums  sound  loudly. 
And  the  trumpets,  too,  are  crashing. 

*'  Ice-cold  are  thy  hands,  Kamiro," 
Clara  speaks  with  shudd'ring  terror. 
**  At  thy  bidding  have  I  come  here  I** 
And  within  the  whirl  they  vanish* 

"  Leave  me,  leave  me,  Don  Eamiro ! 
"  Ah,  thy  breath  is  like  a  corpse's !" 
Once  again  the  dark  words  speaks  he 
"  At  thy  bidding  have  I  come  here !" 

And  the  very  ground  seems  glowing. 
Fiddle,  viol  sound  right  merry ; 
Like  a  wondrous  weft  of  magic 
All  within  the  hall  is  whirlmg. 

'*  Leave  me,  leave  me,  Don  Eamiro !" 
Sadly  sounds  amidst  the  tumult ; 
Don  Eamiro  ever  answers  : 
*'  At  thy  bidding  have  I  come  tere  !*' 

"  In  the  name  of  God  depart,  then !" 
Clara  with  a  firm  voice  utters. 
And  the  words  she  scarce  had  spoken 
When  Eamiro  vanished  from  her. 

Clara,  death  in  every  feature, 
Chilly,  night-surrounded,  stood  there, 
And  a  swoon  her  lightsome  figure 
To  its  darksome  kingdom  carries. 

But  at  last  her  misty  slumber 
Yields,  at  last  her  eyelids  open , 
But  again,  with  deep  amazement, 
Would  she  fain  have  closed  her  fair  ey60 

For  since  they  began  the  dancing, 
From  her  seat  had  she  not  moved  once, 
And  she  stUl  sits  by  the  bridegroom. 
And  the  anxious  knight  thus  a^  her : 

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52  Heine's  poems. 

"  Say,  why  are  thy  cheeks  so  pallid  ? 
**  Wherefore  is  thine  eye  so  dsurksome  ?"— 
"  And  Eamiro?" — stammers  Clara, 
And  her  tongue  is  mute  with  horror. 

But  with  deep  and  solemn  wrinkles 
*    Is  the  bridegroom's  brow  now  furrow'd : 
"  Lady,  bloody  news  why  seek*st  thou  ? 
"  This  day's  noontide  died  Bamiro." 

10.  BELSHAZZAB. 

THE  midnight  hour  was  coming  on, 
In  deathlike  calm  lay  Babylon. 

But  in  the  monarch's  castle  nigh 

Held  the  monarch's  attendants  gay  revelry. 

And  in  the  regal  haii  upstairs 
A  regal  feast  Belshazzar  shares. 

The  servants  in  glittering  circles  recline, 
And  empty  the  goblets  of  sparkling  wine. 

The  servants  are  shouting,  the  goblets  ring, 
Delighting  the  heart  of  the  ruthless  king. 

The  king's  cheeks  feel  a  ruddy  glow, 
The  wine  doth  swell  his  ardour  sp. 

And  blindly  led  on  by  his  ardour's  wiles, 

The  Godhead  with  blasphemous  words  he  revileg. 

And  wildly  he  curses  and  raves  aloud. 
Approvingly  bellow  the  serving  crowd. 

The  king  commands  with  a  look  that  burns, 
The  servant  hastens  and  soon  returns. 

Many  golden  vessels  he  bears  on  his  head. 
The  spoils  of  Jehovah's  temple  dread. 

And  the  monarch  straight  seized  on  a  sacred  cu] 
With  impious  hand,  and  fill'd  it  up. 

And  down  to  the  dregs  he  drains  it  fast. 
And  with  foaming  mouth  exclaims  at  last : 

"  Jehovah,  thy  power  I  here  defy, 
"  The  King  of  Babylon  am  I." 

But  scarcely  had  sounded  the  fearful  word. 

When  the  heart  of  the  king  with  terror  was  stirr  d 

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BOOK  OF   SONGS.  53 

The  yelling  laughter  is  silenced  all. 
And  deathlike  silence  fills  the  hall. 

And  see !     And  see !     On  the  wall  so  white 
A  human  hand  appears  in  sight. 

And  letters  of  flame  on  the  wall  so  white 
It  wrote,  and  wrote,  and  vanish'd  from  sight 

The  king  the  writing  with  wonderment  sees, 
As  pale  as  death,  and  with  trembling  knees. 

The  awestruck  servants  sat  around, 
And  silent  sat,  and  utter'd  no  sound. 

The  magicians  appeared,  but  none  'mongst  them  all 
Could  rightly  interpret  the  words  on  the  wall. 

But  Belshazzar  the  king  the  selfsame  night 
Was  slain  by  his  servants, — a  ghastly  sight. 


11.  THE  MINNESINGERS. 

IN  the  minstrels'  strife  engaging 
Pass  the  Minnesingers  by ; 
Strange  the  war  that  they  are  waging, 
Strange  the  tourney  where  they  vie. 

Fancy,  that  for  battle  nerves  him, 

Is  the  Minnesinger's  steed ; 
Art  as  trusty  buckler  serves  him. 

And  his  word's  a  sword  indeed. 

Beauteous  dames,  with  glances  pleasant. 
From  the  balcony  look  down ; 

But  the  right  one  is  not  present 
With  the  proper  laurel  crown. 

Other  combatants,  when  springing 
To  the  lists,  at  least  are  sound ; 

Minnesingers  must  be  bringing 
To  the  fray  a  deadly  wound. 

He  from  whom  the  most  there  draineth 
Song's  blood  from  the  inmost  breast,— 

He  is  victor,  and  obtaineth 

From  fair  lips  the  praise  most  blest. 


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54  Heine's  poems. 

12.    LOOKING  FBCWi  THE  WINDOW. 

FAIE  Hedwig  lay  at  the  window,  to  see 
If  pale  Henry  would  chance  to  detect  her ; 
She  said  half  aloud :  "  Why  goodness  me ! 
''  The  man  is  as  pale  as  a  spectre!" 
/  iih  yearning  pale  Henry  look'd  above 
At  her  window,  in  hopes  to  detect  her ; 
Fair  Hedwig  now  felt  the  torments  of  love, 

And  she  became  pale  as  a  spectre. 
Love-sick,  now  stood  fair  Hedwig  all  day 

At  her  window,  lest  he  should  reject  her  ; 
But  soon  in  pale  Henry  s  arms  she  lay 
All  night,  at  the  time  for  a  spectre. 

13.    THE  WOUNDED  KNIGHT. 

I  KNOW  a  story  of  anguish, 
A  tale  of  the  times  of  old ; 
A  knight  with  love  doth  languish. 

His  mistress  is  faithless  and  cold. 
As  faithless  must  he  esteem  now 

Her  whom  in  his  heart  he  adored ; 
His  loving  pangs  must  he  deem  now 

Disgraceful  and  abhorred. 
In  vain  in  the  lists  would  he  wander. 

And  challenge  to  battle  each  knight ; 
"  Let  him  who  my  mistress  dares  slander 

*'Make  ready  at  once  for  the  ^ght !" 
But  all  are  silent,  save  only 

His  grief,  that  so  fiercely  doth  burn ; 
His  lance  he  against  his  own  lonely 

Accusing  bosom  must  turn. 

14.    THE  SEA-VOYAGE. 

I  LEANING  stood  against  the  mast, 
And  told  each  wave  of  ocean ; 
Farewell,  my  beauteous  fatherland  ! 
My  bark,  how  swift  thy  motion  I 
I  pass'd  my  lovely  mistress'  house, 
The  windows  gleam'd  all  over  ; 
But  though  I  gazed  and  gazed  and  gazed, 
No  sign  oould  I  discover. 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  55 

Ye  tears,  obscure  not  thus  mine  eyes 

On  this  too-painful  morrow; 
My  love-sick  heart,  O  do  not  break 

With  overweight  of  sorrow  ! 

15.    THE  SONG  OF  REPENTANCE. 

SIR  ULEICH  rides  in  the  forest  so  green. 
The  leaves  with  joy  seem  laden ; 
He  sees,  the  trees'  thick  branches  between,      * 
The  form  of  a  beauteous  maiden. 

The  youth  then  said :  "  Well  know  I  thee. 

"  So  blooming  and  glowing  thy  face  is ; 
"  Alluringly  ever  encircles  it  me, 

"  In  deserts  or  crowded  places. 

'•*  Those  lips,  by  fresh  loveliness  ever  stirr'd, 

"  Appear  a  pair  of  roses ; 
"  Yet  many  a  hateful  bitter  word 

*'  That  roguish  mouth  discloses. 

"  A  pretty  rosebush  a  mouth  like  this 

"  Besembles  very  closely, 
"  Where  cunning  poisonous  serpents  hiss 

**  Amid  the  leaves  morosely. 

*^  Within  those  beauteous  cheeks  there  lies 

**  A  sweet  and  beauteous  dimple ; 
"  That  is  the  grave  where  I  fell  by  surprise. 

"  Lured  on  by  a  yearning  simple. 

*'  There  see  I  the  beauteous  locks  of  hair, 
"  That  once  so  lovingly  pleased  me ; 

"  That  is  the  net  so  wondrous  fair 
"  Wherewith  the  Evil  One  seized  me. 

"  And  that  blue  eye,  that  so  sweetly  fell, 

"  As  dear  as  the  ocean  even, 
"  It  proved  to  be  the  portal  of  hell, 

"  Though  I  thought  it  the  gateway  of  heaven.' 

In  the  wood  still  farther  Sir  XJlrich  doth  ride, 

The  leaves  make  a  rustling  dreary , 
A  second  figure  afar  he  spied. 

That  seem'd  so  sad  and  weary. 


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56  HEIKEB  POEMS. 

The  youth  then  said  :  "  O  mother  dear, 

"  Who  loVdst  me  to  distraction, 
"  But  to  whom  in  life  I  caused  many  a  tear, 

*'  By  evil  word  and  action  I 

"  0  would  that  to  dry  thine  eyes  could  avail 

"  My  sorrow  so  fiercely  glowing  ! 
"  O  could  I  but  redden  iiiy  cheeks  so  pale 

'*  With  the  blood  from  my  own  heart  flowing  !** 

And  farther  rides  Sir  XJlrich  there, 
The  night  o'er  the  forest  is  falling  ; 

Many  singular  voices  fill  the  air, 
The  evening  breezes  are  calling. 

The  youth  then  hears  his  sorrowing  words 

Full  often  near  him  ringing ; 
'Tis  the  notes  of  the  mocking  forest  birds 

All  twittering  loudly  and  singing : 

"  Sir  Ulrich  sings  a  pretty  song, 
**  We  call  it  the  song  of  repentance ; 

*'  And  when  he  has  reach'd  the  end  of  his  song, 
"  He'll  repeat  it  sentence  by  sentence." 

16.    TO  A  SINGER,  ON  HER  SINGING  AN  OLD 
ROMANCE. 

STILL  think  I  of  the  magic  fail*  one. 
How  on  her  first  my  glances  fell  I 
How  her  dear  tones  resounded  sweetly, 
How  they  my  heart  enthralled  completely. 
How  down  my  cheeks  the  tears  coursed  fleetly 
But  how  it  chanced,  I  could  not  tell. 

There  over  me  had  crept  a  vision : 

Methought  I  was  again  a  child, 
And  in  my  mother's  diamber  sitting 
In  silence,  by  the  lamp-light  flitting, 
And  reading  fairy  tales  befitting, 

Whilst  outside  roar'd  the  tempest  wild. 

The  tales  began  with  life  to  glimmer. 
The  knights  arise  from  out  the  grave  ; 

By  Eoncesv^  the  battle  rages, 

Sir  Eoland  in  the  fight  engages, 

And  with  him  many  a  valiant  page  is, — 
And  also  Ganelon,  the  knave. 


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BOOK   OF  SONGS.  57 

By  him  is  Eoland  ill  entreated, 

He  swims  in  blood,  fast  ebbs  his  breath ; 

Scarce  can  his  horn,  at  such  far  distance, 

Call  Charlemagne  to  his  assistance : 

So  passed  away  the  knight  s  existence. 
And,  with  him,  sank  my  dream  in  death. 

It  was  a  loud  confused  echo 

That  from  my  vision  wakened  me. 
The  legend  that  she  sang  was  ended, 
The  people  heartily  commended. 
And  ofttimes  shouted ;  ''  Bravo  !  splendid  I" 

Low  boVd  the  singer  gracefolly. 

17.  THE  SONG  OP  THE  DUCATS. 

OMY  golden  ducats  dear. 
Tell  me  why  ye  are  not  here  ? 

Are  ye  with  the  golden  fishes 
Which  within  the  stream  so  gaily 
Leap  and  splash  and  wriggle  daily  ? 

Are  ye  with  the  golden  flowerets 
Which,  o'er  green  fields  scattered  lightly, 
In  the  morning  dew  gleam  brightly  ? 

Are  ye  with  the  golden  bird-kins 
Which  we  see  in  happy  chorus 
In  the  blue  skies  hov'ring  o'er  us  ? 

Are  ye  with  the  golden  planets 
Which  in  radiant  crowds  each  even 
Smile  in  yonder  distant  heaven? 

Ye,  alas,  my  golden  ducats, 
Swim  not  in  the  streamlet  bright. 

Sparkle  not  on  meadow  green, 

Hover  not  in  skies  serene, 
Smile  not  in  the  heavens  by  night. — 
Creditors,  with  greedy  paws. 
Hold  you  safely  in  their  claws, 

18.  DIALOGUE  ON  PADERBORN  HEATH. 

HEAB.'ST  thou  not  far  music  ringing. 
As  of  double-bass  and  fiddle  ? 
Many  fair  ones  there  are  springing 
Gaily  up  and  down  the  middle. 


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58  Heine's  poems. 

**  You're  mistaken  friend,  in  speaking 
"  Thus  of  fiddle  and  its  brother ; 

"  I  but  hear  young  porkers  squeaking, 
"  And  the  grunting  of  their  mother. 

Hear'st  thou  not  the  forest  bugle  ? 

Hunters  in  the  chase  are  straying ; 
Gentle  lambs  are  feeding,  frugal 

Shepherds  on  their  pipes  are  playing. 

**  Ah,  my  friend,  what  you  just  now  heard. 

"  Was  not  bugles,  pipes,  or  hunters ; 
**  I  can  only  see  the  sow-herd 

"  Slowly  driving  home  his  grunters." 

Hear'st  thou  not  the  distant  voices 
In  sweet  rivalry  contending  ? 

Many  an  angel  blest  rejoices 

Strains  like  these  to  hear  ascending. 

"  Ah,  that  music  sweetly  ringing 
"  Is,  my  friend,  no  rival  chorus ; 

"  'Tis  but  youthful  gooseherds,  singing 
"  As  they  drive  their  geese  before  us.'* 

Hear'st  thou  not  the  church-bells  holy, 
Sweet  and  clear,  with  deep  emotion  ? 

To  the  village-chapel  slowly 
Wend  the  people  with  devotion. 

"  Ah,  my  friend,  the  bells  'tis  only 
"  Of  the  cows  and  oxen  also, 

"  Who,  with  sunken  heads  and  lonely, 
"  Go  back  to  their  gloomy  stalls  so.** 

See'st  thou  not  the  veil  just  moving? 

See'st  thou  not  those  soft  advances  ? 
There  I  see  my  mistress  loving. 

Humid  sorrow  in  her  glances. 

*'  She,  my  friend,  who  nods  so  much,  is 
**  An  old  woman,  Betsy  namely ; 

'*  Pale  and  haggard,  on  her  crutches 
**  O'er  the  meadow  limps  she  lamely.'* 

Overwhelm  me  with  confrision 

At  my  questions,  friend,  each  minute ; 

Wilt  thou  deem  a  mere  illusion 
What  my  bosom  holds  within  it  V 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  59 

19.  LIFE'S  SALUTATIONS. 
(From  an  Album.) 

THIS  earth  resembles  a  highway  vast, 
We  men  are  the  trav'Uers  along  it ; 
On  foot  and  on  horseback  we  hurry  on  fast, 
And  as  runners  or  couriers  throng  it. 

In  passing  each  other,  we  nod  and  we  greet 

With  our  handkerchiefs  waved  from  the  coaches ; 

We  fain  would  embrace,  but  our  horses  are  fleet, 
And  speed  on,  despite  all  reproaches. 

Dear  Prince  Alexander,  as  onward  we  go, 

We  scarcely  have  met  at  a  station. 
When  the  signal  to  start  the  postilions  blow. 

Compelling  our  sad  separation. 

20.  QUITE  TRUE. 

WHEN  the  spring  returns  with  the  sun's  8we(4 
light. 

The  flowers  then  bud  and  blossom  apace ; 

When  the  moon  begins  her  radiant  race. 
Then  the  stars  swim  after  her  track  so  bright. 
When  the  minstrel  sees  two  beautiful  eyes, 
Then  songs  from  his  inmost  bosom  arise ; — 
But  songs  and  stars  and  flowerets  gay, 
And  eyes  and  moonbeams  and  sun's  bright  ray, 

However  delightful  they  are. 

Don't  make  up  the  world,  friend,  by  far. 


4.  SONNETS. 
TO  A.  W.  VON  SOHLEGEL. 

IN  dainty  hoop,  with  flowers  ail-richly  dight, 
With  beauty-patches  on  her  painted  face, 
With  pointed  shoes  all  hung  about  with  lace, 
With  tow'ring  curls,  and,  wasp-like,  fasten'd  tight,  — 
Thus  was  the  spurious  muse  equipp'd  that  night 
When  first  she  offered  thee  her  fond  embrace ; 
But  thou  eludedst  her  and  leffcst  the  place, 
Led  by  a  mystic  impulse  £rom  her  sight : 


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60  hehte's  poems. 

A  castle  in  the  desert  thou  didst  find, 
Where,  like  a  lovely  marble  image  shrin'd, 

Lay  a  fair  maid,  in  magic  slumber  sunk ; 
But  soon  the  spell  was  loosed, — when  kiss'd  by  thee, 
With  smiles  the  lawful  muse  of  Germany 

Awoke,  and  sank  within  thine  arms,  love-drunk. 

TO  MY  MOTHER,  B.  HEINE, 
TMffl  VON  GELDERN. 


IHA  VE  been  wont  to  bear  my  head  right  high, 
My  temper  too  is  somewhat  stem  and  rough ; 
Even  before  a  monaich's  cold  rebuff 
I  would  not  timidly  avert  mine  eye. 
Yet.  mother  dear,  I'll  tell  it  openly  : 

Much  as  my  haughty  pride  may  swell  and  puff, 
I  feel  submissive  and  subdued  enough. 
When  thy  much- cherished,  darling  form  is  nigh. 
Is  it  thy  spirit  that  subdues  me  then, 
Thy  spirit,  grasping  all  things  in  its  ken, 
And  soaring  to  the  light  of  heaven  again  ? 
By  the  sad  recollection  I'm  oppressed 
That  I  have  done  so  much  that  grieved  thy  breast. 
Which  loved  me,  more  than  all  things  else,  the  best 


WITH  foolish  fancy  I  deserted  thee  ; 
I  fain  would  search  the  whole  world  through,  to 
learn 

If  in  it  I  perchance  could  love  discern. 
That  I  might  love  embrace  right-lovingly. 
I  sought  for  love  as  far  as  eye  could  see. 

My  hands  extending  at  each  door  in  turn. 

Begging  them  not  my  prayer  for  love  to  spurn — 
Cold  hate  alone  they  laughing  gave  to  me. 
And  ever  search'd  I  after  love ;  yes,  ever 
Searched  after  love,  but  love  discovered  never, 

And  so  I  homeward  went,  with  troubled  thought ; 
But  thou  wert  there  to  welcome  me  again. 
And,  ah,  what  in  thy  dear  eye  floated  then 

Thai  was  the  sweet  love  I  so  long  had  sought. 


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BOOK   OF   SONGS.  61 


TO  H.  S. 


TT/'HEN  I  thy  book,  friend,  open  hastily, 
▼  ▼     Full  many  a  cherish'd  picture  meets  my  view. 
And  many  a  golden  image  that  I  knew 

En  boyish  dreams  and  days  of  infancy. 

Proudly  tow*rd  heaven  npsoaring,  then  I  see 
The  pious  dome,  rear'd  by  religion  true, 
I  hear  the  sound  of  bell  and  organ  too, 

Love's  sweet  lament  at  times  addressing  me. 

Well  see  I,  too,  how  o'er  the  dome  they  skip, 
The  nimble  dwarfs,  and  with  malicious  joy 
The  beauteous  flow'r-  and  carved-  work  destroy. 

But  though  the  oak  of  foliage  we  may  strip, 
And  rob  it  of  its  fair  and  verdant  grace. 
When  spring  returns,  fresh  leaves  it  dons  apace. 

FBESCO-SONNETS  TO  CHRISTIAN  B~. 
1. 

I  TAKE  no  notice  of  the  blockheads  tame 
Who,  seeming  to  be  golden,  are  but  sand  ; 

I  never  offer  to  that  rogue  my  hand 
Who  secretly  would  injure  my  good  name ; 
I  bow  not  to  the  harlots  who  proclaim 

Boldly  their  infamy  throughout  the  land ; 

And  when  in  victor-cars  the  rabble  band 
Draw  their  vain  idols,  with  them  I  ne'er  came. 
Well  know  I  that  the  oak  must  fall  indeed, 
Whilst  by  the  streamlet's  side  the  pliant  reed 
Stands  in  all  winds  and  weathers,  fearing  not ; 
But  say,  what  is  the  reed's  eventual  lot  ? 
What  joy  I    As  walking-stick  it  serves  the  dandy, 
Or  else  for  beating  clothes  they  find  it  handy. 


GIVE  me  a  mask,  I'll  join  the  masquerade 
As  country  clown,  so  that  the  rabble  rout 
Who  in  their  proud  disguises  strut  about 
May  not  suppose  me  one  of  their  vile  trade. 
Give  me  low  manners,  words  on  purpose  made 
To  show  vulgarity  beyond  all  doubt ; 
All  sparks  of  spirit  I'll  with  care  put  out 
Wherewith  dull  fools  coquet  in  accents  staid. 

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62  HEINE*8  POEMS. 

So  will  I  dance  then  at  the  great  mask'd  ball, 

By  G^erman  knights,  monks,  kings  surrounded  too. 
By  Harlequin  rented,  known  to  few. 

With  wooden  swords  they'll  strike  me,  one  and  all. 
That  is  the  joke.     For  if  I  show  my  face, 
The  rascals  will  be  silenced  in  disgrace. 

i  3. 

I  LAUGH  at  all  the  fools  who  at  me  gape, 
And  whom  with  prying  goat-like  fece  I  see ; 
I  laugh  at  every  fox  who  Imavishly 
And  idly  snu£&  me  like  a  very  grape ; 
I  laugh  at  every  vain  pretentious  ape, 

Who  a  proud  judge  of  genius  daams  to  be ; 
I  laugh  at  all  the  knaves  who  threaten  me 
With  poisonous  weapons  whence  there's  no  escapd. 
For  when  the  charming  fancies  joy  once  gave 
Are  wrested  from  us  by  the  handa  of  fate. 
And  at  our  feet  in  thousand  atoms  cast. 
And  when  our  very  heart  is  torn  at  last. 
All  torn  and  cut  and  pierced  and  desolate, 
A  fine  shrill  laugh  we  still  have  power  to  save. 

4. 

ASTE  AN6E  and  charming  tale  still  haunts  my  mind, 
Wherein  a  song  the  leading  part  assumes. 
And  in  the  song  there  lives  and  twines  and  blooms 
A  lovely  specimen  of  womankind ; 
And  in  this  maiden  is  a  heart  en^irined. 
And  yet  no  love  that  little  heart  illumes ; 
Her  loveless  frosty  disposition  dooms 
Her  life  to  sufter  from  her  pride  so  blind. 
Hear'st  thou  how  in  my  head  the  tale  comes  back  ? 
And  how  the  song  sounds  solemnly  and  sad  ? 
And  how  the  maiden  titters  softly  yet  ? 
I  only  fear  lest  my  poor  head  should  crack. 
Alas  I  it  would  indeed  be  far  too  bad. 
If  my  unlucky  reason  were  upsefc. 

A. 

AT  evening's  silent,  melancholy  hour, 
Long  buried  songs  around  me  take  theii  place, 
Ajid  burning  tears  course  swiftly  down  my  face. 
And  my  old  heart- wounds  bleed  with  greater  power. 


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BOOK  OF   S0N08.  63 

My  love's  deai  image  like  a  beauteous  flower 

As  in  a  magic  glass  again  I  trace ; 

In  bodice  red  sbe  sits  and  sews  apace, 
And  silence  reigns  around  her  blissful  bower. 
But  on  a  sudden  springs  she  from  her  seat, 

And  cuts  from  her  dear  head  a  beauteous  lock, 

And  gives  it  me — the  very  joy*s  a  shock. 

The  Evil  One  soon  spoilt  my  rapture  sweet : 

•  The  hair  he  twisted  in  a  rope  fall  strong, 

And  many  a  year  has  dragg'd  me  thus  along. 


"  XT7HEN  I  a  year  ago  again  met  thee, 

▼  T    "No    kiss  thou    gav'st    me  in  that  moment 

blest;"— 
Thus  spake  I,  and  my  love  a  kiss  impressed 

With  rosy  mouth  upon  my  lips  with  glee. 

With  a  sweet  smile  she  from  a  myrtle  tree 
Hard  by  us  pluck'd  a  twig,  and  said  in  jest : 
"  Take  thou  this  twig,  in  fresh  earth  let  it  rest, 

"  And  o'er  it  place  a  gkss," — then  nodded  she. 

*Twas  long  ago.    The  twig  died  in  the  pot. 

'Tis  many  a  year  since  she  hath  cross'd  my  sight ; 

Yet  in  my  head  that  kiss  still  burneth  hot. 

Lately  returning  home,  I  sought  the  place 

Where  dwells  my  love.     Before  her  house  all  night 

I  stood,  and  left  when  morning  show'd  its  face. 

7. 

OF  savage  devils'-brats,  my  friend,  beware. 
But  gentle  angels'-brats  more  hearts  will  break  ; 

Once  such  a  one  a  sweet  kiss  bid  me  take, 
But  when  I  came,  I  felt  sharp  talons  there. 
Of  black  and  ancient  cats,  my  friend,  take  care. 

But  white  young  kittens  are  still  more  awake  ; 

Once  such  a  one  my  sweetheart  did  I  make, — 
My  heart  my  sweeth^urt  savagely  did  tear. 
O  darling  brat  I    0  maiden  passing  sweet ! 

How  could  thy  clear  eye  e*er  deceive  me  so  ? 

How  could  thy  paw  e'er  give  me  such  a  blow  ? 
O  my  dear  kitten's  paw  so  soft  and  neat  I 

Gould  I  but  press  thee  to  my  glowing  lip ! 

And  could  my  life-blood  meanwhile  cease  to  drip  f 


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64  heinb's  poems. 


I^HOU  oft  hast  seen  me  boldly  strive  with  those*- 
Both  spectacled  old  fop  and  painted  dame, — 
Who  gladljr  would  destroy  my  honest  name, 
And  gladly  see  my  last  expiring  throes. 
Thou  oft  hast  seen  how  pedants  round  me  close, 
How  fools  with  cap  and  bells  my  life  defame, 
How  poisonous  serpents  gnaw  my  sinking  frame, 
'  Whilst  from  a  thousand  wounds  my  life-blood  flows. 
But  firm  as  any  tower  there  stood  thy  form ; 
Thy  head  a  lighthouse  was  amid  the  storm, 
Thy  faithful  heart  a  haven  was  for  me  ; 
Though  round  that  haven  roar6  the  raging  main, 
And  few  the  ships  the  landing  place  that  gain, 
Once  there,  we  slumber  in  security. 


9. 

FAIN  would  I  weep,  but,  ah,  I  cannot  weep ; 
Fain  would  I  upwards  fudl  of  vigour  spring. 
But  cannot ;  to  the  earth  I  needs  must  cling, 
Spurn'd  by  the  reptiles  that  around  me  creep. 
Fain  would  I  near  my  beauteous  mistress  keep, 
Near  my  bright  light  of  life  be  hovering. 
And  in  her  dear  sweet  breath  be  revelling. 
But  cannot ;  for  my  heart  with  sorrow  deep 
Is  breaking ;  from  my  broken  heart  doth  flow 
My  burning  blood,  my  strength  within  me  fades, 
And  darker,  darker  grows  the  world  to  me. 
With  secret  awe  I  yearn  unceasingly 
For  yonder  misty  realm,  where  silent  shades 
Their  gentle  loving  arms  around  me  throw. 


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BOOK   OP   S0N08.  65 


LYRICAL  INTEBLUDtJ. 

1822—23. 

PBOLOGUE. 

THEEE  once  lived  a  knight,  who  was  mournful  and 
bent, 
His  cheeks  white  as  snow  were,  and  hollow ; 
He  totter*d  and  staggered  wherever  he  went, 

A  vain  vision  attempting  to  follow. 
He  seem'd  so  clumsy  and  awkward  and  gauche. 
That  the  flowers  and  girls,  when  they  saw  him  approach, 
Their  merriment  scarcely  could  swallow. 

Prom  his  room's  darkest  comer  he  often  ne'er  stirr'd. 

Esteeming  the  sight  of  men  shocking. 
And  extended  his  arms,  without  speaking  a  word. 

As  though  some  vain  phantom  were  mocking. 
But  scarce  had  the  hour  of  midnight  drawn  near. 
When  a  wonderful  singing  and  noise  met  his  ear, 

And  he  heard  at  the  door  a  strange  knocking. 

His  mistress  then  secretly  enters  the  room. 

In  a  dress  made  of  foam  of  the  ocean ; 
She  glows  like  a  rosebud,  so  sweet  is  her  bloom,' 

Her  jewell'd  veil's  ever  in  motion  ; 
Her  golden  locks  play  round  her  form  slim  and  tall, 
Their  eyes  meet  with  rapture,  and  straightway  they  fall 

In  each  other's  arms  with  devotion. 

In  his  loving  embraces  the  knight  holds  her  fast, 

The  dullard  with  passion  is  glowing ; 
He  reddens,  the  dreamer  awakens  at  last, 

And  bolder  and  bolder  he's  growing. 
But  she  grows  more  saucy  and  mocking  instead, 
And  gently  and  softly  she  covers  his  head, 

Her  white  jewell'd  veil  o'er  him  throwing. 

To  a  watery  palace  of  crystal  bright 

The  knight  on  a  sudden  is  taken ; 
His  eyes  are  dazzled  by  radiant  light. 

By  his  wits  he  is  well-nigh  forsaken. 
But  the  nymph  holds  him  closely  embraced  by  her  side 
The  knight  is  the  bridegroom,  the  nymph  is  the  bride 

While  her  maidens  the  lute's  notes  awakec. 

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66  Heine's  pokocs. 

So  Bwoeily  they  play  and  so  sweetly  they  sing, 
Id  the  danoe  they  arc  moviDg  so  lightly^ 

That  the  knight  before  long  foids  his  senses  take  wing; 
He  embraces  his  sweet  one  more  tightly — 

When  all  of  a  sudden  the  lights  disappear, 

And  the  knight's  once  more  sitting  in  solitude  drear 
In  his  poet's  low  garret  unsightly. 


'nnWAS  in  the  beauteous  month  of  May, 
JL      When  all  the  flowers  were  springing. 
That  first  within  my  bosom 
I  heard  love's  echo  ringing. 

*Twas  in  the  beauteous  month  of  May, 
When  all  the  birds  were  singing, 

That  first  I  to  my  sweetheart 
My  vows  of  love  was  bringing. 

2. 

FROM  out  of  my  tears  all  burning 
Many  blooming  flowerets  break. 
And  all  my  sighs  combining 
A  chorus  of  nightingales  make. 

And  if  thou  dost  love  me,  my  darling. 
To  thee  shall  the  flowerets  belong ; 

Before  thy  window  shall  echo 
The  nightingale's  tuneful  song. 

a 

THE  rose  and  the  lily,  the  dove  and  the  sun, 
I  loved  them  aD  dearly  once,  every  one ; 
I  love  them  no  longer,  I  love  now  alone 
The  small  one,  the  neat  one,  the  pure  one,  mine  owu 
Yes,  she  herself,  the  fount  of  all  love, 
Is  the  rose  and  the  lily,  the- sun  and  the  dove. 

4. 

WHEN  gazing  on  thy  beauteous  eyes 
All  thought  of  sorrow  straightway  flies  ; 
But  when  I  kiss  thy  mouth  so  sweet, 
My  cure  is  perfect  and  complete. 


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BOOK  OP   SONGS.  67 

When  leaning  on  thy  darling  breast, 
I  feel  with  heavenly  rapture  blest ; 
But  when  thou  sayest :  "  I  love  thee  I** 
I  begin  weeping  bitterly. 

5. 

I^HY  face,  so  lovely  and  serene, 
In  vision  I  have  lately  seen ; 
So  like  an  angel's  'tis,  and  meek, 
Though  bitter  grief  has  blanch'd  thy  cheek« 

Thy  lips  alone,  they  still  are  red ; 
Death  soon  will  kiss  them  pale  and  dead ; 
The  heavenly  light  will  soon  be  o'er 
That. from  thine  eyes  is  wont  to  pour. 

6. 

OLEAN  thy  beauteous  cheek  on  mine. 
That  our  tears  together  may  mingle  1 
Against  my  bosom  press  thou  thine, 

That  their  flames  may  no  longer  be  single 

And  when  with  the  flame  is  mingled  at  last 
The  stream  of  our  tears  all  burning, 

And  mine  arm  is  lovingly  round  thee  cast, — 
I'll  die  of  my  love's  sweet  yearning. 

7. 

I'LL  dip  my  spirit  discreetly 
In  the  cup  of  the  lily  down  here ; 
The  lily  shall  sing  to  me  sweetly 
A  song  of  my  mistress  dear. 

The  song  shall  tremble  and  quiver, 

Like  that  delicious  kiss, 
Of  which  her  mouth  was  the  giver 

In  a  wondrous  moment  of  bliss. 

8. 

THE  stars  in  yonder  heavens 
Immovably  have  stood 
For  thousands  of  years,  regarding 
Each  other  in  sad  lovin^s  mood. 


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68  Heine's  poems. 

They  speak  a  mysterious  language 
That's  rich  and  sweet  to  the  ear ; 

Yet  no  philologist  living 
Can  make  its  meaning  clear. 

But  I've  learnt  it,  and  ne'er  will  forget  i%, 
Whatever  the  time  and  place ; 

As  my  grammar  I  used  for  the  purpose 
My  own  dear  mistress's  face. 


ON  song's  exulting  pinion 
I'U  bear  thee,  my  sweetheart  fair, 
Where  Granges  holds  his  dominion, — 
The  sweetest  of  spots  know  I  there. 

There  a  red  blooming  garden  is  lying 
In  the  moonlight  silent  and  clear ; 

The  lotos  flowers  are  sighing 

For  their  sister  so  pretty  and  dear 

The  violets  prattle  and  titter, 
And  gaze  on  the  stars  high  above 

The  roses  mysteriously  twitter 
Their  firagrant  stories  of  love. 

The  gazelles  so  gentle  and  clever 
Skip  lightly  in  frolicsome  mood  • 

And  in  the  distance  roars  ever 
The  holy  river's  loud  flood. 

And  there,  while  joyously  sinking 
Beneath  the  palm  by  the  stream. 

And  love  and  repose  while  drinking 
Of  blissful  visions  well  dream. 

10. 

THE'  lotos  flower  is  troubled 
At  the  sun's  resplendent  lighl 
With  sunken  head  and  sadly 
She  dreamily  waits  for  the  night 

The  moon  appears  as  her  wooer, 

She  wakes  at  his  fond  embrace ; 
For  him  she  kindly  uncovers 
Her  sweetly  flowering  face. 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  69 

She  blooms  and  glows  and  glistens. 

And  mutely  gazes  above  ; 
She  weeps  and  exhales  and  trembles 

With  love  and  the  sorrows  of  love. 

11. 

IN  the  Rhine,  that  beautiful  river, 
The  sacred  town  of  Cologne, 
With  its  vast  cathedral,  is  ever 

Full  clealrly  mirror 'd  and  shown. 
A  picture  on  golden  leather 

In  that  fair  cathedral  is  seen ; 
On  my  life,  so  sad  altogether, 

It  hath  cast  its  rays  serene. 
The  flowers  and  angels  hover 

Bound  our  dear  Lady  there ; 
Her  eyes,  lips,  cheeks,  all  over 

Besemble  my  mistress  fair. 

12. 

THOU  lov'st  me  not,  thou  tellest  me.-^ 
It  troubles  me  but  slightly ; 
But  when  thy  beauteous  face  I  see, 

No  king's  heart  beats  more  lightly. 
Thou  hatest  me,  thy  red  lips  say 
With  well-pretended  snarling ; 
But  when  sweet  kisses  they  convey, 
I'm  comforted,  my  darling. 

13. 

FULL  lovingly  thou  must  embrace  m/s, 
My  mistress  beauteous  and  sweet  f 
With  pliant  form  interlace  me, 

And  with  thine  arms  and  thy  feet. 
The  fairest  of  snakes  e'er  created 

With  vigour  encircles  anon. 
And  clasps  and  twines  round  the  olatoi 
And  happy  Laocoon. 

14. 

SWEAR  not  at  all,  but  only  kiss  ! 
All  woman's  oaths  I  hold  amiss  ; 
Thy  word  is  sweet,  but  sweeter  far 
The  kisses  that  my  guerdon  are. 

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70  Heine's  poems. 

These  keep  I,  while  thy  words  but  seem 

A  passing  cloud,  or  fragrant  dream. 

«  «  «  «  « 

Now  then,  my  loved  one,  swear  away  I 
m  credit  all  that  thou  dost  say ; 
And  when  I  sink  upon  thy  breast, 
I'll  think  that  I  am  truly  blest ; 
I'll  think  that,  love,  eternally 
And  even  longer,  thou'lt  love  me. 

15. 

UPON  my  mistress's  eyes  so  clear 
I  write  the  fairest  cantatas ; 
Upon  my  mistress's  mouth  sinaere 

I  write  the  best  of  terzinas ; 
Upon  my  mistress's  cheeks  so  dear 

I  write  the  cleverest  stanzas ; 
And  had  my  mistress  a  heart,  upon  it 
I  soon  would  write  a  charming  sonnet. 

16. 

THE  world's  an  ass,  the  world  can't  see, 
And  grows  more  stupid  daily : 
It  says,  my  darling  child,  of  thee, — 
Thou  livest  far  too  gaily. 

The  world's  an  ass,  the  world  can't  see. 

Thy  character  not  knowing ; 
It  knows  not  how  sweet  thy  kisses  be, 

How  rapturously  glowing. 

17. 

LOVED  one — gladly  would  I  know  it,— 
Art  thou  but  a  vision  fair, 
Such  as  in  his  brain  the  poet 

Loves  in  summer  to  prepare  ? 
No  I  such  eyes  of  magic  splendour 

Lips  so  rosy  and  so  warm. 
Such  a  child,  so  sweet  and  tender, 

Never  did  the  poet  form. 
Basilisks  and  vampires  gory, 

Dragons,  monsters  of  the  earth, 
Suchlike  evil  beasts  of  story 

In  the  poet's  £re  have  birtik 


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BOOK  OF   SONGB.  71 

But  thyself,  thy  wiles  insidious, 

And  thy  face,  so  sweet  and  staid, 
And  thy  kindly  looks  perfidious, — 

These  the  poet  never  made. 

18. 

GLEAMS  my  love  in  beauty's  splendour, 
Like  the  child  of  ocean  foam ; 
A.8  his  bride  my  mistress  tender 
Is  a  stranger  taking  home. 

Though  'tis  treason,  don't  abuse  it, 

Heart,  thou  much-enduring  one ! 
Bear  it,  bear  it,  and  excuse  it. 

What  the  beauteous  fool  hath  done. 


I'LL  not  be  angry,  thqugh  my  heart  should  break. 
Evermore  lost  one !  no  complaint  I'll  make. 
Though  thou  may'st  sparkle  'neath  thy  diamonds  bright. 
No  ray  can  pierce  thy  heart's  unceasing  night 

I've  known  it  long.     In  vision  saw  I  thee. 
How  night  thy  heart  doth  fill  unceasingly. 
And  how  the  serpent  at  thy  heart  doth  gnaw, — 
How  wretched,  love,  thou  art,  too  well  I  saw, 

20. 

^^pHOITET  wretched,  yes !— but  no  complaint  I'll 
1  make ; — 

My  love,  we  both,  alas,  must  wretched  be  I 

Till  death  our  poor  aflflicted  hearts  doth  break. 

My  love,  we  both,  alas,  must  wretched  be  1 

I  see  the  scorn  that  round  thy  mouth  doth  play, 
I  see  thine  eyes  that  glance  so  haughtily, 

I  see  the  pride  that  doth  thy  bosom  sway, — 
Tet  thou  art  wretched,  wretched  e'en  as  I. 

Grief  lurks  around  thy  mouth,  unseen  indeed, 
With  hidden  tears  tiiine  eyes  can  scarcely  see. 

And  secret  wounds  on  thy  proud  bosom  feed — 
My  love,  we  both,  alas,  must  wretched  be ! 


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72  Heine's  poems. 

21. 

THE  flutes  and  fiddles  are  soundiri^ 
The  trumpets  ringing  clear ; 
In  the  wedding  dance  is  bounding 
My  heart's  own  mistress  dear. 

The  shawms  and  kettle-drums  vying 

In  noisy  chorus  I  hear ; 
But  meanwhile  good  angels  are  sighing 

And  weeping  many  a  tear. 

22. 

I'^HOU  scarcely  could' st  have  forgotten  it  faster, 
That  I  of  thine  heart  so  long  was  the  master ; 
Thine  heart  so  false,  so  small,  and  so  sweet, 
A  sweeter  and  falser  I  never  shall  meet. 
Thou  now  hast  forgotten  the  love  and  disaster 
That  made  my  heart  throb  all  the  faster ; 
I  know  not  if  love  was  the  greatest,  or  woe ; 
That  both  were  great,  full  well  I  Imow. 

23. 

OIF  the  tiny  flowers 
But  knew  of  my  wounded  heart, 
Their  tears,  like  mine,  in  showers 

Would  fall,  to  cure  the  smart. 
If  knew  the  nightingales  only 

That  I*m  so  mournful  and  sad, 
They  would  cheer  my  misery  lonely 

With  their  notes  so  tuneful  and  glad. 
If  the  golden  stars  high  o'er  us 

But  knew  of  my  bitter  woe, 
They  would  speak  words  of  comfort  in  choms, 

Descending  hither  below. 
Not  one  of  these  can  allay  it. 

One  only  knows  of  my  smart ; 
'Tis  she,  I  grieve  to  say  it, 

Who  thus  hath  wounded  my  heart 

24. 

OWHY  have  the  roses  lost  their  hno^ 
Sweet  love,  O  tell  me  why  ? 
Why  mutely  thus  do  the  violets  blue 
In  the  verdant  meadows  sigh  ? 


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BOOK  OF   SONGS.  73 

O  why  doth  the  lark  up  high  in  the  air 

With  a  voice  so  mournful  sing  ? 
O  why  doth  each  fragrant  floweret  fair 

Exhale  like  a  poisonous  thing? 
O  wherefore  looks  the  sun  to-day 

On  the  fields,  so  full  of  gloom  ? 
O  why  doth  the  earth  appear  so  grey, 

And  dreary  as  a  tomb  ? 
Why  feel  I  myself  so  mournftd  and  weak, — 

Sweet  love,  I  put  it  to  thee? 
My  own  sweet  darling,  sweet  love,  O  speak, — 

O  wherefore  leavest  thou  me  ? 


F' 


25. 
^OE  thine  ear  many  tales  they  invented. 
And  loud  complaints  preferred ; 
But  how  my  soul  was  tormented, 

Of  this  they  said  not  a  word. 
They  prated  of  mischief  and  evil. 

And  mournfully  shook  their  head  ; 
They  Hken'd  poor  me  to  the  devil, 

And  thou  didst  believe  what  they  said. 
But,  O,  the  worst  and  the  saddest, 

Of  this  they  nothing  knew ; 
The  saddest  and  the  maddest 

In  my  heart  was  hidden  from  view. 
26. 

THE  linden  blossom'd,  the  nightingale  sung. 
The  sun  was  laughing  with  radiance  bright ; 
Thou  kissed*st  me  then,  while  thine  arm  round  me  clung. 

To  thy  heaving  bosom  thou  pressed' st  me  tight. 
The  raven  was  screeching,  the  leaves  fast  fell, 

The  sun  gazed  cheerlessly  down  on  the  sight ; 
We  coldly  said  to  each  other  "  Farewell  1" 
Thou  politely  didst  make  me  a  curtsey  polite. 

27. 

WE  have  felt  for  each  other  emotions  soft. 
And  yet  our  tempers  always  were  matching, 
At  "  man  and  wife  "  we  have  play'd  full  oft, 

And  yet  ne'er  took  to  fighting  and  scratching. 
We  have  shouted  together,  together  been  gay. 
And  tenderly  kiss'd  and  fondled  away. 

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74  Heine's  poems. 

At  last  we  play'd  in  forest  and  dell 

At  hide  and  seek,  like  sister  and  brother, 

And  managed  to  hide  ourselves  so  well, 

That  never  since  then  have  we  seen  each  other 

28. 

I'VE  no  belief  in  the  heavens 
Of  which  the  parsons  rave  ; ' 
In  thine  eyes  believe  I  only, 

In  their  heavenly  light  I  lave. 
I've  no  belief  in  the  Maker 

Of  whom  the  parsons  rave ; 
In  thine  heart  believe  I  only, 

No  other  God  will  I  have. 
I've  no  belief  in  the  devil, 

In  hell  or  the  pains  of  heU  ; 
In  thine  eyes  believe  I  only. 

And  thine  evil  heart  as  welL 


T 


29. 

10  me  thou  wert  faithful  and  steady, 
And  madest  for  me  supplication ; 

In  my  troubles  and  sad  tribulation 
Thy  comfort  always  was  ready. 
Food  and  drink  thou  gav'st  me  in  payment, 

And  plenty  of  money  didst  lend  me, 

And  also  a  passport  didst  send  me, 
As  well  as  some  changes  of  raiment. 
From  heat  and  from  coldness  unpleasant 

May  heaven,  my  dear  one,  long  guard  thee, 

And  may  it  never  reward  thee 
The  kindness  shown  me  at  present ! 

30. 

THE  earth  had  long  been  avaricious, 
But  May,  when  she  came,  gave  with  great  pro« 
digality. 
And  all  things  now  smile  with  rapture  delicious, 

.But  I  for  laughter  have  no  partiality. 
The  blue  bells  are  ringing,  their  beauty  displaying, 

The  birds,  as  in  fables,  talk  sentimentality; 
1  take  no  pleasure  in  all  they  are  saying. 
And  r  am  quite  wretched  in  sober  reality. 

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BOOK  OF   SONGS.  75 

All  men  I  detest,  and  now  cannot  meet  one, 
Not  even  my  friend,  with  the  least  cordiality, 

And  this  all  because  my  amiable  sweet  one 

They  "  madam"  entitle,  with  chilling  formality. 

31. 

AND  when  I  so  long,  so  long  had  delay 'd, 
In  foreign  lands  had  in  reveries  stay'd, 
My  loved  one  found  it  too  long  to  wait, 
And  8ew*d  herself  a  wedding-dress  straight. 
And  then  embraced  in  her  arms,  willy-mlly, 
As  bridegroom,  the  youth  in  the  world  the  most  silly. 

My  loved  one  is  so  beauteous  and  soft, 

Before  me  still  hovers  her  image  oft ; 

Her  rosy  cheeks,  her  violet  eyes 

That  all  the  year  round  glow  bright  as  the  skies. 

That  I  could  fly  from  such  charming  attractions 

Was  the  silliest  far  of  my  silliest  actions. 

32. 

THE  lovely  eyes  of  violet  blue, 
The  beauteous  cheeks  of  rosy  hue. 
The  hands  so  like  white  lilies  too, — 
All  these  still  sweetly  blossom  and  bloom, 
The  heart  alone  is  cold  as  the  tomb. 

33. 

THE  earth  is  so  fair,  and  the  heavens  so  bright. 
The  breezes  are  breathing  with  soothing  might, 
The  blooming  fields  with  flowers  are  dight, 
In  the  morning  dew  all  radiant  with  light. 
All  men  are  rejoicing  that  meet  my  sight — 
My  bed  in  the  grave  I  fain  would  be  pressing. 
The  corpse  of  my  mistress  dear  caressing. 

34. 

"VTT'HEN  in  the  tomb,  my  mistress  fair, 

▼  T     The  chilly  tomb,  thou  must  hide  thee, 
I'll  soon  descend  to  rejoin  thee  there. 
And  fondly  nestle  beside  thee. 

I  wildly  will  press  thee,  embrace  thee,  and  kisH 

My  pale,  cold,  fearful-to-see  love ! 
Ill  tremble,  weep,  shout  with  rapturous  bliss, 

And  soon  be  a  corpse  like  thee,  love. 

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76  Heine's  poems. 

The  dead  will  arise,  when  midnight  is  nigh, 

And  danoe  in  airy  troops  lightly ; 
But  we  in  the  torab  will  quietly  lie. 

Thine  arms  embracing  me  tightly. 

The  dead  will  arise,  when  the  loud  tmmp  of  doom 

To  bliss  or  to  torment  is  calling ; 
But  regardless  of  all,  we'll  remain  in  the  tomb, 

Still  clasp 'd  in  embraces  enthralling. 

85. 

A  LONELY  fir  tree  is  standing 
On  a  noithem  barren  height ; 
It  sleeps,  and  the  ice  and  snow-drift 
Cast  round  it  a  garment  of  white. 

It  dreams  of  a  slender  palm-tree, 
Which  far  in  the  Eastern  land 

Beside  a  precipice  scorching 
In  silent  sorrow  doth  stand. 

36. 

FAIE,  bright,  golden  constellation. 
Seek  my  love's  far  habitation ; 
Tell  her  that  I  still  am  true, 
Sick  at  heart  and  palefaced  too. 

37. 

(The  head  ^edksJ) 

AH,  were  I  but  the  footstool  e'en 
On  which  my  loved  one's  foot  doth  rest 
I  ne'er  to  griunble  should  be  seen. 
However  hard  I  might  be  press'd. 

(The  heart  speaks,) 
Ah,  were  I  but  the  cushion  soft 

Wherein  her  pins  she's  wont  to  stick, 
And  'twere  her  will  to  prick  me  oft, 

1  should  rejoice  at  every  prick. 

(The  song  speaks,) 
Ah,  were  I  but  the  paper  dear 

Wherewith  she's  wont  her  hair  to  curl, 
I'd  gently  whisper  in  her  ear 

The  thonglits  that  in  me  live  and  whirL 


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BOOK   OF   SONGS.  77 

38. 

SINCE  my  darling  one  has  left  mo, 
Power  of  laugting  is  bereft  me  ; 
Blockheads  fain  would  rikise  a  joke, 
But  no  laughter  can  provoke. 
Since  IVe  lost  my  darling  one, 
Power  of  weeping,  too,  is  gone ; 
Though  my  heart  with  sorrow  deep 
Wellnigh  breaks,  I  cannot  weep. 

39. 

MY  little  songs  do  I  utter 
From  out  of  my  great,  great  sorrow; 
Some  tinkling  pinions  they  borrow, 
And  tow'rd  her  bosom  they  flutter. 
They  found  it,  and  over  it  hover'd. 
But  soon  returned  they,  complaining. 
And  yet  to  tell  me  disdaining 
What  they  in  her  bosom  discovered. 

40. 

SWEET  darling,  beloved  by  me  solely, 
The  thoughts  in  my  memory  dwell 
That  once  I  possessed  thee  wholly. 

Thy  soul  and  body  as  well. 
Thy  body,  so  young  and  tender, 

I  need,  beyond  all  doubt ; 
Thy  soul  to  the  tomb  I'll  surrender, 

I've  plenty  of  soul  without. 
I'll  cut  my  soul  in  simder, 

And  half  of  it  breathe  into  thee. 
And  when  I  embrace  thee, — O  wonder  !— 

One  soul  and  body  we'll  be. 

41. 

THE  blockheads,  their  holidays  keeping, 
Are  walking  through  forest  and  plain ; 
They  shout,  and  like  kittens  are  leaping. 

And  hail  sweet  Nature  again. 
They  gaze,  with  glances  that  glisten, 

On  each  romantic  thing  ; 
With  ears  like  asses  they  listen 
To  hear  the  sparrows  sing. 


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78  Heine's  poems. 

My  chamber  window  to  darken, 
With  black  cloth  I  hang  it  by  day ; 

To  the  signal  my  spirits  straight  hearken, 
Day-visits  they  hasten  to  pay. 

My  olden  love  also  draws  nigh  me, 

From  the  realms  of  the  dead  she  appears ; 

She,  weeping,  sits  gently  close  by  me, 
And  softens  my  bosom  to  tears. 

42. 

MANY  Yisions  of  times  long  vanish'd 
Arise  from  out  of  their  tomb, 
And  show  me  how  once  in  thy  presence 
I  lived  in  my  life's  young  bloom. 

All  day  I  mournfully  totter'd 

Through  the  streets,  as  though  in  a  dream 
The  people  gazed  on  me  with  wonder, 

So  silent  and  sad  did  I  seem. 

The  night-time  suited  me  better, 
Deserted  the  streets  were  then, 

And  I  and  my  shadow  together 
We  wandered  in  silence  again. 

With  footsteps  echoing  loudly 

I  wander'd  over  the  bridge ; 
The  moon  with  solemn  look  hail'd  me 

As  she  burst  through  the  cloudy  ridge. 

1  stood  in  front  of  thy  dwelling. 

And  fondly  gazed  up  on  high ; 
I  gazed  up  towards  thy  window, 
My  heart  breathed  many  a  sigh. 

Well  know  I  that  thou  from  the  window 

Full  often  hast  gazed  below, 
And  in  the  moonlight  hast  seen  me 

Stand  fix'd,  the  image  of  woe. 


/ 


43. 

A  YOUTH  once  loved  a  maiden. 
Who  loved  another  instead ; 
The  other  himseK  loved  another. 
And  with  the  latter  did  wed. 


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BOOK  OF   SONGS.  79 

The  maiden,  in  scornful  anger, 

Straight  married  the  first  of  the  men 
Who  happened  to  come  across  her, — 

The  youth  was  heart-broken  then. 
'TIS  only  an  old,  old  story, 

And  yet  it  ever  seems  new ; 
The  heart  of  him  whom  it  pictures 

Will  soon  be  broken  in  two. 

44. 

FEIENDSHIP,  love,  philosophers'  stone,— 
These  three  things  men  value  alone. 
I,  too,  valued  and  sought  them  ever, 
But,  alas,  discovered  them  never. 

45. 

ON  hearing  the  strains  enthralling 
That  my  loved  one  sang  to  me  erst. 
With  torments  fierce  and  appalling 

My  heart  is  ready  to  burst. 
Impell'd  by  a  gloomy  yearning 

I  seek  in  the  forest  relief, 
And  there  in  tears  hotly  burning 
I  quench  my  anguish  and  grief. 

46. 

THE  child  of  a  king  in  dream  have  I  seen ; 
How  tear-stain'd  and  pallid  her  face  is, 
As  we  quietly  sit  'neath  the  linden  green, 

Held  fast  in  each  other's  embraces ! 
'*  Thy  father's  throne  is  nothing  to  me, 

"  Nor  yet  his  sceptre  all  golden, 
"  And  diamond  crown ;  for  nothing  but  thee, 

**  Sweet  love,  will  I  be  beholden." 
**  That  may  not  be,"  the  maiden  replied, 

"  For  I  in  my  grave  am  lying, 
"  And  only  by  night  can  I  be  by  thy  side, 

'*  To  thy  loving  caresses  replying." 

47. 

SWEET  love,  in  fond  converse  together 
In  the  light  canoe  sat  we. 
Still  the  night  was,  and  calm  was  the  weather, 
As  we  s£nmi'd  o'er  the  wide-spreading  sea* 


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80  Heine's  poebis. 

Tlie  fair  epirit-islands  before  us 
In  the  glimmering  moonlight  lay ; 

Sweet  tones  came  floating  o'er  as. 

While  the  mists  were  dancing  in  play. 

On  danced  they  with  merrier  motion, 
And  sweeter  still  sounded  the  song ; 

But  over  the  boundless  ocean 
Wo  mournfully  floated  along. 

48. 

FEOM  older  legends  springing, 
Appears  a  snow-white  band 
With  joyous  strains,  and  singing. 
From  some  fa.T  magic-land, 

Where  flowers  in  glowing  splendour 

Pine  in  the  evening  sun. 
And  bridal  glances  tender 

Cast  sweetly  every  one ; 

Where  all  the  trees,  uniting 

In  chorus,  shout  below. 
And  bubbling  brooks  delighting 

The  ear,  like  music  flow ; 

And  love-songs  fierce  and  burning 

Unheard  of  bliss  impart, 
Till  sweet  and  wondrous  yearning 

Befools  the  throbbing  heart. 

Ah,  could  I  thither  travel, 
And  ease  my  aching  breast, 

And  all  my  grief  unravel, 
And  there  be  £ree  and  blest ! 

That  land,  whence  care  and  trouble 
Are  banish'd,  that  in  dreams 

Oft  see  I,  like  a  bubble 

Dissolves,  when  morning  beams. 

«•  ./, 

1'YE  loved  thee  long,  and  I  love  thee  sin/JL/ 
And  e'en  if  the  world  were  shatter'd, 
My  glowing  love  would  glisten  and  thrill. 

Though  widely  earth's  ruins  were  scatttnt^ 

•  *  «  «  * 


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i 


BOOK   OF  SON(HI.  8i 

And  when  I  thus  have  loved  thee  so  ^vell 
Till  the  hour  of  death  has  soundei;., 

I'll  take  with  me  e'en  to  my  tomb's  dark  coll 
My  love-pangs  fierce  and  unbounded. 

50. 

IN  the  glimmering  summer  morning 
I  pace  the  garden  alone ; 
The  flowers  are  whispering  and  speaking, 
But  silently  wander  I  on. 

The  flowers  are  whisp'ring  and  speaking, 
My  form  with  compassion  they  scan  : 

O  pray  be  kind  to  our  sister, 

Thou  mournful  and  pale-faced  man ! 

51. 

HER  dark  attire  thus  wearing 
My  love  appeal's  to  my  sight 
Like  a  tale  of  sorrow  despairing 

That's  told  in  the  long  summer  night : 

"  In  the  magical  garden  there  wander 

"  Two  lovers  mute  and  alone ; 
"  Sweet  sing  the  nightingales  yonder, 

"  The  moonbeams  are  over  them  thrown. 

'*  Like  a  statue  the  maiden  stands  mildly, 
"  At  her  feet  the  faithful  knight  lies  ; 

**  The  forest  giant  comes  wildly, 
''  The  sorrowing  maiden  soon  flies. 

"  Soon  the  knight  on  the  ground  lies  all  ?ory, 
'*  The  giant  goes  home  at  his  ease — '* 

And  when  I  am  buried,  the  story 
Is  ended  as  soon  as  you  please. 

52. 

THEY  often  have  vex'd  me  sadly 
And  worried  me  early  and  late  ; 
While  some  with  their  love  have  annoy'd  me, 
The  others  pursued  me  with  bftte. 

My  bread  they  have  utterly  poison'd, 

And  poison'd  my  cup  too  of  late  ; 
While  some  with  their  love  have  annoy'd  mo-, 

The  others  pursued  me  with  hate. 


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HEINE  S  FOEMB. 

iho  who  more  than  all  othere 
IS  yex'd  me,  and  worried,  and  chafed, 
mly  with  hate  ne'er  pursued  me, 
e  only  her  love  ne'er  vouchsafed. 

4  53. 

THEBE  lies  the  glow  of  summer 
Upon  thy  cheek  confessed, 
And  in  thine  heart  cold  winter 
Has  made  its  place  of  rest. 

All  this  will  soon  be  alter'd, 

My  dearest  love  and  best, 
The  winter  on  thy  cheek  be, 

The  summer  in  thy  breast ! 

54. 
TT'HEN  two  fond  lovers  are  parted, 
T     They  give  each  other  the  hand, 
>  weep  and  to  sigh  beginning, 
And  losing  all  seK-command. 

it  not  one  single  tear  wept  we, 
No  Ah !  or  Alas  I  did  we  sigh  ; 
ir  tears  and  our  sighs  both  together 
Too  surely  came  by-and-by. 

"^HEY  sat  round  the  tea-table  drinking, 
.    And  speaking  of  love  a  great  deal ; 
le  men  of  SBsthetics  were  thinking, 
The  ladies  more  prone  were  to  feel. 

AQ  love  ought  to  be  but  platonical " 
The  wither'd  old  counsellor  said ; 
Ls  wife  by  a  smile  quite  ironical 
Eejoin'd,  and  then  sighed  ^*  Ah !"  instead. 

id  the  canon  with  visage  dejected : 
**  Love  ne'er  should  be  suffered  to  go 
Too  far,  or  the  health  is  affected ;" 
The  maiden  then  simper'd :  **  How  so?*' 

le  Countess  hu:  sad  feelings  vented, 
Said  **  Love  is  a  passion,  I'm  sure," 
id  then  to  the  Baron  presented 
His  cup  with  politeness  demure. 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  83 

A  place  was  still  empty  at  table ; 

My  dai-ling,  'twas  thou  wert  away ; 
Thou  hadst  been  so  especially  able 

The  tale  of  thy  love,  sweet,  to  say.    ^ 


M^ 


56. 
[Y  songs  with  poison  are  tainted, 
But  how  could  it  otherwise  be  ? 
My  blossoming  life  thou  hast  poison'd. 
And  made  it  hateful  to  me. 

My  songs  with  poison  are  tainted, 
But  how  could  it  otherwise  be  ? 

In  my  heart  many  serpents  I  carry, 
And  thee  too,  my  dearest  love,  thee. 

57. 

IDBEAMT  once  more  the  vision  of  yore : 
The  time  was  a  fair  May  even, 
We  sat  'neath  the  linden,  and  there  we  swore 
To  be  faithful,  in  presence  of  heaven. 

And  once  and  again  we  plighted  our  troth. 
And  titter'd,  caress'd,  kiss'd  so  dearly ; 

And  lest  I  should  fail  to  remember  my  oath. 
My  hand  thou  then  bittest  severely. 

O  sweetest  love,  with  the  eyes  so  bright, 
O  sweet  one,  so  fair  and  so  biteful  I 

The  swearing  was  doubtless  all  proper  and  right. 
But  the  biting  was  rather  too  spiteful  I 

58. 
STAND  on  the  brow  of  the  mountain. 
And  sentimentally  sigh. 
"  O  were  I  only  a  bird  now !" 
I  many  a  thousand  times  cry. 

O  were  I  only  a  swallow. 

My  darling,  to  thee  would  I  fly. 

And  soon  a  nest  would  I  build  me, 
Thy  lattice  window  hard  by. 

0  were  I  a  nightingale  only, 
I  would  fly,  my  darling,  to  thee. 

And  sing  my  sweet  songs  by  night-time 
Perch'd  high  in  the  green  linden  trea 


I 


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84:  heine'8  poems. 

O  were  I  only  a  bullfinch, 

I  would  fly  straight  into  thy  heart ; 

To  the  bullfinch  thou  always  wert  Irindly, 
And  healest  the  bullfinch's  smart.* 


MY  carriage  is  traversing  slowly 
The  greenwood  merry  and  bright, 
Through  flowering  valleys,  like  magic 
Illumed  by  the  sun's  glowing  light. 

I'm  sitting  and  thinking  and  dreaming, 

And  muse  on  my  mistress  dear ; 
When,  nodding  their  heads  at  the  window, 

Three  shadowy  figures  appear. 

They  skip  and  they  make  wry  grimaces, 

So  scof&ng  and  yet  so  shy ; 
And  twirling  mist-like  together, 

They  titter  and  haste  swiftly  by. 

60. 

IN  vision  I  lately  was  weeping, 
I  dreamt  thou  wert  laid  in  thy  grave ; 
I  awoke,  and  the  tears  unceasing 
My  cheeks  continued  to  lave. 

In  vision  I  lately  was  weeping, 

I  dreamt  I  was  left,  love,  by  thee ; 
I  awoke,  and  weeping  continued 

Both  long  and  bitterly. 

In  vision  I  lately  was  weeping, 

I  dreamt  thou  wert  kind  as  of  yore ; 

I  awoke,  and  my  tears  in  torrents 
Continued  to  flow  as  before. 

61. 

ALL  night  in  vision  behold  I  thee, 
And  see  thee  greeting  me  kindly ; 
And  loudly  weeping  then  throw  I  me 
Before  ihj  sweet  feet  llindly. 

*  The  word  ♦*  Gimpel "  in  the  original  has  the  doable  meaning 
>f  "bullfinch"  and  *•  blockhead,"  9»id  the  point  of  thia  verse  ia 
tlierefore  lost  in  a  translation. 


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BO(m  OF   SONGS.  85 

Witli  sorrowing  looks  thou  stand'st  in  my  view, 
Thy  fair  locks  mournfully  shaking ; 

While  teardrops  bright  of  pearly  hue 
From  thy  dear  oyes  are  breaHng. 

A  gentle  word  thou  dost  secretly  say, 
And  givest  a  cypress-wreath  sweetly ; 

T  awake,  and  the  wreath  has  vanished  away, 
And  the  word  is  forgotten  completely. 

62. 

'npiS  autumn,  the  night's  dark  and  gloomy, 
X    With  rain  and  tempest  above ; 
Where  tarries, — O  tell  it  unto  me, — 
My  poor  and  sorrowing  love  ? 

By  the  window  I  see  her  reclining. 

In  her  chamber  lonely  and  drear. 
And  out  in  the  night,  sadly  pining. 

She  looks  with  many  a  tear. 

63. 

THE  trees  in  the  autumn  wind  rustle, 
The  night  is  humid  and  cold; 
I  ride  all  alone  in  the  forest, 
And  round  me  my  grey  cloak  I  fold. 

And  as  I  am  riding,  before  me 

My  thoughts  unrestrainedly  roam ; 
They  lightly  and  airily  bear  me 

To  my  own  dear  mistress's  home. 

The  dogs  are  barking,  the  servants 

With  glittering  torches  appear ; 
I  climb  up  the  winding  staircase. 

My  spurs  ring  loudly  and  clear. 

In  her  bright-lighted  tapestry  chamber. 

So  full  of  magical  charms. 
My  own  sweet  darling  awaits  me, 

I  hasten  into  her  arms. 

The  wind  in  the  leaves  is  sighing. 

The  oak  thus  whispers  to  me  : 
•  What  means,  thou  foolish  young  horseman, 

**  Thy  foolish  reverie  ?" 

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86  hone's  K)emb. 


64. 


A  GLITTERING  star  is  faUiog 
From  its  shining  home  in  the  air ; 
The  star  of  love  'tis  surely 
That  I  see  falling  there. 

The  blossoms  and  leaves  in  plenty 
FrcHn  the  apple  tree  fall  each  day ; 

The  merry  breezes  approach  them, 
And  with  them  merrily  play. 

The  swan  in  the  pool  is  singing, 
And  up  and  down  doth  he  steer, 

And,  singing  gently  ever. 
Dips  under  the  water  clear. 

All  now  is  silent  and  darksome. 

The  leaves  and  blossoms  decay. 
The  star  has  crumbled  and  vanished, 

The  song  of  the  swan  died  away. 

65. 

rpHE  Dream-God  brought  me  to  a  castle  vast, 

JL    Where  magic  fragrance  reign'd  and  lighte  \vere 

gleaming. 
And  through  its  mazy-winding  chambers  pass'd 

A  chequer'd  throng,  still  onward,  onwani  streaming. 
The  pale  crowd  seek  the  exit-portal  fast, 

Wringing  their  hands,  and  full  of  terror  screaming, 
And  knights  and  maidens  mingle  in  the  throng. 
And  I  myself  am  with  them  borne  along. 

But  suddenly  I  stand  alone,  for,  lo, 

The  crowd  hath  vanished  and  from  sight  departed  ; 
T  wander  on,  and  through  the  chambers  go. 

All  strangely  winding,  silent  and  deserted ; 
My  foot  is  leaden,  and  I  scarcely  know 

How  to  escape,  thus  sadden'd  and  faint-hearted. 
At  length  the  farthest  portal  I  descry, 
And  seek  to  pass — great  heavens,  what  meets  mine  eye ! 

It  was  my  love,  who  at  the  door  did  stand, 
Grief  on  her  lips,  her  brow  in  tribulation. 

I  sought  to  fly, — she  beckoned  with  her  hand. 
Whether  to  warn  me,  or  in  indignation ; 

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BOOK  OP  SONCrfl.  87 

Yet  gleam'd  her  eye  like  some  sweet  glowing  brand, 

Setting  my  heart  and  brain  in  conflagration. 
And  as  she  gazed  with  looks  of  passion  deep, 
Blended  with  sternness,  I  awoke  from  sleep. 

66. 

I^HE  midnight  was  cold,  in  plaintive  mood 
.    I  wander'd  mournfully  through  the  wood ; 
I  shook  the  trees  from  out  of  their  sleep. 
They  shook  their  heads  with  pity  deep. 

67. 

BENEATH  the  crossway  buried, 
The  suicide  lies  here, 
Where  grows  a  charming  blue  floweret, 
The  culprit-flower  so  dear. 

I  stood  by  the  crossway  sighing. 

The  night  was  chilly  and  drear. 
While  slowly  moved  in  the  moonlight 

The  culprit-flower  so  dear. 


XlTHEEteSOE'EE  I  go,  there  darkles 
▼  T       Bound  me  gloom  and  utter  nighty 
Now  that  there  no  longer  sparkles 
On  me,  love,  thine  eyes'  sweet  light. 

Quench'd  are  all  the  golden  blisses 
That  love's  star  upon  me  smil'd ; 

^eath  my  feet  the  dread  abyss  is, — 
Night  primeval,  take  thy  child ! 


NIGHT*  lay  upon  mine  eyelids, 
Upon  my  mouth  lay  lead  ; 
I  in  my  grave  was  lying. 
With  frozen  heart  and  head. 

How  long  it  was  I  know  not 
That  I  in  slumber  lay ; 

I  woke  and  heard  a  knocking 
Upon  my  grave  one  day. 


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88  Heine's  poem& 

"  Wilt  thou  not  rise  up,  Henry  ? 

"  The  Judgment  Day  is  this, 
"  The  dead  have  all  arisen, 

*'  To  taste  of  endless  bliss," 

I  cannot  rise,  my  darling. 

For  I  have  lost  my  sight ; 
Mine  eyes,  through  very  weeping. 

Are  veil'd  in  darkest  night. 

'*  111  kiss  away  the  darkness, 
"  My  Henry,  from  thine  eyes  ; 

**  The  angels  shalt  thou  see  then, 
"  The  glory  of  the  skies." 

I  cannot  rise,  my  darling, 
The  wound  is  bleeding  yet, 

Made  by  thee  in  my  bosom 

With  one  sharp  word  and  threat 

"  My  hand  all  gently,  Henry, 

"  1*11  lay  upon  thy  heart ; 
*  It  then  will  bleed  no  longer, 
"  And  heal'd  will  be  the  smart." 

I  cannot  rise,^  my  darling, 
My  head  still  bleeds  amain ! 

'Twas  there  the  bullet  enter'd, 
When  thou  wert  from  me  taW 

"  With  my  long  tresses,  Henry, 
"  I'll  stanch  the  bleeding  wound, 

'*  And  drive  the  blood-stream  backwards^ 
'*  And  make  thy  head  thus  soimd." 

So  gently,  sweetly  pray'd  she, 
I  could  not  spurn  her  prayer ; 

I  sought  to  rise  and  hasten 
To  join  my  mistress  fair. 

Then  all  my  wounds  *gan  bleeding, 
Then,  wildly  rushing,  broke 

From  head  and  breast  the  bloodsti-easii. 
And  lo  I — from  sleep^I  woke. 


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BOOK  OF   SONO&         '  b^ 

70. 

THE  numbers  old  and  evil, 
The  dreams  so  harrowing, 
Let's  bury  all  together, — 
A  mighty  coffin  bring ! 

1*11  place  there  much,  but  say  not 

What  *tis,  till  all  is  done ; 
The  cofl&n  must  be  larger 

Than  Heidelberg's  vast  tun. 

And  also  bring  a  death-bier, 
Of  boards  full  stout  and  sound ; 

They  also  must  be  longer 

Than  Mayence  bridge  renown'd. 

And  also  bring  twelve  giants 
Whose  strength  of  limb  excels 

Saint  Christopher's,  whose  shrine  in 
Cologne  Cathedral  dwells. 

The  coffin  they  must  carry. 

And  sink  beneath  the  wave ; 
For  such  a  mighty  coffin 

Must  have  a  mighty  grave. 

Why  was  the  coffin,  tell  me, 

So  great  and  hard  to  move  ? 
I  in  it  placed  my  sorrows. 

And  in  it  placed  my  love. 

THE  GODS*  TWILIGHT. 

rAIE  May  has  come  with  her  bright  golden  radiance^ 
And  silken  gales  and  fra^pmt  spicy  odours. 
And  kindly  lures  us  with  her  snowy  blossoms. 
And  from  a  thousand  blue-eyed  violets  greets  us, 
And  spreads  abroad  her  flowery  verdant  carpet, 
With  morning  dew  and  sunshine  interwoven, 
And  summons  all  her  favourite  human  children. 
At  her  first  call  the  bashful  people  come ; 
The  men  in  haste  put  on  their  nankeen  breeches. 
And  Sunday  coats  with  golden  glassy  buttons; 
The  women  don  the  white  of  innocence. 
The  youths  take  care  to  curl  their  spring-mustachios, 
The  maidens  bid  their  bosoms  softly  heave ; 


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I»J 


90  Heine's  poems. 

The  city  poets  cram  into  their  pockets 

Paper,  lead-pencil,  and  lorgnette ;  and  gaily 

The  eddying  moving  crowd  draw  near  the  gateway, 

And  lie  at  ease  on  the  green  tmrf  beyond. 

Amazed  to  see  how  much  the  trees  have  sprouted, — 

Play  with  the  tender  coloured  flowerets  fair, 

List  to  the  song  of  merry  birds  above  them. 

And  shout  exulting  tow'rds  the  vault  of  heaven. 

To  me  came  also  May,  and  three  times  knocked  she 

Against  my  door  and  cried :  "  Behold  sweet  May ! 

'*  Thou  palefaced  dreamer,  come,  I  fain  would  kiss  thee 

But  I  my  door  kept  bolted,  and  I  cried  : 

"  In  vain  thou  seek*st  to  tempt  me,  evil  stranger. 

"  I  long  have  seen  thee  through,  I've  seen  through  also 

"  The  fabric  of  the  world,  and  seen  too  much, 

"  And  much  too  deep,  and  fled  is  all  my  pleasure, 

"  And  endless  torments  quiver  in  my  heart. 

*^  I  see  through  all  the  stony  hard  outsides 

*'  Of  human  houses  and  of  human  bosoms, 

"  And  see  in  both  deceit  and  woe  and  falsehood. 

"  I've  learnt  to  read  the  thoughts  on  every  face, — 

"  All  evil !     In  the  maiden's  shamefaced  blushes 

"  I  see  the  trembling  of  a  secret  lust ; 

"  On  the  inspired  and  haughty  head  of  youth 

"  I  see  the  laughing  chequer'd  fool's  cap  jingling ; 

*^  And  caric'tures  alone  and  sickly  shadows 

"  I  see  upon  this  earth,  and  live  in  doubt 

"  Whether  a  madhouse  'tis,  or  hospital. 

"  The  old  earth's  crust  I  see  through  but  too  plainly 

"  As  though  it  were  of  crystal, — see  the  horrors 

"  Which  May  is  vainly  striving  to  conceal 

"  With  pleasing  verdure.     There  I  see  the  dead  ; 

"  They  lie  beneath,  in  their  small  coffins  prison'd, 

"  With  hands  together  folded,  eyes  wide  open, 

"  White  is  their  garment,  white  their  faco  as  well, 

"  And  yellow  worms  from  out  their  lips  are  crawling, 

"  I  see  the  son  with  his  loved  mistress  sitting 

"  And  toying  with  her  on  his  father's  grave. 

"  Derisive  songs  the  nightingales  are  singing, 

*'  The  gentle  meadow  flow'rets  laugh  with  malice, 

"  And  the  dead  father  moveth  in  his  grave, 

"  While  the  old  mother-earth  with  pain  doth  shudder.** 


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BOOK  OF  80NaS.  91 

D  khon  poor  earth,  thy  sorrows  know  I  well ! 

I  flee 'the  glow  that  in  thy  breast  is  heaving, 

Thy  thousand  veins  I  see  all  bleeding  freely, 

And  see  thy  gaping  wounds  all,  all  torn  open. 

While  flames  and  smoke  and  blood  stream  wildly  forth, 

I  see  thy  proud  defiant  giant-children, 

Primeval  monsters,  from  dark  guKs  arising 

And  swinging  ruddy  torches  in  their  handjs. 

Their  iron  scaling-ladders  they  advance. 

And  wildly  rush  to  storm  the  forts  of  heaven, 

And  swartiiy  dwarfs  climb  after  them  ;  with  crackling 

Each  golden  star  on  high  like  dust  is  scattered. 

With  daring  hand  they  tear  the  golden  curtain 

From  God's  own  tent ;  the  blessed  troops  of  angels 

Fall  headlong  down  with  howling  at  the  sight. 

The  pale  God  sits  upon  his  awful  throne, 

Tears  from  his  head  his  crown,  and  tears  his  hair. — 

Still  onward,  onward  press  the  savage  crew, 

The  giants  fiercely  hurl  their  blazing  torches 

Into  the  realms  of  heaven,  the  dwarfs  strike  wildly 

With  flaming  scourges  on  the  angels'  backs, 

Who  twist  and  writhe  in  ecstasy  of  anguish. 

And  by  the  hair  are  seized  and  whirl'd  away. 

And  my  own  angel  likewise  see  I  there, 

With  his  blond  locks,  his  sweet  expressive  features, 

With  everlasting  love  around  his  mouth, 

And  with  beatitude  in  his  blue  eyes. 

A  fearful  hideous  swarthy  goblin  comes. 

Tears  him  from  off  the  ground,  my  poor  pale  angel, 

Grins  as  he  ogles  his  fair  noble  limbs, 

And  clasps  him  firmly  in  his  soft  embraces, — 

A  yell  re-echoes  through  the  universe, 

The  pillars  crash,  and  earth  and  heaven  are  hurl'd 

Headlong  together,  and  old  night  is  lord. 

EATCLIFF.* 

THE  Dream-God  brought  me  to  a  landscape  fair 
Where  weeping  willows  nodded  me  a  welcome 
With  their  long  verdant  arms,  and  where  the  flowei*s 
Grazed  on  me  mutely  with  wise  sisters'  eyes, 

♦  See  Heine's  Tragedy  of  that  name. 

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92  HSJNES  POEMS. 

Where  the  birds'  twittering  resounded  sweetly. 
Where  the  dogs'  barking  seem'd  to  me  familiar. 
And  voices  kindly  greeted  me,  and  figures. 
Like  an  old  friend,  and  yet  where  everything 
Appear'd  so  strange,  beyond  description  strange. 
Before  a  pretty  country-house  I  stood. 
My  bosom  in  me  moving,  but  my  head 
All  peaceful,  and  the  dust  with  calmness  shook  I 
From  off  my  travelling  garments ;  shrilly  sounded 
The  bell  I  rang,  and  then  the  door  was  open'd. 

Inside  were  men  and  women,  many  faces 

To  me  well  known.     Still  sorrow  lay  on  all, 

And  secret  fearful  griel     With  strange  emotion, 

Wellnigh  with  looks  of  pity,  on  me  gazed  they 

Till  my  own  soul  with  terror  was  pervaded. 

As  though  foreboding  some  unknown  misfortune. 

Old  Margaret  I  straightway  recognized, 

Gazed  on  her  fixedly,  but  yet  she  spake  not. 

"  Where  is  Maria  V  ask'd  I,  yet  she  spake  not, 

But  softly  seized  my  hand,  and  led  me  on 

Through  many  a  long  and  brightly-lighted  chamber, 

Where  splendour,  pomp,  and  deathlike  silence  reign'd 

And  to  a  darksome  room  at  length  she  brought  me. 

And,  with  her  face  averted  from  me,  pointed 

Toward  the  form  that  sat  upon  the  sofa. 

"  Art  thou  Maria  ?"  ask'd  I.     Inwardly 

I  was  myself  astounded  at  the  firmness 

With  which  I  spoke.     Like  stone  and  hollow 

Sounded  a  voice :  '*  That  is  the  name  they  call  me." 

A  piercing  agony  straight  froze  me  through, 

For  that  cold  hollow  tone,  alas,  was  yet 

The  once  enchanting  voice  of  my  Maria ! 

And  yonder  woman  in  pale  lilac  dress, 

In  negligent  attire,  with  unveil'd  bosom. 

With  glassy  staring  eyes,  like  leather  seeming 

The  muscles  of  the  cheeks  of  her  white  face, — 

Alas,  that  woman  once  was  the  most  lovely, 

The  blooming,  pleasing,  sweet  and  kind  Maria  t 

"  Your  travels  have  been  long  '*  she  said  aloud 

In  cold,  unpleasing,  but  famUiar  accents, — 

"  You  look  no  longer  languishing,  my  friend, 

•*  You're  well  in  health,  your  loins  and  calves  elastio 


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BOOK  Oi    SONUS.  93 

"  Sbow  your  solidity."     A  silly  smile 

Play'd  the  while  round  her  yellow,  pallid  mouth. 

In  my  confusion  utter*d  I  these  accents : 

"  I've  been  inform'd  that  thou  art  married  now  ?" 

"  Ah  yes !"  she  carelessly  replied  with  laughing  : 

'*  I  have  a  stick  of  wood  that's  covered  over 

•'  With  leather,  call'd  a  husband.     Still,  for  all  that, 

"  Wood  is  but  wood !"    And  then  she  laugh'd  perversely 

Till  chilling  anguish  through  my  spirit  ran, 

And  doubt  upon  me  seized : — are  those  the  modest, 

The  flowery-modest  lips  of  my  Maria  ? 

But  presently  she  rose,  took  quickly  up 

Prom  off  the  chair  her  cashmere  shawl,  and  threw  it 

Aroimd  her  neck,  my  arm  took  hold  of  then. 

Drew  me  away,  and  through  the  open  housedoor. 

And  led  me  on  through  thicket,  fields  and  meadow. 

The  sun's  red  glowing  disk  already  downward 

Was  hastening,  and  its  purple  rays  were  beaming 

Over  the  trees  and  flowers,  and  o'er  the  river 

That  flow'd  majestically  in  the  distance. 

*'  See'st  thou  the  large  and  golden  eye  that's  floating 

**  In  the  blue  water?"  cried  Maria  quickly. 

"  Hush,  thou  poor  creature !"  said  I,  as  I  spied 

In  the  dim  twilight  a  strange  wondrous  motion. 

Figures  of  mist  arose  from  out  the  plain, 

And  with  white  tender  arms  embraced  each  other  ; 

The  violets  eyed  each  other  tenderly, 

The  lily  cups  with  yearning  bent  together  ; 

A  loving  glow  in  every  rose  was  gleaming. 

The  pinks  would  fain  in  their  own  breath  be  kindled, 

In  blissful  odours  revell'd  every  flower. 

And  every  one  wept  silent  tears  of  rapture^ 

And  all  exulting  shouted :  Love !  Love !  Love  I 

The  butterflies  were  fluttering,  and  the  shining 

Gold  beetles  humm'd  their  gentle  fairy  songs, 

The  winds  of  evening  whisper'd,  and  the  oaks 

All  rustled,  and  the  nightingale  sang  sweetly ; 

And  amid  all  the  whispering,  rustling,  singing, 

Prated  away,  with  thin  cold  soundless  voice, 

The  faded  woman  hanging  on  my  arm : 

"  I  know  your  nightly  longing  for  the  castle ; 

**  Everv  lon|5  shadow  is  a  simpleton, 


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04  HEINE  S  POEMS. 

"  That  nods  and  signs  precisely  as  one  wishes  5 
'*  The  blue  coat  is  an  angel ;  but  the  red  coat 
"  With  his  drawn  sword,  is  very  hostile  to  you/" 
And  many  other  things  in  this  strange  fashion 
Continued  she  to  say,  till,  tired  at  length, 
She  sat  down  with  me  on  the  mossy  bank 
That  stands  beneath  the  ancient  noble  oak-tree. 
Together  there  we  sat,  both  sad  and  silent. 
And  gazed  upon  each  other,  growing  sadder. 
The  oak,  as  with  a  dying  sigh,  was  murmuring ; 
Deep-grieving,  sang  the  nightingale  down  on  us. 
But  through  the  leaves  a  ruddy  light  was  piercing, 
And  flickered  round  Maria's  pallid  face, 
And  lured  a  glow  from  out  her  rigid  eyes. 
Until  with  her  old  darling  voice  thus  spoke  she : 
**  How  knewest  thou  that  I  am  so  unhappy  ? 
"  I  read  it  lately  in  thy  strange  wild  numbers." 

An  ice-cold  feeling  pierced  my  breast,  I  shudder'd 
At  my  own  mad  delirium,  which  the  future 
Saw  tiirough,  my  brain  grew  giddy  with  alarm, 
And  through  sheer  terror  I  awoke  from  sleep. 

DONNA  CLAEA. 

IN  the  evening-shaded  garden 
Eambles  the  Alcalde's  daughter ; 
Kettle-drums  and  trumpets  loudly 
Echo  from  the  lofty  castle. 

"  Wearisome  I  find  the  dances, 
"  And  the  honied  words  of  flatt'ry, 
"  And  the  knights,  who  so  gallantly 
"  Tell  me  I  the  sun  resemble. 

"  Everything  is  hateful  to  me 
"  Since  I  by  the  beaming  moonlight 
**  Saw  the  Knight  whose  lute  allured  mo 
"  To  the  window  every  evening. 

'*  As  he  stood,  so  slim,  but  daring, 
"  And  his  eyes  shot  lightning  glances 
"  From  his  pale  and  noble  features, 
**  Truly  he  Saint  George  resemblei" 


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BOOK   OF   S0XG8  95 

In  this  maimer  Donna  Clara 
Tliought,  and  on  the  ground  then  looked  she ; 
When  she  raised  her  eyes,  the  handsome 
Unknown  Knight  was  standing  by  her. 

Pressing  hands  with  loving  wliispers 
Wander  they  beneath  the  moonlight, 
And  the  zephyr  gently  woos  them, 
Wondrously  the  roses  greet  them. 

Wondrously  the  roses  greet  them, 
Like  love's  messengers  all  glowing.- — 
'*  But,  my  loved  one,  prythee  tell  me 
"  Why  so  suddenly  thou  redden*st  ?" 

"  *Twas  the  flies  that  stung  me,  dearest, 
"  And  the  flies  are,  all  the  summer, 
"  Quite  as  much  detested  by  me 
"  As  the  long-nosed  Jewish  fellows." 

"  Never  mind  the  flies  and  Jews,  dear," 
Said  the  Knight,  with  fond  caresses. 
From  the  almond-trees  are  falling 
Thousand  white  and  fleecy  blossoms. 

Thousand  white  and  fleecy  blossoms 
Their  sweet  fragrance  shed  around  them. 
"  But,  my  loved  one,  prythee  tell  me 
*'  Is  thy  heart  devoted  to  me  ?" 

**  Yes,  I  truly  love  thee,  dearest, 
"  And  I  swear  it  by  the  Saviour 
"  Whom  the  God-detested  Jews  erst 
"  Wickedly  and  vilely  murder'd." 

'*  Never  mind  the  Jews  and  Saviour," 
Said  the  Knight,  with  fond  caresses. 
In  the  distance  snow-white  lilies 
Dreamily,  light-bathed,  are  bending. 

Bathed  in  light  the  snow-white  lilies 
Graze  upon  i^e  stars  above  them : 
"  But,  my  loved  one,  prythee  tell  mo 
**  Hast  thou  not  a  false  oath  taken  ?** 

**  Falsehood  is  not  in  me,  dearest, 
•*  Since  within  my  breast  there  flows  not 
**  E'en  one  single  drop  of  Moor's  blood, 
•*  Or  of  dirty  Jew's  blood  either." 


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96  Heine's  poems. 

"  Never  mind  the  Moors  and  Jews,  dear, 
Said  the  Knight,  with  fond  caresses ; 
And  he  to  a  myrtle  bower 
Leads  the  fair  Alcalde's  daughter. 

With  the  nets  of  love  so  tender, 
He  hath  secretly  enclosed  her ! 
Short  their  words  and  long  their  kisses^ 
And  their  hearts  are  overflowing. 

Like  a  wedding-song  all-melting 
Sings  the  nightingale,  the  dear  one ; 
Glowworms  on  the  ground  are  movinff. 
As  if  in  the  torch-dance  circling. 

Silence  reigns  within  the  bower, 
Nought  is  heard  except  the  stealthy 
Whispers  of  the  cunning  myrtles. 
And  the  breathing  of  the  flowerets. 

But  soon  kettle-drums  and  trumpets 
Echo  from  the  lofty  castle, 
And,  awakening,  Clara  quickly 
From  the  Knight's  arm  frees  her  person. 

•  "  Hark,  they're  calling  me,  my  dearest, 
"  Yet  before  we  part,  thou  need'st  must 
"  Thy  dear  name  to  me  discover 
"  Which  thou  hast  so  long  concealed." 

And  the  Knight,  with  radiant  smiling, 
Kiss'd  the  fingers  of  his  Donna, 
Kiss'dher  lips  and  kiss'd  her  forehead.^ 
And  at  last  these  words  ho  uttered : 

"  I,  Senora,  I,  your  loved  one, 
"  Am  the  son  of  the  much  honour'd 
"  Great  and  learned  scribe,  the  Kabbi 
•*  Israel  of  Saragossa." 

ALMANSOE. 
1. 

IN  fair  Cordova's  cathedral. 
Stand  the  columns,  thirteen  ]:undrcd,- 
Thirteen  himdred  giant-columns 
Bear  the  mighty  dome  in  safety. 


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BOOK  OF  SONOS.  97 

And  on  dome  and  walls  and  columns 
From  the  very  top  to  bottom 
The  Koran's  Arabian  pioverbs 
Twine  in  wise  and  flowery  fashion. 

Moorish  Kings  erected  whilome 
This  vast  house  to  Allah's  glory, 
Yet  in  many  parts  'tis  alter'd 
In  the  darksome  whirl  of  ages. 

On  the  turret  where  the  watchman 
Summon'd  unto  prayer  the  people, 
Now  the  Christian  bell  is  sounding 
With  its  melancholy  murmur. 

On  the  steps  whereon  the  faithful 
Used  to  sing  the  Prophet's  sayings, 
Now  baldpated  priests  exhibit 
All  the  mass's  trivial  wonders. 

How  they  twirl  before  the  colour'd 
Puppets,  full  of  antic  capers, 
Midst  the  incense  smoke  and  ringing, 
While  the  senseless  tapers  sparkle ! 

In  fair  Cordova's  cathedral 

Stands  Almansor  ben  Abdullah, 

Viewing  silently  the  columns, 

And  these  words  in  silence  murmuring ; 

"  0  ye  columns,  strong,  gigantic, 
"  Once  adom'd  in  AUcJi's  glory, 
*'  Now  must  ye  pay  himibl^  homage 
"  To  this  Christendom  detested. 

'*  To  the  times  have  ye  submitted, 
<*  And  ye  bear  the  burden  calmly ; 
**  Still  more  reason  for  the  weaker 
"  To  be  patient  all  the  sooner." 

And  Almansor  ben  Abdullah 
Bent  his  head  with  fsuse  unruffled 
O'er  the  font  so  decorated 
[n  fisdr  Cordova's  cathedral. 


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98  UIHiNE'S   POEMS^ 


THE  cathedral  left  lie  quickly, 
On  his  wild  steed  speeding  onwaidi 
While  his  moist  locks  and  the  feathers 
In  his  hat  the  wind  is  moving. 

On  the  road  to  Alcolea, 
By  the  side  of  Guadalquivir, 
Where  the  snowy  almond  blossoms, 
And  the  fragrant  golden  orange, 

Thither  hastes  the  merry  rider, 
Piping,  singing,  laughing  gaily, 
And  die  birds  all  swell  tiie  chorus, 
And  the  torrent's  noisy  waters. 

In  the  fort  at  Alcolea 
Dwelleth  Clara  de  Alvares ; 
In  Navarre  her  sire  is  fighting. 
And  she  revels  in  her  freedom. 

And  afar  Almansor  heareth 
Sounds  of  kettle-drums  and  trumpets, 
And  the  castle  lights  beholds  he 
Glittering  through  the  trees'  dark  shadowik 

In  the  fort  at  Alcolea 
Dance,  twelve  gaily  trick'd-out  ladies 
With  twelve  ^ghts  attired  as  gaily, 
!But  AJmansor's  the  best  dancer. 

As  if  wing'd  by  merry  fancies, 
Bound  about  the  hall  he  flutters, 
Knowing  how  to  all  the  ladies 
To  address  sweet  flattering  speeches. 

Isabella's  lovely  hands  he 
Kisses  quickly,  and  then  leaves  her^ 
And  before  Elvira  stands  he, 
Looking  in  her  fiEtce  so  archly. 

He  in  turns  assures  each  lady 
That  he  heartily  adores  her ; 
"  On  the  true  faith  of  a  Christian  " 
Swears  he  thirty  times  that  evening. 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS. 


99 


8. 

IN  the  fort  at  Alcolea 
Merriment  and  noise  have  ceased  now, 
Enigiits  and  ladies  all  have  vanished, 
And  the  lights  are  all  extinguished. 

Donna  Clara  and  Almansor 
In  the  hall  above  still  linger, 
And  one  single  lamp  is  throwing 
On  them  both  its  feeble  lustre. 

On  the  seat  the  lady's  sitting, 
And  the  knight  upon  the  footstool, 
And  his  head,  by  sleep  o'erpower'd. 
On  her  darling  knees  is  resting. 

From  a  golden  flask  some  rose-oil 
Pours  the  lady,  sadly  musing, 
On  Almansor's  dark-brown  tresses, — 
From  his  inmost  bosom  sighs  he. 

With  her  soft  lips  then  the  lady 
Gives  a  sweet  kiss,  sadly  musing, 
On  Almansor's  dark-brown  tresses, 
And  his  brow  is  clouded  over. 

From  her  light  eyes  tears  in  torrent  .--r* 
Weeps  the  lady,  sadly  musing,  "" 

On  Almansor's  dark-brown  tresses, 
And  his  lips  begin  to  quiver. 

And  he  dreams  he's  once  more  standin] 
With  his  head  bent  down  and  weeping 
In  fair  Cordova's  cathedral, 
Many  gloomy  voices  hearing. 

All  the  lofty  giant-columns 
Hears  he  murmuring  full  of  anger, — 
That  no  longer  wiU  they  bear  it. 
And  they  totter  and  they  tremble. 

And  they  wildly  fall  together. 
Pale  turn  all  the  priests  and  people^ 
Crashing  falls  the  dome  upon  them, 
And  the  Christian  gods  wail  loudly. 


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100  Heine's  poems. 

THE  PILGRIMAGE  TO  KEVLAAB. 
1. 

THE  mother  stood  by  the  window, 
The  son  in  bed  lay  he. 
**  Wilt  thou  not  rise  up,  William, 
"  The  fair  procession  to  see  ?" — 

'*  I  am  so  ill,  my  mother, 

"  I  neither  see  nor  hear ; 
"  I  think  of  my  poor  dead  Gretchen, 

"  My  heart  is  breaking  near." 

"  Arise,  let's  go  to  Kevlaar, 
"  Take  book  and  rosary  too ; 

"  The  mother  of  God  will  heal  thee, 
"  And  cure  thy  sick  heart  anew." 

In  church-like  tones  they  are  singing, 
The  banners  flutter  on  high ; 

At  Cologne  on  the  Ehine  this  happeni^ 
The  proud  procession  moves  by. 

The  crowd  the  mother  follows. 

Her  son  she  leadeth  now, 
And  both  of  them  sing  in  chorus : 

"  O  Mary,  blessed  be  thou !" 


THE  mother  of  God  at  Kevlaar 
Her  best  dress  wears  to-day ; 
FuU  much  hath  she  to  accompli^. 
So  great  the  sick  folks'  array. 

The  sick  folk  with  them  are  bringing. 
As  offerings  fitting  and  meet, 

Strange  limbs  of  wax  all  fashion'd, 
Tes,  waxen  hands  and  feet. 

And  he  who  a  wax  hand  offers, 
Finds  cured  in  his  hand  the  wound. 

And  he  who  a  wax  foot  proffers. 
Straight  finds  his  foot  grow  sound. 

To  Kevlaar  went  many  on  crutches 
Who  now  on  the  tight  rope  skip. 

And  many  a  palsied  finger 

0*er  the  viol  doth  merrily  trip. 


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BOOK  OF  SOKQg.  101 

The  mother  took  a  waxlight, 

And  out  of  it  fashioned  a  heart : 
^'  My  son,  take  that  to  God's  mother^ 

"  And  she  will  cure  thy  smart." 

The  son  took  sighing  the  wax-heart, 
Went  with  sighs  to  the  shrine  so  blest, 

The  tears  burst  forth  from  his  eyelids, 
The  words  burst  forth  from  his  breast ; 

"  Thou  highly-favour'd  blest  one ! 

"  Thou  pure  and  godlike  maid ! 
**Thou  mighty  queen  of  heaven, 

"  To  thee  my  woes  be  displayed ! 

**  I  with  my  mother  was  dwelling 

"  In  yonder  town  of  Cologne, 
"  The  town  that  many  a  hundred 

''Fair  churches  and  chapels  doth  own. 

"  And  near  us  there  dwelt  my  Gretchen, 

"  Who,  alas  I  is  dead  to-day ; 
"  0,  Mary,  I  bring  thee  a  wax-heart, 

**  My  heart's  wounds  cure,  I  pray. 

"  My  sick  heart  cure,  0  cure  thou, 

"  And  early  and  late  my  vow 
"  I'll  pay,  and  sing  with  devotion : 

" '  O  Mary,  blessed  be  thou  V  " 

3. 

THE  poor  sick  son.  and  his  mother 
In  their  little  chamber  slept. 
The  mother  of  God  to  their  chamber 
All  lightly,  lightly  crept. 

She  bent  herself  over  the  sick  one, 

Her  hand  with  action  light 
Upon  his  heart  placed  sofdy, 

Smiled  sweetly  and  vanished  from  sight 

The  mother  saw  all  in  her  vision, 

Saw  this  and  saw  much  more ; 
From  out  of  her  slumber  woke  she, 

The  hounds  were  baying  full  sore. 


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102  Heine's  FOEMft. 

Her  son  was  lying  before  her, 

And  dead  her  son  he  lay, 
While  over  his  pale  cheeks  gently 

The  light  of  morning  did  play. 

Her  hands  the  mother  folded, 

She  felt  she  knew  not  how ; 
With  meekness  sang  she  and  softly : 

"  0  Mary,  blessed  be  thou  1" 

THE  DREAM. 
(From  Salon,) 

A  VISION  I  dreamt  of  a  lovely  child, 
She  wore  her  hair  in  tresses  ; 
In  the  blue  nights  of  summer  so  calm  and  miU 
We  sat  in  the  greenwood's  recesses. 

In  mutual  rapture  and  torture  we  vied, 
We  loved  and  exchanged  loving  kisses ; 

The  yellow  stars  in  the  heavens  fdl  sigh'd 
And  seem*d  to  envy  our  blisses. 

I  now  am  awake,  and  around  me  gaze 
In  the  darkness,  alone  and  despairing ; 

The  stars  in  the  heavens  are  shedding  their  laya 
In  silence  and  all-uncaring. 


NEW  POEMS. 
1.  SERAPHINA. 


XTrJUfiN  at  evening  in  the  forest, 

▼  T       In  the  dreamlike  wood  I  rove. 
Ever  doth  thy  slender  figure 
Close  beside  me  softly  move. 

See  I  not  thy  gentle  features  ? 

Is  it  not  ikj  veil  that  stirs  ? 
Can  it  be  the  moonlight  only 

Breaking  through  the  gloomy  firs? 

Can  it  be.  mine  own  tears  only 
That  I  hear  all-lightly  flow  ? 

Or  my  loved  one,  dost  thou  really 
Close  beside  me  weeping  go  ? 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  103 

2. 

O'EK  the  silent  strand  of  ocean 
Night  appears  in  gloomy  splendour ; 
From  the  clouds  the  moon  is  breaking, 
As  the  waves  these  whispers  send  her : 

"  Yonder  mortal,  is  he  foolish, 

"  Or  is  he  by  love  tormented, 
"  That  he  looks  so  sad,  yet  joyous, 

''  So  distressed,  yet  so  contented  ?" 

But  the  moon,  with  smiles  replying. 
Loudly  said :  "  FuU  well  I  know  it ; 

**  He  is  both  in  love  and  fbolish, 
"  And  moreover  is  a  poet." 

8. 
'nniS  surely  a  snowwhite  seamew 
X     That  I  see  fluttering  there 
Just  over  the  darksome  billows ; 
The  moon  stands  high  in  the  air. 

The  shark  and  the  ray  snap  fiercely 
From  out  of  the  wave,  and  stare ; 

The  seamew  is  rising  and  falling, 
The  moon  stands  high  in  the  air. 

0  dear  and  wandering  spirit, 
So  sad  and  full  of  despair ! 

Too  near  art  thou  to  the  water. 
The  moon  stands  high  in  the  air. 

4. 

I  KNEW  that  thou  didst  love  mo, 
I  knew  it  long,  dear  maid ; 
Yet  when  thou  didst  confess  it 
I  felt  fall  sore  afbdd. 

1  elamber'd  up  the  mountain 

With  loud  exulting  song, 
At  sunset  rambled  weeping 
The  ocean  shore  along. 

The  sun  my  heart  resemblethy 

8o  flaming  to  the  sights 
And  in  a  loving  ocean 

It  setteth,  great  and  bright. 


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104  Heine's  poems. 


H3W  curiously  the  seamew 
Looks  over  at  ns,  dear, 
Because  against  thy  lips  I 
So  firmly  press  my  ear ! 

She  maybe  would  discover 

What  from  thy  mouth  did  flow,--* 
If  words  alone  or  kisses 

Thou  in  my  ear  didst  throw. 

D  could  I  but  decipher 
What  'tis  that  fills  my  mind ! 

The  words  are  with  the  kisses 
So  wondrously  combined./ 

6. 

AS  timid  as  the  roe  she  fled, 
And  with  its  fleetness  vying ; 
She  clamber'd  on  from  crag  to  crag 
Her  hair  behind  Jier  flying. 

Where  to  the  sea  the  cli£&  descend, 
.  At  length  I  caught  the  rover ; 
And  gently  there  with  gentle  words 
Her  coy  heart  soon  won  over* 

High  as  the  heavens  we  sat,  both  fill'd 
With  heavenly  blest  emotion ; 

Beneath  us  by  degrees  the  sun 
Sank  in  the  dark  deep  ocean. 

In  the  dark  sea  beneath  us  far 
The  beauteous  sun  sank  proudly  i 

The  billows  with  impetuous  joy 
Were  meanwhile  roaring  loudly. 

Weep  not,  the  sun  in  yonder  waves 

Hath  not  for  ever  perish'd, 
But  lieth  hidden  in  my  heart, 

Where  all  its  glow  is  cherish'd. 

7. 

UPON  this  rock  we  build  the  Church 
Which  (type  of  our  to-morrow) 
Proclaims  the  third  New  Testamenl^ 
And  ended  is  our  sorrow. 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  105 

The  twofold  nature  that  so  long 

Deceived  us,  is  abolished ; 
Our  olden  fierce  corporeal  pangs 

Are  now  at  length  demolished. 

Hear'st  thou  the  God  in  yon  dark  sea  ? 

He  speaks  with  thousand  voices ; 
See'st  thou  how  overhead  God's  sky 

With  thousand  lights  rejoices  ? 

Almighty  God  is  in  the  light^ 

As  in  the  dark  abysses, 
And  everything  there  is,  is  God, 

He  is  in  fdl  our  kisses. 

8. 

GEAY  night  broodeth  o'er  the  ocean, 
And  the  tiny  stars  are  sparkling ; 
Long  protracted  voices  oft-times 
Sound  from  out  the  billows  darkling. 

There  the  aged  north  wind  sporteth 

With  the  glassy  waves  of  ocean, 
Which  like  organ  pipes  are  skipping 

With  a  never-ceasing  motion. 

Partly  heathenish,  partly  churchlike, 
Strangely  doth  this  music  move  us, 

As  it  rises  boldly  upwards, 

Gladdening  e'en  the  stars  above  us. 

And  the  stars,  stiU  larger  growing, 

With  a  radiant  joy  are  Reaming, 
And  at  length  around  the  heavens 

Boam,  with  sunlike  lustre  beaming 

To  far-reaching  strains  of  music 
They  revolve  in  madden'd  legions 

Simny  nightingales  are  circling 
In  those  fair  and  blissful  regions. 

With  a  mighty  roar  and  crashing. 

Sea  and  heaven  alike  are  singing. 
And  I  feel  a  giant-rapture 

Wildly  through  my  bosom  ringing. 


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106  Heine's  poems. 


9. 


SHADOWY  loTe  and  shadowy  kisses, 
Shadowy  life,  how  wondrons  strange ! 
Fool,  dost  think,  then,  that  all  this  is 
Ever  true  and  free  firom  change  ? 

Like  an  empty  dream  hath  vanished 
All  we  loved  with  love  so  deep  ; 

Memory  from  the  heart  is  banish'd, 
And  the  eyes  are  closed  in  sleep. 

10. 

THE  maid  stood  by  the  ocean, 
And  long  and  deep  sigh'd  she 
With  heartfelt  sad  emotion, 
The  setting  sun  to  see. 

Sweet  maiden,  why  this  fretting? 

An  olden  tnck  is  here ; 
Although  before  us  setting, 

He  rises  in  our  rear. 

11. 

WITH  sails  all  black  my  ship  sails  on 
Far  over  the  raging  sea ; 
Thou  know'st  full  well  how  sad  am  I, 
And  yet  tormentest  me. 

Thy  heart  is  faithless  as  the  wind. 

And  flutters  ceaselessly ; 
With  sails  all  black  my  sHp  sails  on 

Far  over  the  raging  sea. 

12. 

THOUGH  shamefully  thou  didst  entreat  me. 
To  no  man  would  I  e'er  unfold  it. 
But  travell'd  far  over  the  billows, 
And  unto  the  flshes  I  told  it. 

I've  left  thee  thy  good  reputation 
With  earth  and  the  beings  upon  her. 

But  every  depth  of  the  ocean 

Knows  fully  thy  tale  of  dishonour. 


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BOOK  OF.SOKQS.  107 


13. 


THE  roaring  waves  are  dashing 
High  oh -the  strand ; 
They're  swelling  and  they're  crashing 
Over  the  sand. 

They  come  in  noisy  fashion 

Uno^asingly,— 
At  lepgth  burst  into  passion,^ — 

But  what  care  we  ? 

14. 

THE  Eunic  stone  'mongst  the  waves  stands  high, 
There  sit  I,  with  thoughts  far  roaming ; 
The  wind  pipes  loudly,  the  seamews  cry, 
The  bi§lows  are  curling  and  foaming. 

I've  loj^ed  fiOl  many  ^  charming  girl, 
JiWStMt^y  a  CQBpwie  prpudjj-r^^      j 

Wh^re  fcfe  they  now  r     The  billows  curl 
And  fdam,  and  the'  wind  pipes  loudly. 

15. 

THE  sea  appears  all  golden 
Beneath  the  sunlit  sky, 
O  let  me  there  be  buried, 
My  brethren,  when  I  die. 

The  sea  I  have  always  loved  so, 

It  oft  hath  cool'd  my  breast 

With  its  refreshing  billows, 

Each  in  the  other's  love  blest, 
t 

2.  ANGELICA 

1. 

NOW  that  heaven  my  wish  hath  granted, 
Why  be  dunib,  like  mutes  inglorious,— 
I  who,  when  unhappy,  chanted 
Of  my  woe  with  noise  uproarious. 

Till  a  thousand  ypuths  despairing 

Sang  like  me  wijth  voices  hollow. 
And  the  song  I  Bsig^  uncaring 

Made  still  greater  mischief  folic  w? 


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108  HEINE^S  POEMS. 

0  ye  nightingale-like  chorus, 
That  I  bear  within  my  spirit, 

Let  your  song  of  joy  rise  o'er  us 
Merrily,  that  all  may  hear  it. 

2. 

ONCE  more  behind  thee  thou  wert  looking, 
Swiftly  as  thou  didst  past  me  glide, 
With  open  mouth,  as  if  inquiring. 
And  in  thy  look  a  stormy  pride. 

O  that  I  ne'er  had  sought  to  grasp  it, 
That  flowing  robe  of  snowy  wlute  I 

The  little  foot's  enchanting  traces, 
0  that  they  ne'er  had  met  my  sight! 

Thy  wildness  now  indeed  hath  vanish'd, 
Like  other  women  tame  art  thou, 

And  mild,  and  somewhat  over-civil, 
And,  ah,  thou  evien  lov'st  me  now. 

3. 

I'LL  not  credit,  youthful  beauty, 
What  thy  bashful  lips  may  say ; 
Eyes  so  black  and  large  and  rolling 
Are  not  much  in  virtue's  way. 

Strip  away  this  brown-striped  falsehood — 

Well  and  truly  love  I  thee ; 
Let  thy  white  heart  kiss  me,  dearest — 

White  heart,  understand'st  thou  me  ? 

4. 

UPON  her  mouth  I  give  a  kiss. 
And  close  her  either  eye ; . 
She  gives  me  now  no  peace  for  this, 
But  asks  the  reason  why. 

From  night  to  mom,  because  of  this. 

This  is  her  constcmt  cry : 
"  When  on  my  mouth  thou  giVst  a  kisSi 

"  Why  close  my  either  eye?** 

I  tell  her  not  the  cause  of  this, 

Nor  know  the  reason  why, 
Yet  on  her  mouth  I  give  a  kiss, 

And  close  her  either  eye. 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  109 


XTTHEN  I  am  made  blest  with  kisses  delicious, 

▼  T     And  lie  in  tliine  arms,  0  in  that  happy  season 
Thou  ne*er  must  discourse  of  Germany,  dearest, — 
It  spoils  my  digestion, — ^there's  plenty  of  reason. 

With  Germany  leave  me  in  peace,  I  implore  thee, 
Thou  must  not  torment  me  with  question  on  question 

Of  home  and  relations  anCE  manner  of  living, — 
There's  plenty  of  reason, — it  spoils  my  digestion. 

The  oaks  there  are  green,  and  blue  are  the  dear  eyes 
Of  German  women ;  they  sigh  as  they  please  on 

The  blisses  of  love  and  of  hope  and  religion, — 
It  spoils  my  digestion, — there's  plenty  of  reason. 

,  6. 
"TTTHILST  I  after  other  people 

▼  T    And  their  treasures  have  been  prying, 
And  with  ever-restless  yearning, 

At  strange  doors  of  love  been  spying, 

Probably  those  other  people 

Have  been  taking  their  own  pleasure 

Similarly,  and  been  ogling 
At  my  window  my  own  treasure. 

This  is  human  i    God  in  heaven 

In  our  every  action  guard  us ! 
God  in  heaven  give  us  blessings, 

And  with  happiness  reward  us  I 

7. 

OYES,  thou  art  my  ideal  forsooth, 
I've  often  confirmed  it  till  dizzy 
With  kisses  and  oaths  unnumber'd  in  truth  ;— 
To-day  I  however  am  busy. 

Betum  to-morrow  between  two  and  three, 

And  then  a  fresh-kindled  passion 
Shall  prove  my  love,  and  afterwards  we 

WiU  dine  in  a  firiendly  fashion. 

And  if  I  in  time  the  tickets  receive, 

Well  join  in  a  merry  revel, 
And  go  to  the  Opera,  where  I  believe 

They're  playing  Kobert  the  DeviL 


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110  Heine's  poems. 

A  wondrous  magic  play  is  here, 
With  devils*  loves  and  curses ; 

The  music  is  by  Meyerbeer, 
By  Scribe  the  wretched  verses. 

8. 

DISMISS  me  not,  although  thy  thirst 
The  pleasant  draught  has  still'd ; 
Some  three  months  longer  keep  me  on, 
Till  I  too  have  been  fillU 

If  thou  my  love  canst  not  remain, 

O  be  my  friend,  I  pray  ; 
For  when  one  has  outloved  one's  love. 

Friendship  may  have  its  way. 


THIS  wild  carnival  of  loving. 
This  delirium  of  our  bosoms 
Gomes  unto  an  end,  and  now  we 
Soberly  gape  on  each  other  I 

Drain'd  the  cup  is  to  the  bottom, 
Brimming  with  intoxication. 
Foaming,  glowing  to  the  margin ; 
Drained  the  cup  is  to  the  bottom. 

And  the  fiddles  too  are  silent. 
Which  for  dancing  gave  the  signal. 
Signal  for  the  dance  of  passion ; 
Yes,  the  fiddles  too  are  silent 

And  the  lamps  too  are  extinguished. 
Which  their  wild  light  shed  so  brightly 
On  the  masquerade  exciting ; 
Yes,  the  lamps  too  are  extinguish'd. 

And  to-morrow  comes  Ash-Wednesday , 
When  I'll  sign  upon  thy  forehead 
With  the  cross  of  ashes,  saying : 
"  Woman,  that  thou'rt  dust,  forget  not** 

10. 

OHOW  rapidly  develop 
From  mere  fugitive  sensations 
Passions  that  are  fierce  and  boundless, 
Tenderest  associations  1 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  Ill 

rewards  this  lady  grows  the  bias 

Of  my  heart  on  each  occasion, 
4nd  that  I'm  enamoured  of  her 

Has  become  my  firm  persuasion. 

Beauteous  is  her  spirit.     Truly 

Thus  I  leam  to  rise  superior 
To  the  overpowering  beauty 

Of  her  form  and  mere  exterior. 

Ah,  what  hips !  and,  ah,  what  forehead ! 

Ah,  what  nose  I     CoT]dd  aught  serener 
Be  than  this  sweet  smile  she's  wearing  ? 

And  how  noble  her  demeanour ! 

11. 

AH,  how  fair  art  thou,  whenever 
Thou  thy  mind  disclosest  sweetly. 
And  thy  language  with  the  grandest 
Sentiments  o'e^ows  discreetly  I 

When  thou  tell'st  me  how  thou  always 

Worthily  and  nobly  thoughtest ; 
How  unto  thy  pride  of  heart  thou 

Greatest  sacrifices  broughtest ! 

How  with  countless  millions  even 
Men  could  woo  and  win  thee  never ; 

Sooner  than  be  sold  for  money 

Thou  wouldst  quit  this  world  for  ever. 

And  I  stand  before  thee,  listening 

To  the  end  with  due  emotion ; 
Like  an  image  mute  of  faith,  I 

Fold  my  hands  with  meek  devotion. 

12. 

HAVE  no  fear,  dear  soul,  I  pray  thee, 
Thou  art  safe  here  evermore ; 
Fear  not  lest  they'll  take  away  thee, 
For  I'U  forthwith  bar  the  door. 

Though  the  wind  may  roar  around  us, 

It  will  do  no  mischief  here ; 
That  a  fire  may  not  confound  us, 

Let  us  put  ike  light  out,  dear  1 


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112  HEINE  S  POEMS. 

Let  me  in  mine  arm,  dear  Bmall  one, 
Thy  enchanting  neck  enfold ; 

In  the  absence  of  a  shawl,  one 
Grets  BO  yery  quickly  cold. 

8.  DIANA. 


THESE  fair  limbs,  of  size  so  massing 
'  Of  colossal  womanhood, 
Now  are,  in  a  yielding  mood, 
Under  my  embraces  passiye. 

Had  I,  with  unbridled  passion, 

Trusting  in  my  strength  drawn  near, 
I  had  soon  had  cause  for  fear ! 

She  had  thrashed  me  in  strange  fashion* 

How  her  bosom,  neck,  throat  charm  me 
(Higher  I  can  scarcely  see) ; 
Ere  alone  I'd  with  her  be, 

Pray  I  that  she  may  not  harm  me. 


TWAS  in  the  Bay  of  Biscay 
That  she  first  saw  the  light ; 
Two  kittens  in  the  cradle 

She  squeezed  to  death  outright. 

Across  the  Pyrenees  she 
With  feet  uncovered  ran ; 

Then  for  her  size  gigantic 
Was  shown  at  Perpignan. 

She's  now  the  grandest  dame  in 
The  Faubourg  Saint-Denis, 

Where  unto  small  Sir  William 
Some  thousand  pounds  costs  she. 


OFTEN  when  I  am  with  thee. 
Much-beloved  and  noble  lady, 
The  remembrance  steals  o'er  ma 
Of  Bologua's  market  shady. 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  Il3 

There  a  massive  fount  doth  stand — 
'Tis  the  Giants*  Fountain  pretty — 

With  a  Neptune,  by  the  hand 
Of  Giovanni  of  tiat  city. 

4.  HORTENSE. 


ONCE  I  thought  each  kiss  a  womao 
Gives  us,  or  receives  instead, 
By  some  influence  superhuman 
Was  from  old  predestined. 

I  both  took  and  gave  back  willing 

Kisses  then  as  earnestly 
As  if  I  were  but  fulfilling 

Actions  of  necessity. 

Kisses  are  superfluous, — this  I 
Have  discovered  on  life's  stage. 

And  with  small  concern  now  kiss  I, 
Heedless  of  the  surplusage. 


BESIDE  the  comer  of  the  street 
We  stood  in  fond  communion 
For  full  an  hour,  and  talked  about 
Oilr  spirits'  loving  union. 

We  loved  each  other — this  we  said 
A  hundred  times  repeating ; 

Beside  the  comer  of  the  street 
We  stood,  and  went  on  greeting. 

The  Goddess  of  Occasion,  brisk 
As  waiting  maids,  and  sprightly, 

Pass'd  by  that  way  and  saw  us  stand. 
And  smiled,  and  went  on  lightly. 


IN  all  my  dreams  by  daytime. 
In  all  my  watchings  nightly, 
Thy  sweet  delicious  laughter 
^  tings  through  my  spirit  ligb^ly. 


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114  Heine's  POESftt. 

Bemember  st  Montmorency, 
Where,  on  the  donkey  riding 

Thou  fell'st  among  the  thistles, 
From  off  the  saddle  gliding  r 

The  ass  stood  still,  the  thistles 

Demurely  looking  after, — 
I  never  shall  forget,  love, 

Thy  sweet  delicious  laughter. 

4. 

{She  speaks,) 

IN  the  garden  fair  a  tree  i^tand% 
And  an  apple  hangeth  there, 
And  around  the  trunk  a  serpent 
Coils  himself,  and  I  can  ne'er 
From  the  serpent's  eyes  enchanting 

Turn  away  my  troubled  sight, 

And  he  whispers  words  alluring, 

And  enthrals  me  with  delight 

(The  other  one  speaks,) 

'Tis  the  fruit  of  life  thou  spyest, — 

Its  delicious  flavour  taste, 
That  thy  life  until  thou  diest 

May  not  be  for  ever  waste ! 
Darling  dove,  sweet  child,  no  sighing ! 

Qui(My  taste,  and  never  fear ; 
Follow  my  advice,  relying 

On  thy  aunt's  sage  counsel,  dear 

5. 

ON  my  newly-tuned  guitar  I 
Play  new  tunes  thai  seem  much  fitter 
Old  the  text  is,  for  the  words  are 
Solomon's :  A  woman's  bitter. 

To  her  husband  she  is  faithless. 

And  she  treats  her  friend  with  malice; 

Wormwood  are  the  last  remaining 
Drops  in  love's  once-golden  chalice. 


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BOOK  OF  SONOS.  115 

TeU  me,  is  the  ancient  legend 

Of  the  curse  of  sin  no  libel  ? 
Did  the  serpent  bring  it  on  thee, 

As  recorded  in  the  Bible  ? 

Creeping  on  the  earth,  the  serpent 

Lurks  in  every  bush  around  thee, 
Still,  as  formerly,  caresses, 

And  her  hisses  still  confound  theo. 

Ah,  how  cold  and  dark  'tis  growing ! 

Bound  the  sun  the  ravens  hover 
Croakingly,  and  love  and  rapture 

Now  for  evermore  are  over. 

6. 

THE  bliss  that  thou  didst  falsely  pledge 
For  but  a  short  time  cheated ; 
Thine  image,  like  a  vision  false. 
Soon  from  my  bosom  fleeted. 

The  morning  came,  the  mist  soon  fled 

Before  the  sun's  rays  splendid  ; 
And  wellnigh  ere  it  had  commenced, 

Our  passing  fondness  ended. 

5.  CLARISSA. 
1. 

ALL  my  charming  loving  oflfers 
Thou  art  eagerly  declining ; 
If  I  say:  "Is  this  refusal?" 
Thou  at  once  beginnest  whining. 

Seldom  pray  I,  but  now  hear  me, 
Gracious  Qod  I  O  help  this  maiden ! 

Dry  her  sweet  tears,  and  enlighten 
Her  poor  brains  so  sorrow-laden ! 


Iff  HERESOEVEB  thou  mayst  wander, 
T  T    Thou  dost  every  hour  behold  me, 
And  I  love  thee  all  the  fonder, 

When  thou  dost  rebuke  and  eould  meu 


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116  Heine's  POEMS. 

Charminpr  malice  will  ensnare  me. 
While  I  hate  a  kindly  action ; 

^And  the  surest  way  to  scare  me, 
Is  to  love  me  to  distraction. 

3. 

MAY  the  devil  take  thy  mother 
And  thy  father,  for  their  crn^ 
Conduct  at  the  play,  in  hiding 
Thee  from  me,  my  precious  jewel  I 

There  they  sat,  their  spreading  dressea 
Leaving  but  few  spaces  only 

Through  the  which  to  spy  thee  sitting 
In  the  box's  rear,  all  lonely. 

There  they  sat,  and  saw  two  lovers 
Both  destroy'd,  with  eyes  admiring ; 

And  they  clapp'd  a  loud  approval 
When  they  saw  them  bofli  expiring. 


GO  not  through  the  naughty  quarters 
Where  the  pretty  eyes  are  living ; 
Ah,  they  fain  would  spare  their  lightnings 
With  a  semblance  of  forgiving. 

From  the  high  bow-window  looking 
In  a  loving  way  they  greet  thee, 

Smiling  kindly  (death  and  devil !) 
Sisterlike  their  glances  meet  thee. 

But  thou*rt  on  thy  way  already, 
And  in  vain  is  all  thy  striving ; 

Thou  wilt  have  a  very  breastful 
Of  distress,  when  home  arriving. 


IT  comes  too  late,  thy  present  smiling', 
It  comes  too  late,  thy  present  sigh  t 
The  feelings  all  long  since  have  perished 
That  thou  didst  spurn  so  cruelly. 


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BOOK  OF   SONOS.  117 

Too  late  has  come  thy  love  responsiye, 
My  heart  thou  vainly  seek'st  to  stir 

With  burning  looks  of  loye,  all  falling 
Like  sunbeams  on  a  sepulchre. 

«  «  « 

This  would  I  learn :  when  life  is  ended, 

O  whither  doth  our  spirit  go  ? 
Where  is  the  flame  when  once  extinguished  ? 

The  wind,  when  it  hath  ceased  to  blow  ? 

6. 

WOUNDED,  in  distress,  and  sickly, 
On  a  lovdly  summer's  morrow 
Men  I  fly,  and  bury  quickly 
In  the  wood  my  bitter  sorrow. 

As  I  move,  in  mute  compassion 

All  the  noisy  birds  are  vying ; 
At  my  grief  in  wondrous  fashion 

Each  dark  linden-tree  is  sighing. 

In  the  vale  I  sadly  sit  on 

Some  green  bank,  sweet  balm  exhaling : 
"  Kitten  I  O  my  pretty  kitten  1" 

And  the  hills  repeat  my  wailing. 

Kitten  1  O  my  pretty  kitten  I 

Why  delightest  thou  to  do  ill  ? 
Sadly  is  my  poor  heart  smitten 

By  thy  tiger-talons  cruel. 

For  my  heart,  grown  stem  and  sadden'd. 

Long  had  been  to  joy  a  stranger. 
Till  by  new  love  I  was  gladden'd 

At  thy  sight,  and  fear'd  no  danger. 

Thou  in  secret  seem'dst  to  mew  thus : 

''  Have  no  fear  of  being  bitten ; 
"  Prythee  trust  me  when  I  sue  thust 

"  I'm  a  very  gentle  kitten." 


WfflLST  sweet  Phaomel  in  airy 
Woods  at  random  sings  and  wildly, 
Thou  preferrest  the  canary 
DoobklesSy  as  it  flutters  mildly. 


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118  Heine's  poems. 

In  the  cage  I  see  thee  feeding 

This  small  bird,  so  tame  and  yellow. 

And  it  picks  thy  fingers,  pleading 
For  some  sugar,  pr^y  fellow  I 

Charming  is  the  scene  and  moving  t 

Angels  must  enjoy  the  notion ! 
I  myself,  with  look  approving. 

Drop  a  tear  of  deep  emotion. 

8. 

WITH  wedding  gifts  the  spring  has  arrived. 
With  music  and  exultation ; 
It  brings  the  bridegroom  and  the  bride 
Its  hearty  congratulation. 

It  brings  its  violets,  rosebuds  fair, 
And  jasmine  and  herbs  sweetnscented, 

And  for  the  bride  asparagus  too, — 
The  bridegroom's  with  salad  contented. 

9. 

GOD  protect  thee  from  o'erheating^ 
And  thy  heart  from  palpitation. 
Keep  thee  from  excessive  eating, 
Aiid  excessive  perspiration. 

As  upon  thy  day  of  marriage 

May  thy  love  be  ever  blessed ! 
Ne'er  the  bridal  yoke  disparage ! 

Be  thy  frame  with  health  possessed ! 

10. 

PRETTY  maid,  if  so  inclined. 
Thou  mayst  now  thus'^hink  anent  me: 
This  man's  conduct  is  unkind. 

For  he's  seeking  to  torment  me ; — 
Me,  who  never  said  a  word 

That  could  possibly  offend  him ; 

Who, 'when  others'  blame  I  heard. 

Did  my  utmost  to  befriend  him. 

Me,  who  had  resolved  in  fact 

By-and-by  to  love  him  dearly, 
Had  he  not  begun  to  act 

As  if  ho  were  frantic  nearly ! 


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BOOK  OF  flOKGS.  119 


11. 


HOW  thou  snarlest,  laugliest,  broodeet 
How  thou  in  ill  humour  twistest, 
When  thou,  to  all  love  a  stranger, 
Yet  on  jealousy  existest ! 

'Tis  not  red  and  fragrant  roses 

Thou  dost  smell  and  love  so  dearly ; 

No,  amongst  the  thorns  thou  sniffest, 
Till  they  scratch  thy  nose  severely. 

6.  YOLANTE  AND  MARY. 
1. 

BOTH  these  ladies  know  by  instinct 
How  a  poet  well  to  treat, 
For  they  ask'd  me  and  my  genius 
Luncheon  with  them  once  to  eat. 

Ah  I  the  soup  was  quite  delicious. 
And  the  wine  was  old  and  rare. 

And  the  game  was  really  heavenly, 
And  well-larded  was  the  hare. 

They  of  poetry  kept  talking, 

Till  I  had  enough  at  last, 
And  I  thank'd  them  for  the  honour 

Of  this  very  kind  repast. 

2. 

XT71TH  which  shall  I  become  enamour'd, 

▼  f     Since  both  tire  loveable  and  mild  ? 
The  mother's  still  a  pretty  woman. 
The  daughter  is  a  pretty  child. 

The  white  and  inexperienced  menr^"'*'* 

Are  very  pleasant  to  the  view. 
And  yet  the  genial  eyes  that  ansTi 

Our  tenderness  are  charming  Uy 

My  heart  the  jackass  grey  resembl 
Who  when  'twixt  two  hay- bund 

Eyes  them  with  hesitation,  doubti] 
Which  of  the  two  the  best  will 


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120  HEIMEIS  POElfS. 


THE  botdes  are  empty,  the  breakfast  was  good, 
The  ladies  are  gay  and  in^assion'd ; 
They  open  their  corsets  in  right  merry  mood, 
Methinks  they  with  point  lace  are  fashion'd. 

Their  bosoms  how  fair  I  Their  shoulders  how  white* 

My  heart  is  soon  trembling  all  over ; 
They  presently  jump  on  the  bed  with  delight, 

And  hide  themselves  imder  the  cover. 

The  curtains  around  them  before  long  they  pull. 
And  snore  away,  free  from  intrusion ; 

I  stand  in  the  chamber  alone,  like  a  fool. 
And  stare  at  the  bed  in  ccmfusion. 

4. 

NOW  that  I'm  fast  growing  older, 
Youth's  by  keener  fire  replaced, 
And  my  arm,  becoming  bolder, 
Circles  many  a  loving  waist. 

Though  at  first  they  were  aflfrighted, 

Yet  they  soon  were  reconcil'd ; 
Modest  doubts  and  wrath  united 

Were  o'ercome  by  flattery  mild. 

Yet  the  best  of  all  is  wanting 

When  I  taste  my  victory ; 
Can  it  be  my  youth's  enchanting 

Bashful  weak  stupidity  ? 


rriHIS  tricolour'd  flow'r  now  worn  in 
X    In  my  breast,  to  show  I'm  free, 
Proving  that  my  heart  freebom  is, 
And  a  foe  to  slavery. 

Sweet  Queen  Mary,  who  thy  quarters 
In  my  heart  hast  fix'd,  pray  list : 

Many  of  earth's  fairest  daughters 

There  have  reign'd,  then  been  dismissed 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  121 

7.  EMMA. 
1. 

^1  stands  as  firm  as  a  tree  stem, 
In  heat  and  tempest  and  frost; 
His  toes  in  the  ground  are  planted, 
His  arms  are  heavenward  toss*d. 

Thus  long  is  Bagiratha  tortured, 
And  Brama  his  torments  would  end ; 

He  makes  the  mighty  G^ges 
Down  from  the  h^ivens  descend. 

But  I,  my  loved  one,  am  vainly 
Tormented  and  stricken  with  woe  ; 

From  out  of  thine  heavenly  eyelids 
No  drops  of  pity  e*er  flow. 


FOUR-and-twenty  hours  I  still  must 
Wait,  to  see  my  hliss  complete, 
As  her  sidelong  glances  tell  me, 
Glances,  0  how  dazzling  sweet ! 

Language  is  but  inexpressive, 

Words  are  awkward  and  in  vain ; 
Soon  as  they  are  said,  the  pretty 
Butterfly  flies  off  again. 

But  a  look  may  last  for  ever, 
And  with  joy  may  fill  thy  breast, 

Making  it  like  some  wide  heaven, 
Full  of  starry  rapture  blest. 


NOT  one  solitary  kiss 
After  months  of  loving  passic 
So  my  mouth  must  still  continue 
Dry,  in  very  wretched  fashion. 

Happiness  seem'd  once  at  hand, 
And  her  breath  I  e'en  felt  nigh  i 

But  without  my  lips  e'er  touching, 
She,  alas  I  soon  fleeted  by  me. 


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122  hejne's  poems. 


I^MMA,  for  my  eatisfiftotioii 
li   Say  if  Tm  distracted  driyen. 
By  my  love,  or  is  love  only 
The  result  of  my  distraction  ? 

Ah !  I'm  tortured,  charming  Emma, 
Not  alone  by  my  mad  loving, 
Not  alone  by  loving  madness, 

But  besides  by  this  dilemma. 


WHEN  I'm  with  thee,  strife  and  need ! 
So  I  on  my  travels  started ; 
Yet  my  life,  when  from  thee  parted. 
Is  no  life,  but  death  indeed. 

Pondering  all  the  livelong  night, 

I  'twixt  death  and  hell  lay  choosing — 
Ah,  methinks  this  strife  confusing 

Now  has  driVn  me  mad  outright  I 

6. 

FAST  is  creeping  on  us  dreary 
Night  with  many  a  ghostly  shape. 
And  our  souls  are  growing  weary, 
And  we  at  each  other  gape. 

Thou  art  old  and  I  still  older. 

And  our  spring  has  ceased  to  bloom  ; 
Thou  art  cold,  and  I  still  colder, 
;  Aii^th'  approach  of  winter's  gloom. 

4^^e  end,  how  all  is  sadden'd ! 

After  love's  sweet  cares  are  past, 
Cares  draw  nigh,  by  love  ungkdden'd. 

After  life  comes  death  at  last. 

8.  FEEDERICA. 
1. 

O  LEAVE  Berlin,  with  its  thick-lying  sand. 
Weak  tea,  and  men  who  seem  so  much  to  know 
That  they  both  God,  themselves,  and  all  below 
With  Hegel's  reason  only  understand. 


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BOOK  OF  soNas.  123 

O  come  to  India,  to  the  sunny  land 

Where  flowers  ambrosial  their  sweet  fragrance  throw 
Where  pilgrim  troops  on  tow'rd  the  Ganges  go 

With  reverence,  in  white  robes,  a  festal  band. 

There,  where  the  palm-trees  wave,  the  billows  smile, 
And  on  the  sacred  bank  the  lotos-tree 

Soars  up  to  Indra's  castle  blue, — yes  there. 

There  will  I  kneel  to  thee  in  trusting  style, 
And  press  against  thy  foot,  and  say  to  thee : 
^'  Madam,  thou  art  the  fairest  of  the  fair  T' 


THE  Ganges  roars ;  amid  the  foliage  see 
The  sharp  eyes  of  the  antelope,  who  springs 
Disdainfully  along ;  their  colour'd  wings 
The  peacocks  as  they  move,  show  haughtily. 

Deep  from  the  bosom  of  the  sunny  lea 

Eises  a  newborn  race  of  flowers,  sweet  things ; 
With  yeaming-madden'd  voice  Cocila  sings — 

Yes,  thou  art  fair,  no  woman's  like  to  thee  I 

God  Cama  *  lurks  in  all  thy  features  fair, 
He  dwells  within  thy  bosom's  tents  so  white. 

And  breathes  to  thee  the  sweetest  songs  he  knows. 

Upon  thy  lips  Yassant  f  has  made  his  lair, 
I  flud  witiiin  thine  eyes  new  worlds  of  light, 
In  my  own  world  no  more  I  And  repose. 

3. 

THE  Gkmges  roars :  the  mighty  Ganges  swells, 
The  Himalaya  glows  in  evening's  light, 
And  from  the  banyan-forest's  gloomy  night 
The  elephantine  herd  breaks  fortii  and  yells. 

O  for  a  type  to  show  how  she  excels ! 
A  type  of  thee,  so  lovely  to  the  sight, 
Thee  the  incomparable,  good  and  bright, 

So  that  sweet  rapture  in  my  bosom  dwells. 

*  The  Hindoo  god  correBpondinfi  to  Cupid.  f  Bprini?. 


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124  Heine's  poems. 

In  vain  fcLon  see'st  me  seek  for  types,  and  prate, — 
See'st  me  with  feelings  struggle,  and  with  rhyme, 
And,  ah,  thon  smilest  at  my  pangs  of  love  1 

But  smile !     For  when  thou  smil'st,  Gandarvas  straight 
Seize  on  the  sweet  guitar,  and  all  the  time 
Sing  in  the  golden  sunny  halls  above. 

9.  CATHERINE. 


A  BEAUTEOUS  star  arises  o'er  my  night, 
A  star  which  smiles  down  on  me  comJort  bright, 
And  new  life  pledges  to  supply, — 
O  do  not  lie  1 

As  leaps  to  the  moon  the  sea  with  sullen  roar. 
So  gladly,  wildly,  doth  my  spirit  soar 
Up  to  thy  blissful  light  on  high, — 
O  do  not  lie  I 


w 


ILL  you  not  be  presented  to  her?" 
The  duchess  whispered  once  to  me. 
"  On  no  account!  for  I  to  woo  her 
"  Methinks  have  too  much  modesty." 

How  gracefully  she  stands  before  me  I 

I  fancy,  when  I  near  her  go, 
A  newborn  life  is  stealing  o'er  me, 

With  newborn  joy  and  newborn  woe, 

I'm  from  her  kept  as  though  by  anguish, 
While  yearning  drives  me  to  draw  near; 

Her  eyes,  as  they  so  sweetly  languish. 
The  wild  stars  of  my  fete  appear. 

Her  brow  is  clear,  yet  in  the  distance 
The  fatiu^e  lightning  gathers  there. 

The  storm  which,  spite  of  all  resistance. 
My  spirit's  deepest  seat  will  tear. 

Her  mouth  is  lovely,  but  with  terror 

I  see  beneath  the  roses  hiss 
The  serpents  which  will  prove  my  error, 

With  honied  scorn  and  treach'roos  kin 


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BOOK  OF  SONOS.  125 

Impell'd  by  yearning,  still  more  near  1 
Draw  to  the  dear  bat  dangerous  place : 

Her  darling  voice  already  hear  I — 
Bright  flames  her  every  sentence  grace. 

"  Sir,  what's  the  name  " — I  hear  her  utter 

These  words — "  Of  her  whose  voice  I  heard  ?" 

I  only  answer  with  a  stutter : 

"  Madam,  I  did  not  hear  one  word !" 


"^T2S,  I  now,  a  poor  magician, 
X    Like  sage  Merlin,  am  held  fast 

In  my  magic  ring  at  last, 
In  disconsolate  condition. 

At  her  feet  imprisoned  sweetly 
I  am  lying  all  the  while, 
Gazing  on  her  eyes'  sweet  smile. 

And  the  hours  are  passing  fleetly. 

Thus,  for  hours,  days,  weeks  behold  mo  I 
Like  a  vision  time  has  fled. 
Scarcely  know  I  what  T  said, 

And  I  know  not  what  she  told  me. 

Just  as  if  her  lips  were  dearly 
Press'd  to  mine,  beyond  control 
I  am  stirr'd,  till  in  my  soul 

I  can  trace  the  flames  fiill  clearly. 


THOU  lie'st  in  my  arms  so  gladly. 
So  gladly  thou  lie'st  on  my  heart  t 
I  am  thy  one  sole  heaven. 
My  dearest  star  thou  art 

The  foolish  race  of  mortals 

Is  swarming  far  below  ; 
They're  shouting  and  storming  and  scoldingi 

(And  each  one  is  right,  I  well  know,) 

Their  cap  and  bells  they  jingle, 

And  quarrel  without  a  cause, 
And  with  their  heavy  club-sticks 

They  break  each  other's  jaws. 


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126  hbine's  poems. 

How  happy  are  we,  my  darling. 

That  we  bo  £ur  away  are ; 
Thou  hidest  in  thy  heaven 

Thy  head,  my  dearest  star  I 

5. 

ILOYE  such  white  and  snowy  memben, 
The  thin  veil  of  a  spirit  tender, 
Wild  and  large  eyes,  a  brow  encompassed 
With  flowing  locks  of  swarthy  splendour. 

Thou  art  indeed  the  very  person 

Whom  I  in  every  land  have  sought  for, 

While  girls  like  thee  a  man  of  honour 

Like  me  have  always  cared  and  thought  for. 

The  yery  man  thou  stand'st  in  need  of 
Is  found  in  me.    At  first  thoult  pay  me 

Bichly  with  sentiments  and  kisses, 
And  then,  as  usual,  wilt  betray  me. 


I^HE  spring's  already  at  the  gate 
-    With  looks  my  care  beguifing ; 
The  country  round  appearefii  straight 
A  flower-garden  smiling. 

My  darling  sitteth  by  my  side, 

In  carriage  onward  fleeting ; 
She  looks  on  me  with  tender  pride. 

Her  heart,  I  feel  it  beating. 

What  warbling,  what  fragrance  the  sun's  light  awakes  1 

Like  jewels  ^e  verdure  is  gleaming. 
His  snowy-blossoming  head  soon  shakes 

The  sapling  with  joyous  seeming. 

The  flowers  peep  forth  from  the  earth  to  see. 

With  longing  in  every  feature, 
The  lovely  woman  won  by  me, 

And  me,  the  happy  creature. 

O  transient  bliss !    Across  the  com 

To-morrow  will  pass  the  sickle, 
The  beauteous  spring  wither,  and  I  all  forlorn 

Be  left  by  the  woman  fickle. 


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BOOK  OF  SONQS.  127 


LATELY  dreamt  1 1  was  walking 
In  the  happy  realms  of  heaven, 
Walking  with  thee,  for  without  thee, 
Heaven  itself  would  be  a  hell. 

There  I  saw  th'  Elect  together. 
All  the  righteous  and  the  godly, 
Who  had  for  their  souls'  salvation 
Mortified  on  earth  their  bodies. 

Fathers  of  the  Church,  apostles, 

Capuchins  and  holy  hermits. 

Strange  old  fellows,  some  strange  young  one&— 

'Twas  the  latter  look*d  the  ugliest  I 

Very  long  and  saintly  faces, 
Ample  bald  pates,  also  grey  beards 
(Various  Jews  were  of  the  number) 
Pass'd  us,  looking  stem  and  solemn. 

Not  one  look  upon  thee  throwing, 
Although  thou,  my  pretty  darling, 
On  my  arm  wert  hanging,  toying. 
Toying,  smiling,  and  coquetting. 

One  alone  upon  thee  look'd, 
And  he  was  the  only  handsome, 
Handsome  man  of  sAi  the  number ; 
And  majestic  were  his  featuifes. 

Bound  his  lips  was  human  kindness, 
In  his  eyes  &vine  repose, 
And  he  mildly  gazed  upon  thee 
As  upon  the  Magdalene. 

Ah  !  I  know,  he  meant  it  kindly, 
None  was  e*er  so  pure  and  noble. 
But  I,  I  was  notwithstanding 
Moved  as  by  an  envioas  feeling; 

And,  I  must  confess,  I  found  it 
Far  from  pleasant  up  in  heaven — 
May  God  pardon  me  I    Our  Saviour 
Jesus  Christ  I  deem'd  intrusive 


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128  heike's  posms. 

8. 

EACH  person  to  this  feast  enchanting 
His  mistress  takes,  and  with  delight 
Eoams  in  the  blooming  summer  night. 
I  wander  alone,  for  my  loved  one  is  wanting. 

Like  some  sick  man,  I  wander  all  lonely, 
And  far  from  the  mirth  and  dancing  go, 
The  music  sweet  and  the  lamps'  bright  glow ; 

My  thoughts  are  away,  and  in  England  only. 

I  pluck  the  pinks  and  I  pluck  the  roses. 

Distractedly  and  full  of  woe. 

And  know  not  on  whom  the  flowers  to  bestow ; 
My  heart  soon  withers  along  with  the  posies. 

9. 

LONG  songless  and  oppressed  with  sadness, 
I  now  compose  again  with  yearning  I 
Like  tears  that  from  us  burst  with  madness 
My  songs  are  suddenly  returning. 

Again  I  chant,  with  voice  melodious, 
Of  great  love  and  still  greater  sorrow ; 

Of  hearts  which,  to  each  other  odious 
To-day,  when  parted  break  to-morrow. 

I  ofttimes  think  I  feel  the  greeting 
Of  German  oak  trees  waving  o'er  me, 

With  whispers  of  a  glad  re-meeting — 
A  dream  1  they  vanish  from  before  me. 

I  ofttimes  think  I  hear  the  singing 

Of  German  nightingales  once  cherish'd ; 

Sweetly  their  notes  are  round  me  clinging  - 
A  dream  I  the  vision  soon  has  perish'd. 

Where  are  the  roses  whose  delicious 

Perfume  once  bless'd  me  ?     EvOTy  blossom 

Long  since  has  died  I     With  taint  pernicious 
Their  ghostly  scent  still  haimts  my  bosom. 


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BOOK   OF   SONGS.  129 

10.  SONGS  OF  CREATION. 

1. 
OD  at  first  the  sun  created, 


Then  each  nightly  constellation ; 
From  the  sweat  of  his  own  forehead 
Oxen  were  hh  next  creation. 

Wild  beasts  he  created  later, 

Lions  with  their  paws  so  furious ; 

In  the  image  of  the  lion 

Made  he  kittens  small  and  curious. 

Afterwards,  the  wilds  to  people, 
Man  to  spring  to  being  bade  he, 

And  in  man's  attractive  image 
Interesting  monkeys  made  he. 

Satan  saw.it,  full  of  laughter : 
*'  Copies  from  himself  he's  taking  t 

"  In  the  image  of  his  oxen 

"  Calves  he  finally  is  making.'* 

2. 

TO  the  devil  spake  the  Lord  thus : 
Copies  of  myself  I'm  taking  ; 
After  sun  come  constellations. 
After  oxen,  calves  I'm  making. 

After  lions  with  their  furious 
Paws,  I'm  making  kittens  curious, 
After  men  come  monkeys  clever : 
Thou  canst  nothing  make,  however. 

8. 

IT/IADE  for  my  glory  and  edification 
Men,  lions,  and  oxen,  and  sunlight  splendid  ; 
But  calves,  cats,  monkeys,  and  each  constellation 
For  nought  but  my  own  delight  I  intended. 

4. 

AlAiTH  one  short  week  of  preparation 
T  T    The  whole  of  the  world  was  made  by  mo  i 
And  yet  I  worked  out  the  plan  of  creation 
For  thousands  of  years  full  thoughtfully. 

K 

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180  Heine's  fOEMS. 

(Creation  itself  is  a  mere  act  of  motion 
That's  easily  done  in  a  yery  short  time ; 

And  yet  the  plan,  the  primary  notion, — 
Tis  that  that  proves  the  artist  sublime. 

Three  hundred  long  years  have  I  been  taking 
In  solving  the  question  by  slow  degrees 

As  to  which  was  the  proper  manner  of  making 
Both  Doctors  of  Law  and  little  fleas. 


ON  the  sixth  day  spake  the  Lord  thus : 
I  have  finished  Anally 
All  this  vast  and  fair  creation, 
And  that  all  is  good,  I  see. 

How  the  sun*s  rays,  golden-roselike. 
O'er  the  ocean  brightly  gleam ! 

Every  tree  is  green  and  glittering, 
And  enameU'd  all  things  seem. 

On  the  plain  yon  lambkins  sporting 

Are  like  alabaster  white ; 
0  how  natural  and  perfect 

Nature  seem^th  to  the  sight  t 

Earth  and  heaven  alike  are  teeming 

With  my  glorious  majesty, 
And  through  long  and  endless  ages 

Man  will  praise  and  worship  me. 

6. 

THE  stuff  out  of  which  a  poem  is  wrought 
Is  not  to  be  suck'd  from  the  finger ; 
No  God  created  the  world  from  nought 
Any  more  than  an  earthly  singer. 

Twas  mud  primeval  that  form'd  the  source 
Whence  flie  body  of  man  I  created. 

And  from  the  ribs  of  man  in  due  course 
Fair  woman  I  separated. 

The  heavens  I  form'd  from  out  of  the  earth. 
And  angels  from  women  completed  ; 

The  raw  material  first  gets  its  worth 
From  being  artistically  treated. 


1 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  131 


7. 


THE  chiefest  reason  why  I  made 
The  earth,  I  will  confess  with  gladness : 
Within  my  soul,  like  fiery  madness, 
A  btiming  call  to  do  so  play'd. 

Illness  was  the  especial  ground 

Of  my  creative  inclination ; 

I  might  recover  by  creation, 
Creation  made  me  once  more  sound. 

11.  ABBOAD. 
1. 

FEOM  place  to  place  thou'rt  wandering  still. 
Thou  scarcely  knowest  why ; 
A  gentle  word  the  wind  doth  filX — 
Thou  look*st  round  wond'ringly. 

My  loved  one,  who  was  left  behind, 

Is  calling  softly  now : 
*  Eetum,  I  love  thee,  O  be  kind, 

"  My  only  joy  art  thou  T* 

But  on,  still  on,  no  peace,  no  rest, 

Thou  never  still  mayst  be ; 
What  thou  of  yore  didst  love  the  best, 

Thou  ne'er  again  shalt  see. 


THOU  art  to-day  of  sadder  seeming 
Than  thou  hast  been  for  long  before; 
Mute  tears  upon  thy  cheeks  are  gleaming, 
Thy  sighs  wax  louder  more  and  more. 

Of  thy  far  home  long  vanished  is  it 
That  thou  art  thinking,  full  of  pain  ? 

Wouldst  thou  not  joyfully  revisit 
Thy  much-loved  &therland  again  ? 

Art  thinking  now  of  her  who  sweetly 
With  dny  rage  enchanted  thee  ? 

Vex'd  by  her  oft,  ye  soon  completely 
Were  reoonciled,  and  laugh'd  w;th  jclee 


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1'62  hbine's  poems. 

Art  thinking  of  tlie  friends  whom  yearning 

Impell'd  to  fall  npon  thy  breast  ? 
Within  the  heart  the  thoughts  were  burning. 

And  yet  the  lips  rei](iain'd  at  rest. 
Or  of  the  sister  and  the  mother 

Art  thinking,  who  approved  thy  snit  ? 
Methinks  within  thy  breast,  good  brother, 

Wild  passions  fast  are  growing  mnte. 
Of  the  fair  garden  art  thou  thinking, 

Its  birds  and  trees,  where  love's  young  dream 
Ofttinies  sustain'd  thy  spirits  sinking, 

And  hope  shone  forth  with  trembling  beam  ? 
'Tis  late.     The  snow  has  fallen  thickly, 

Bright  night  illumes  the  humid  mass ; 
I  now  must  go,  and  hasten  quickly 

To  dress  for  company, — Alas  I 

& 

OF  my  fair  fatherland  I  once  was  proud ; 
Beside  the  stream 
The  oak  soar'd  high,  the  violets  gently  bow'd ; 

It  was  a  dream. 
German  the  kisses  were,  in  German  too 

(Sweet  then  did  seem 
The  sound)  they  spake  the  words :  "  Yes,  I  love  you  f- 
It  was  a  dream. 

12.  TRAGEDY. 
1. 

OFLY  with  me,  and  be  my  wife, 
And  to  my  heart  for  comfort  come ! 
Far,  far  away  hence  be  my  hearty 

Thy  fatherland  and  father's  h  me. 
If  thou'lt  not  go,  I  here  will  die, 

And  all  alone  abandon  thee ; 
And  if  thou  in  thy  father's  home 
Dost  stay,  thou'lt  seem  abroad  to  be. 

2. 
(A  genuine  national  song,  heard  by  Heine  on  the  Rhine.) 

THEEE  fell  a  frost  in  a  night  of  spring, 
It  fell  on  the  tender  flowerets  blue, 
They  all  soon  wither'd  and  faded. 


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BOOK  OF  SONOS.  183 

A  youth  once  loved  a  maiden  full  well, 
They  secretly  fled  away  from  the  house, 
Unlmown  to  father  and  mother. 

They  wandered  here  and  they  wander'd  there, 
And  neither  joy  nor  star  could  they  find, 
And  so  they  droop 'd  and  they  perish'd. 

3. 

UPON  her  grave  a  linden  is  springing, 
Where  birds  and  the  evening  breeze  are  singing 
And  on  the  green  sward  under  it 
The  miller's  boy  and  his  sweetheart  sit. 

The  winds  are  blowing  so  softly  and  fleetly^ 
The  birds  are  singing  so  sadly  and  sweetly, 
The  prattling  lovers  are  mute  by-and-by, 
They  weep  and  they  know  not  the  reason  why. 

13.  THE  TANNHAUSER. 

A  Legend. 

(Written  in  1836.) 

1. 

OALL  good  Christians,  be  on  your  guard. 
Lest  Satan's  wiles  ensnare  you! 
I'll  sing  you  the  song  of  the  Taimhauser  bold. 
That  ye  may  duly  beware  you. 

The  noble  Tannhauser,  a  valiant  knight, 

For  love  and  pleasure  yearning. 
To  the  Venus'  mount  traveU'd,  and  there  he  dwelt 

Seven  years  without  returning. 

*'  Dear  Venus,  lovely  mistress,  farewell ! 

*'  Though  much  thou  mayst  enchant  me, 
"  No  longer  will  I  tarry  with  thee, 

"  Permission  to  leave  now  grant  me." 

'*  Tannhauser,  dear  and  noble  knight, 

"  To-day  you  have  kept  from  kissing ; 
**  So  kiss  me  quickly  and  tell  me  true, 

'*  What  is  there  in  me  you  find  missing  ? 

^  Have  I  each  day  the  sweetest  wine 

"  Not  pour'd  out  for  you  gaily  ? 
"  And  have  I  not  always  crown'd  your  head 

**  With  fragrant  roses  daily  ?" — 


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131  heinb's  poescs. 

"  Dear  Venus,  lovely  mistress,  in  tmth 

"  My  soul  no  longer  finds  pleasing 
"  These  endless  kisses  and  luscious  wine, — 

'^  I  long  for  something  that's  teasing. 

"  Too  much  have  we  jested,  too  much  have  we  laugh'd, 

"  My  heart  for  tears  has  long  panted ; 
•'  Each  rose  on  my  head  I  fain  would  see 

"  By  pointed  thorns  supplanted." — 

"  Tannhauser,  dear  and  noble  knight, 

"  You  fain  would  vex  and  grieve  me ; 
*'  An  oath  you  have  sworn  a  thousand  iomcs 

"  That  you  would  never  leave  me. 

*'  Come,  let  us  into  the  chamber  go, 

"  To  taste  of  love's  rapture  and  gladness, 

"  And  there  my  fair  and  lily-white  form 
''  Shall  drive  away  thy  sadness." — 

"  Dear  Venus,  lovely  mistress,  thy  charms 

"  Will  bloom  for  ever  and  ever ; 
"  As  many  already  have  glow'd  for  thee, 

''  So  men  will  forget  thee  never  I 

"  But  when  I  think  of  the  heroes  and  gods 

"  Who  erst  have  taken  their  pleasure 
"  In  clasping  thy  feir  and  lily-white  form 

''  My  anger  knows  no  measure. 

'•  Thy  feir  and  lily-white  figure  with  dread 

"  Is  filling  me  even  this  minute, 
"  When  thinking  hew  many  in  after  times 

**  Will  still  t^e  pleasure  in  it!" — 

'•  Tannhauser,  dear  and  noble  knight, 

'*  You  should  not  utter  such  treason  ; 
"  'Twere  better  to  beat  me,  as  you  have  beforo 

'*  Oft  done  for  many  a  season. 

"  Twere  better  to  beat  me,  than  such  harsh  words 

*'  Of  insult  thus  to  have  spoken, 
**  Whereby,  O  Christian  ungrateful  and  cold, 

**  The  pride  in  my  bosom  is  broken. 

**  Because  I  love  you  so  much,  I  forgivo 

**  Your  evil  words,  thankless  mortal  ;^ 
**  Farewell,  I  grant  you  permission  to  leave, 

''  I'll  open  myself  the  portaL" 


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BOOK  OP  SONGS.  136 

2. 

IN  Eome,  in  the  holy  city  of  Eome, 
With  singing  and  ringing  and  blowing 
A  grand  procession  is  moving  on, 

The  Pope  in  the  middle  is  going. 
The  pious  Pope  Urban  is  his  name, 

The  triple  crown  he  is  wearing, 
He  wears  a  red  and  purple  robe. 

And  Barons  his  train  are  bearing. 
**  O  holy  Father,  Pope  Urban,  stay  I 

**  I  will  not  move  from  my  station, 
"  Until  thou  hast  saved  my  soul  from  hell, 

"  And  heard  my  supplication  1" — 
The  ghostly  songs  are  suddenly  mute, 

The  people  faJl  backwards  dumbly ; 
O  who  is  the  pilgrim  pale  and  wild 

Who  bends  to  the  Pope  so  humbly  ? 
**  O  holy  Father,  Pope  Urban,  to  whom 

*'  To  bind  and  to  loose  not  too  much  is, 
"  O  save  me  from  the  pangs  of  hell, 

*•  And  out  of  the  Evil  One's  clutches  I 
"  By  name,  I'm  the  noble  Tannhauser  call'd; 

"  For  love  and  pleasure  yearning, 
**  To  the  Venus'  mount  I  travell'd  and  dwelt 

"  Seven  years  there  without  returning. 
"  This  Venus  is  a  woman  fair 

"  With  charms  of  dazzling  splendour  ; 
**  Like  light  of  sun  and  flowers*  sweet  scent 

"  Her  voice  is  gentle  and  tender. 
**  As  a  butterfly  flutters  around  a  flower 

'^  And  from  its  calyx  sips  too, 
*'  So  flutters  my  soul  for  evermore 

**  Around  her  rosy  lips  too. 
'^  Around  her  noble  features  entwine 

"  Her  blooming  black  locks  wildly ; 
•*  Thy  breath  would  be  gone  if  once  her  great  eyes 

"  Were  fix'd  upon  thee  mildly. 
**  If  her  great  eyes  upon  thee  were  fix'd 

"  They  surely  would  harass  thee  greatly ; 
**  'Twas  with  the  greatest  trouble  that  I 

*'  Escaped  from  the  mountain  lately. 


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186  Heine's  poems. 

"  From  out  of  the  moiuxtain  I  made  my  escape, 

"  And  yet  for  ever  pursue  me 
*'  The  looks  of  the  beautiful  woman,  which  seem 

'*  To  say  '  O  hasten  back  to  me  1* 

*'  A  wretched  spectre  by  day  I've  become, 

"  At  night  I  vainly  would  hide  me 
''  In  sleep,  for  I  dream  that  my  mistress  dear 

"  Is  sitting  and  laughing  beside  me. 

**  How  clearly,  how  sweetly,  how  madly  she  laughs, 
"  Her  white  teeth  all  the  while  showing  I 

"  Whenever  I  think  of  that  laugh,  in  streams 
*'  The  tears  from  my  eyes  begin  flowing. 

"  I  love  her  indeed  with  a  boundless  love 

**  That  scorches  me  up  to  a  cinder ; 
*'  Tis  like  a  wild  waterfall,  whose  fierce  flood 

'*  No  barrier  ever  can  hinder. 

"  It  nimbly  leaps  from  rock  to  rock 

"  With  noisy  foaming  and  boiling ; 
*'  Its  neck  it  may  break  a  thousand  times, 

"  Yet  on,  still  on,  it  keeps  toiling. 

**  If  all  the  expanse  of  the  heavens  were  mine, 
''  To  Venus  the  whole  I'd  surrender ; 

"  I'd  give  her  the  sun,  I'd  give  her  the  moon, 
*•  I'd  give  her  the  stars  in  their  splendour. 

"  I  love  her  indeed  with  a  boundless  love, 

*'  Whose  flame  within  me  rages; 
"  O  say  can  this  be  the  fire  of  hell, 

"  The  glow  that  will  last  through  all  ages  ? 

*'  O  holy  Father,  Pope  Urban,  to  whom 
To  bind  and  to  loose  not  too  much  is, 
'  O  save  me  from  the  pangs  of  hell, 
"  And  out  of  the  Evil  One's  clutches  I—' 

His  hands  the  Pope  raised  sadly  on  high, 
And  sigh'd  till  these  words  he  had  spoken  * 

"  Tannhauser,  most  unhappy  knight, 
*'  The  charm  can  never  be  broken. 

**  The  Devil  whom  they  Venus  call 
''  Is  mighty  for  hurting  and  harming ; 

"  I'm  powerless  quite  to  rescue  thee 
*^  From  out  of  his  talons  so  charming. 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  13*1 

"  And  SO  thy  soul  must  expiate  now 

"  Thy  fleshly  lusts  infernal ; 
'*  Yes,  diou  art  rejected,  yes,  thou  art  condemned 

"  To  suffer  hell's  torments  eternal." 


THE  knight  Tannhauser  roam'd  on  till  his  feet 
Were  sore  with  his  wanderings  dreary. 
At  midnight's  hour  he  came  at  length 
To  the  Venus*  mountain,  full  weary. 

Fair  Venus  awoke  from  out  of  her  sleep, 
And  out  of  her  bed  sprang  lightly, 

And  clasp*d  her  fair  and  lily-white  arms 
Aroimd  her  beloved  one  tightly. 

From  out  of  her  nose  the  blood  feU  fast, 
The  tears  from  her  eyes  descended ; 

She  cover'd  the  face  of  her  darling  knight 
With  blood  and  tears  closely  blended. 

The  knight  lay  quietly  down  in  the  bed, 

And  not  one  word  has  he  spoken ; 
While  Venus  went  to  the  kitchen,  to  make 

Some  soup,  that  his  fast  might  be  broken. 

She  gave  him  soup,  and  she  gave  him  bread, 

She  wash*d  his  wounded  feet,  too  ; 
She  comb'd  his  rough  and  matted  hair. 

And  laugh'd  with  a  laugh  full  sweet,  too. 

**  Tannhauser,  dear  and  noble  knight, 
**  Full  long  hast  thou  been  wandering; 

''  O  f  ay  in  what  lands  hast  thou  thy  time 
"  So  feir  from  hence  been  squandering  ?" 

**  Dear  Venus,  lovely  mistress,  in  truth 

**  In  Italy  I  have  been  staying ; 
•*  I've  had  some  bus'ness  in  Eome,  and  now 

*'  Eetiun  without  farther  delaying. 

*^  Bome  stands  on  the  Tiber,  just  at  the  spot 

"  Whore  seven  hills  are  meeting  ; 
••  In  Rome  I  also  beheld  the  Pope, — 

•'Tho  Pope  he  sends  thee  his  greeting. 


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138  heike's  poems. 

"  And  Florence  I  saw,  when  on  my  return, 

''  And  then  through  Milan  I  hasted, 
**•  And  next  through  Switzerland  scrambled  feust, 

"  And  not  one  moment  wasted. 

"  And  when  I  travell'd  over  the  Alps, 

"  The  snow  already  was  falling ; 
"  The  blue  lakes  sweetly  on  me  smiled, 

**  The  eagles  were  circling  and  calling. 

"  And  when  on  the  Mount  St.  Gothard  I  stood, 
"Below  me  snored  Germany  loudly; 

"  Beneath  the  mild  sway  of  thirty-six  kings 
"  It  slumber'd  calmly  and  proudly. 

**  In  Swabia  I  saw  the  poetical  school 

"  Of  dear  little  simpleton  creatures; 
"  They  sat  together  idl  ranged  in  a  row, 

"  With  very  diminutive  features. 

"  In  Dresden  I  saw  a  certain  dog, 

"  A  sprig  of  the  aristocracy ; 
"  His  teeth  he  had  lost,  and  bark'd  and  yell'd 

**  Like  one  of  the  vulgar  democracy. 

"  At  Weimar,  the  Muses'  widow'd  seat, 
"  I  heard  tiiem  their  sentiments  giving ; 

"  They  wept  and  lamented  that  Goethe  was  dead, 
"  And  Eckermann  still  'mongst  the  living  I 

"  At  Potsdam  I  heard  a  very  loud  cry, — 
"  I  said  in  amaze :  '  What's  the  matter  ?' — 

"  'Tis  Gans*  at  Berlin,  who  last  century's  tale 
''  *  Is  reading  and  making  this  clatter.' 

"  At  Gottingen  knowledge  was  blossoming  still, 
"  But  bringing  no  fruit  to  perfection ; 

**  'Twas  dark  as  pitch  when  I  got  there  at  night, 
"  No  light  was  in  any  direction. 

"  In  the  bridewell  at  Zell  Hanoverians  alone 
«  Were  confined ;  at  our  next  Eeformation 

*'  A  national  bridewell  and  one  common  lash 
"  We  must  have  for  the  whole  German  nation. 

•  The  eminent  Professor  and  Editor  of  HegeFs  works.    Ha 
died  in  1839 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  139 

"  At  Hamburg,  in  that  excellent  town, 

"  Many  terrible  rascals  dwell  still ; 
"  And  when  I  wander'd  about  the  Exchange, 

"  I  fancied  myself  in  Zell  still ! 
**  At  Hamburg  I  Altona  saw ;  'tis  a  spot 

*'In  a  charming  situation ; 
"  And  aU  my  adventures  that  there  I  met 

"  111  tell  on  another  occasion."* 

14.  ROMANCES. 
1.  A  WOMAN. 

THEY  loved  each  other  beyond  belief, 
The  woman  a  rogue  was,  the  man  was  a  thief; 
At  each  piece  of  knavery,  daily 
She  fell  on  the  bed,  laughing  gaily. 
In  joy  and  pleasure  they  pass'd  the  day. 
Upon  his  bosom  all  night  she  lay ; 
When  they  carried  him  off  to  Old  Bailey, 
At  the  window  she  stood,  laughing  gaily. 
He  sent  her  this  message :  O  come  to  me, 
I  yearn,  my  love,  so  greatly  for  thee  ; 
I  want  thee,  I  pine,  and  look  palely, — 
Her  head  she  but  shook,  laughing  gaily. 
At  six  in  the  morning  they  hang'd  the  knave. 
At  seven  they  laid  him  down  in  his  grave ; 
At  eight  on  her  ears  this  fell  stalely, 
And  a  bumper  she  drank,  laughing  gaily. 

2.  CELEBRATION  OF  SPRING. 

OLIST  to  this  spring  time's  terrible  jest ! 
In  savage  troops  the  maidens  fedr 
Are  rushing  along  with  fluttering  hair, 
And  howls  of  anguish  and  naked  breast : — 

Adonis  I  Adonis  1 
The  night  falls  fast.    By  torchlight  clear 
They  sadly  explore  each  forest  track. 
Which  moumM  answers  is  echoing  back 
Of  laughter,  sobs,  sighs,  and  cries  of  fear : — 
Adonis!  Adonis! 

*  It  is  with  real  hesitation  that  I  publish  this  lame  and  ira* 
otent  conclusion  to  a  legend  the  first  two  parts  of  whicb  aM 
I  Heine's  best  si^rle. 


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110  hbine's  poems. 

That  yontfafdl  figure,  so  wondrons  &ir, 
Now  lies  on  i^e  ground  all  pale  and  dead ; 
His  blood  bas  dyed  eacb  floweret  red, 

And  mournful  sighs  resound  through  the  air  i-^ 
Adonis  I  Adonis! 

3.  OHILDE  HAHOLD. 

SLOW  and  weary,  moves  a  dreary 
Stout  black  bark  the  stream  along  j 
Visors  wearing,  all-imearing, 

Funeral  mutes  the  benches  throng. 

'Mongst  them  dumbly,  with  his  comely 
Face  upturned,  the  dead  bard  lies  ; 

Living  seeming,  toward  the  beaming 
Light  of  heaven  still  turn  his  eyes. 

From  the  water,  like  a  daughter 
Of  the  stream's  voice,  comes  a  sigh, 

And  with  wailing  ima vailing 

'GaiDst  the  bark  the  waves  dash  high. 

4.  THE  EXORCISM. 

THE  young  Franciscan  friar  sits 
In  his  cloister  silent  and  lonely; 
He  reads  a  magical  book,  which  speaks 
Of  exorcisms  only. 

And  when  the  hour  of  midnight  knell'd. 

An  impulse  resistless  came  o'er  him ; 
The  underground  spirits  with  pallid  lips 

He  summoned  to  rise  up  before  him  : 
"  Ye  spirits !  Go,  fetch  me  from  out  of  the  grava 

**  The  corpse  of  my  mistress  cherish*d; 
**  For  this  one  night  restore  her  to  life, 

'*  Eekindling  joys  long  perish'd." 

The  fearful  exorcising  word 

He  breathes,  and  his  wish  is  granted ; 

The  poor  dead  beauty  in  grave-clothes  white 
Appears  to  his  vision  enchanted. 

Her  look  is  mournful ;  her  ice-cold  breast 

Her  sighs  of  grief  cannot  smother ; 
The  dead  one  sits  herself  down  by  the  monk. 

In  silence  they  gaze  od  each  other. 


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i 


BOOK  OF  S0NGH8.  141 

5.  EXTRACT  FROM  A  LETTER. 
(Hie  Sun  speaks,) 

WHAT  matter  all  my  looks  to  thee  ? 
It  is  the  well-known  right  of  the  snzi 
To  shed  down  his  rays  on  ev'ry  one ; 
I  beam  because  'tis  proper  for  me. 

What  matter  all  my  looks  to  thee  ? 

Thy  duties  bear  in  mind,  poor  elf ; 

Quick,  marry,  and  get  a  son  to  thyself 
And  so  a  German  worthy  be ! 

I  beam  because  'tis  proper  for  me. 
I  wander  up  and  down  in  the  sky, 
From  mere  ennui  I  peep  from  on  high — 

What  matter  all  my  looks  to  thee  ? 

{The  Poet  speaks.) 

It  is  in  truth  my  special  merit 

That  I  can  bear  thy  radiant  light, 
Pledge  of  an  endless  youthful  spirit, 

Thou  dazzling  beauty,  blest  and  bright  I 

But  now  mine  eyes  are  growing  weary. 
On  my  poor  eyelids  fast  are  falling. 

Like  a  bla!ck  covering,  the  dreary 

Dark  shades  of  night  with  gloom  appalling^ 

(Chorus  of  Monkeys,) 

We  monkeys,  we  monkeys. 

Like  impudent  flunkies, 

Stare  at  the  sun. 

Who  can't  prevent  its  being  doDfi* 

(Chorus  of  Frogs.) 

The  water  is  better, 
But  also  much  wetter 
Than  'tis  in  the  air. 
And  merrily  there 
We  love  to  gaze 
On  the  sun's  bright  rayik 


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142  Heine's  poems. 

{Chorus  of  Moles,) 

How  foolish  people  are  to  chatter 
Of  beams  and  sunny  rays  bewitching! 
With  us,  they  but  produce  an  itching, 

We  scratch  it  and  so  end  the  matter. 

{A  OlouMoorm  speaks.) 

How  boastingly  the  sun  displays 
His  very  fleeting  daily  rays  I 
But  I'm  not  so  immodest  quite, 
And  yet  I'm  an  important  light, — 
I  mean  by  night,  I  mean  by  night  I 

THE  EVIL  STAR. 

THE  star,  after  beaming  so  brightly, 
From  the  sky  fell,  a  vision  unsightly , 
What  is  the  love  by  poets  sung  ? 
A  star  amid  a  heap  of  dung. 

Like  a  poor  mangy  dog,  when  he's  dying, 
Beneath  all  this  filth  it  is  lying ; 
Shrill  crows  the  cock,  loud  grunts  the  sow 
And  wallows  in  the  fearful  dough. 

In  the  garden  O  had  I  descended, 
By  fair  flowerets  lovingly  tended, 
Where  I  oft  yeam'd  to  find  my  doom, 
A  virgin  death,  a  fragrant  tomb ! 

7.  ANNO  1829. 

GIVE  me  a  wide  and  noble  field 
Where  I  may  perish  decently  ! 
O  let  me  in  this  narrow  world 

Of  shops  be  not  condemned  to  die ! 

They  eat  fall  well,  they  drink  full  well,  • 
Aiid  revel  in  their  mole-like  bliss ; 

^rheir  magnanimity's  as  great 
As  any  poor-box  opening  is. 

Oigars  they  carry  in  their  mouths, 

Their  hands  we  in  their  breeches  view, 

And  their  digestive  powers  are  great, — 
O  could  we  but  digest  them  too ! 


} 


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1 


BOOK  OF  SONGS.  143 

They  trade  in  every  spice  that  grows 

Upon  the  earth,  yet  we  can  trace, 
Despite  their  spiced,  in  the  air 

The  odour  of  a  grovelling  race. 

Could  I  some  great  transgressions,  yoB, 

Colossal  bloody  crimes  but  see, — 
Aught  but  this  virtue  flat  and  tame, 

This  solvent  strict  morality ! 

Te  clouds  on  high,  O  bear  me  hence, 

To  some  far  spot  without  delay ! 
To  Lapland  or  to  Africa, 

To  Pomerania  e'en — away  I 

O  bear  me  hence  1 — They  hearken  not — 
The  clouds  on  high  so  prudent  are ! 

They  fly  above  this  town,  to  seek 

With  trembling  haste  some  region  far. 

8.  ANNO  1839. 

DEAR  distant  Germany,  how  often 
I  weep  when  I  remember  thee  I 
Gay  France  my  sorrow  cannot  soften, 
Her  merry  race  gives  pain  to  me. 

In  Paris,  in  this  witty  region, 

'Tis  cold  dry  reason  that  now  reigns ; 

O  bells  of  folly  and  religion. 

How  sweetly  sound  at  home  your  strains  I 

Courteous  the  men !     Their  salutation 

I  yet  return  with  feelings  sad ; 
The  rudeness  shown  in  every  station 

In  my  own  country  made  me  glad ! 

Smiling  the  women !  but  their  clatter. 
Like  millwheels,  never  seems  to  cease ; 

The  Germans  (not  to  mince  the  matter) 
Prefer  I,  who  lie  down  in  peace. 

And  all  things  here  with  restless  passion 
Keep  whirling,  like  some  madden'd  dream ; 

With  us,  they  move  in  jog-trot  fashion, 
And  weU-nigh  void  of  motion  seenu 


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144  beine's  poems. 

Methinks  I  hear  the  distant  ringing 
Of  the  soft  bugle's  notes  serene  ; 

The  watchman's  songs  I  hear  them  singings 
With  PhilomeFfl  sweet  strains  between. 

At  home  the  bard,  a  happy  vagrant 
In  Schilda's  oak  woods  loved  to  rove  ; 

From  moonbeams  fair  and  violets  fragrant 
My  tender  verses  there  I  wove. 

9.  AT  DAWN. 

ON  the  Faubourg  Saint  Mar9eaa 
Lay  the  mist  this  very  morning, 
Mist  of  autumn,  heavy,  thick, 
And  a  white-hued  night  resembling. 

Wandering  through  this  white-hued  night, 

I  beheld  before  me  gliding 

An  enchanting  female  form 

Which  the  moon's  sweet  light  resembled. 

Yes,  she  was,  like  moonlight  sweet, 
Lightly  floating,  tender,  graceful ; 
Such  a  slender  shape  of  limbs 
I  had  here  in  France  ne'er  witness'd. 

Was  it  Luna's  self  perchance, 

Who  with  some  young  dear  and  handsanic 

Fond  Endymion  had  to-day 

In  th'  Quartier  Latin  been  ling'ring? 

On  my  way  home  thus  I  thought : 
Wherefore  fled  she  when  she  saw  me  ? 
Did  the  Goddess  think  that  I 
Was  perchance  the  Sun-God  Phoebug  * 

10.  SIR  OLAVE. 

I. 

AT  the  door  of  the  cathedral 
Stand  two  men,  both  wearing  red  coat8» 
And  the  first  one  is  the  monarch, 
And  the  headsman  is  the  other.^ 

To  the  headsman  spake  the  monarch : 
**  By  the  priest's  song  I  can  gather 
**  That  the  wedding  is  now  finish'd — 
•*  Keep  thy  trusty  hatchet  ready  T* 


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BOOK   OF   SONGS.  145 

To  tho  sound  of  bells  and  organ 
From  the  church  the  people  issue 
In  a  motley  throng,  and  'mongst  them 
Move  the  gay-dress'd  bridal  coupla 

Pale  as  death  and  sad  and  mournful 
Looks  the  monarch's  lovely  daughter ; 
Bold  and  joyous  looks  Sir  Olave, 
And  his  ruddy  lips  are  smiling. 

And  with  smiling  ruddy  lips  he 
Thus  the  gloomy  king  addresses : 
"  Father  of  my  wife,  good  morning! 
*'  Forfeited  to-day  my  head  is. 

"  I  to-day  must  die, — O  suffer, 

"  Suffer  me  to  live  till  midnight, 

^'  That  I  may  with  feast  and  torch-danco 

''  Celebrate  my  happy  wedding ! 

"  Let  me  live,  O  let  me  live,  sire, 
'  Till  IVe  drain'd  the  final  goblet, 
''  Till  the  final  dance  is  finished — 
**  Suffer  me  to  live  till  midnight !" 

To  the  headsman  spake  the  monarch  : 
**  To  our  son-in-law  a  Despite 
**  Of  his  life  we  grant  mil  midnight — 
*'  Keep  thy  trusty  hatchet  ready  I** 

n. 

SIE  OLAYE  he  sits  at  his  wedding  repast, 
And  every  goblet  is  drained  at  last ; 
Upon  his  shoulder  reclines 
His  wife  and  pines — 

At  the  door  the  headsman  is  standing. 

The  dance  begins,  and  Sir  Olave  takes  hold 
Of  his  youthfol  wife,  and  with  haste  uncontroli'd 
They  dance  by  the  torches*  glow 
Their  last  dance  below — 

At  the  door  the  headsman  is  standing. 

The  fiddles  strike  up,  so  merry  and  glad. 
The  flutes  they  sound  so  mournful  and  sad ; 
Whoever  their  dancing  then  saw 
Was  filled  with  awe — 

At  the  door  the  headsman  is  standing. 

L 
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116  Heine's  poems. 

And  as  they  dance  in  the  echoing  hall, 

To  liis  wife  speaks  Sir  Olave,  unheard  by  them  ai"*  j 

*'  My  love  will  be  ne'er  known  to  thee — 

'*  The  grave  yawns  for  me — '* 

At  the  door  the  headsman  is  standing. 


SIK  OLAVE,  'tis  the  midnight  hour, 
Thy  days  of  life  are  number  d ; 
In  a  king's  daughter's  arms  instead 
Thou  thoughtest  to  have  slumber'd. 

The  monks  they  mutter  the  prayers  for  the  dead. 

The  man  the  red  coat  wearing 
Already  before  the  black  olock  stands, 

His  polish'd  hatchet  bearing. 

Sir  Olave  descends  to  the  court  below, 

Where  the  swords  and  the  lights  are  gleaming ; 

The  ruddy  lips  of  the  Knight  they  smile, 
And  he  speaks  with  a  countenance  beaming  : 

"  I  bless  the  sun,  and  I  bless  the  moon, 
"  And  the  stars  in  the  heavens  before  me ; 

"  I  bless  too  the  little  birds  that  sing 
"  In  the  air  so  merrily  o'er  me. 

^'  I  bless  the  sea  and  I  bless  the  land, 

'*  And  the  flow*rs  that  the  meadow's  life  are  ; 

**  I  bless  the  violets,  which  arc  as  soft 
"  As  the  eyes  of  my  own  dear  wife  are. 

"  Ye  violet  eyes  of  my  own  dear  wife, 
"  My  life  for  your  sakes  I  surrender  ! 

"  I  bless  the  elder-tree,  under  whose  shade 
"  We  plighted  our  vows  of  love  tender." 

11.  THE  WATER  NYMPHS. 

THE  waves  were  plashing  against  tl  e  lone  sti-and, 
The  moon  had  risen  lately, 
The  knight  was  lying  upon  the  white  sand. 
In  vision  musing  greatly. 

The  beauteous  nymphs  arose  from  the  deep, 

Their  veils  around  them  floated ; 
They  softly  approached,  and  fmcied  that  sleep 

The  youth's  repose  denoted. 


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BOOK   OF   SONGS.  147 

Tlie  plume  of  his  helmet  the  first  one  felt, 
To  see  if  perchance  it  would  harm  her ; 

The  second  took  hold  of  his  shoulder  belt, 
And  handled  his  heavy  chain  armour. 

The  third  one  laugh'd,  and  her  eyes  gleam'd  bright. 
As  the  sword  from  the  scabbard  drew  she ; 

On  the  bare  sword  leaning,  she  gazed  on  the  knight, 
And  heartfelt  pleasure  knew  ahe. 

The  fourth  one  danced  both  here  and  thore. 

And  breath'd  from  her  inmost  bosom : 
^-  O  would  that  I  thy  mistress  were, 

'*  Thou  lovely  mortal  b^ssom !" 

The  fifth  her  kisses  with  passionate  strength 
On  the  hand  of  the  knight  kept  planting  ; 

The  sixth  one  tarried,  and  kissed  at  length 
His  lips  and  his  cheeks  enchanting. 

The  knight  was  wise,  and  far  too  discreet 

To  open  his  eyes  midst  such  blisses  ; 
He  let  the  fair  nymphs  in  the  moonlight  sweet 

Continue  their  loving  kisses. 

12.  BERTRAm)  DE  BORN. 

A  NOBLE  pride  on  every  feature, 
His  forehead  stamp 'd  with  thought  mature. 
He  could  subdue  each  mortal  creature, 
Bertrand  de  Bom,  the  troubadour. 

How  wondrously  his  sweet  notes  caught  her, 

Plantagenet  the  Lion  s  queen  I 
Both  sons  as  well  as  lovely  daughter 

He  sang  into  his  net,  I  ween. 

The  father  too  he  fool'd  discreetly ! 

Hush'd  was  the  monarch's  wrath  and  scorn 
On  hearing  him  discourse  so  sweetly, 

The  troubadour,  Bertrand  de  Bom. 

13.  SPRING. 

THE  waters  glisten  and  merrily  glide, — 
How  lovely  is  love  midst  spring's  splendour  1 
The  shepherdess  sits  by  the  streamlet's  side. 
And  twines  her  garlands  so  tender. 

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148  HEINE  S   POEMS. 

All  nature  is  budding  with  fragrant  perfume. 
How  lovely  is  love  midst  spring's  splendour ! 

The  shepherdess  sighs  from  her  heart :  "  O  to  whom 
"  ShaU  I  my  garlands  surrender?" 

A  horseman  is  riding  beside  the  cl6ar  brook, 

A  kindly  greeting  he  utters ; 
riie  shepherdess  views  him  with  sorrowful  look, 

The  plume  in  his  hat  gaily  flutters. 

She  weeps  and  into  the  gliding  waves  flings 

Her  flowery  garlands  so  tender  ; 
Of  kisses  and  love  the  nightingale  sings — 

IIow  lovely  is  love  midsfe  spring's  splendour  I 

14.  ALI  BEY. 

ALT  BEY,  the  true  Faith's  hero, 
Happy  lies  in  maids'  embraces ; 
Allah  granteth  him  a  foretaste 
Here  on  earth  of  heavenly  rapture. 

Odalisques,  as  fair  as  houris, 
Like  gazelles  in  every  motion — 
While  the  first  his  beard  is  curling, 
See,  the  second  smoothes  his  forehead. 

And  the  third  the  lute  is  playing. 
Singing,  dancing,  and  with  laughter 
Kissing  him  upon  his  bosom, 
Where  the  flames  of  bliss  are  glowing. 

But  the  trumpets  of  a  sudden 
Sound  outside,  the  svords  are  rattling. 
Calls  to  arms,  and  shots  ci  muskets — 
Lord,  the  Franks  are  mai  ching  on  us  ! 

And  the  hero  mounts  his  war-steed, 
Joins  the  fight,  but  seems  still  dreaming ; 
For  he  fancies  he  is  lying 
As  before  in  maids'  embraces. 

Whilst  the  heads  of  the  invaders 
He  is  cutting  off  by  dozens, 
He  is  smiling  like  a  lover. 
Yes,  he  softly  smiles  and  gently. 


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BOOK  OF  S0NG8.  149 

15.  PSYCHE. 

IN  her  Land  the  little  lamp,  and 
Mighty  passion  in  her  breast. 
Psyche  creepeth  to  the  couch  where 
Her  dear  sleeper  takes  his  rest. 

How  she  blushes,  how  she  trembles,         i 

When  his  beauty  she  descries ! 
He,  the  God  of  love,  unveil*d  thus, 

Soon  awakes  and  quickly  flies. 

Eighteen  hundred  years'  repentance  I 
And  the  poor  thing  nearly  died  I 

Psyche  fasts  and  whips  herself  still, 
For  she  Amor  naked  spied. 

16.  THE  UNKNOWN  ONE. 

EVERY  day  I  have  a  meeting 
With  my  golden-tressed  beauty 
In  the  Tuileries'  fair  garden 
Underneath  the  chesnuts'  shadow. 

Every  day  she  goes  to  walk  there 
With  two  old  and  ugly  women — 
Are  they  aunts  ?  or  else  two  soldiers 
Muffled  up  in  women's  garments  ? 

Overawed  by  the  mustachios 
Of  her  masculine  attendants, 
And  still  further  overawed  too 
By  the  feelings  in  my  bosom, 

I  ne'er  ventured  e'en  one  sighing 
Word  to  whisper  as  I  pass'd  her, 
And  with  looks  I  scarcely  ventured 
Ever  to  proclaim  my  passion. 

For  the  first  time  I  to-day  have 
Learnt  her  name.     Her  name  is  Laura. 
Like  the  Proven9al  fair  maiden 
Whom  the  famous  poet  loved  so. 

Laura  is  her  name  I    I've  gone  now 
Just  as  far  as  Master  Petrarch, 
Who  the  fair  one  celebrated 
in  canzones  and  in  sonnets. 


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150  Heine's  poems. 

Lanra  is  her  name !  like  Petrarch 
I  can  now  platonically 
Revel  in  this  name  enphonious — 
He  himself  no  further  ventured. 

17.  THE  CHANGE. 

WITH  brunettes  I  now  have  finish'd. 
And  this  year  am  once  more  fond 
Of  the  eyes  whose  colour  blue  is, 
Of  the  hair  whose  colour's  blond. 

Mild  the  blond  one,  whom  I  love  now, 

And  in  meekness  quite  a  gem  I 
81ie  would  be  some  blest  saint's  image, 

Held  her  hand  a  lily  stem. 

Slender  limbs  of  wondrous  beauty, 

Little  flesh,  much  sympathy ; 
All  her  soul  is  glowing  but  for 

Faith  and  hope  and  charity. 

She  maintains  she  understands  not 

German, — but  it  can't  be  so  ; 
Hast  ne'er  read  the  heavenly  poem 

Klopstock  wrote  some  time  ago  ? 

18.  FORTUNE. 
[ADAM  Fortune,  thou  in  vain 
Act'st  the  coy  one !     I  can  galli 
By  my  own  exertions  merely 
All  thy  favours  prized  so  dearly. 

Thou  art  overcome  by  me, 
^       To  the  yoke  I  fasten  thee  ; 

Thou  art  mine  beyond  escaping — 

But  my  bleeding  wounds  are  gaping.  j 

All  my  red  blood  gushes  out. 
My  life's  courage  to  the  rout 
Soon  is  put ;  I'm  vanquish'd  lying. 
And  in  victory's  hour  am  dying. 

19.  LAMENTATION  OF  AN  OLD-GERMAN  YOITrit 

THE  man  on  whom  virtue  smiles  is  blest, 
He  is  lost  who  neglects  her  instructiong; 
Poor  youth  that  I  am.  I  am  ruin'd 
By  evil  companions'  seductions. 


M' 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  151 

For  cards  and  dice  soon  dispossessed 

My  pockets  of  all  their  money ; 
At  first  the  maidens  consoled  me 

With  smiles  as  luscious  as  honey. 

But  when  they  had  fuddled  with  wine  their  guest, 

And  torn  my  garments,  straightway 
(Poor  youth  that  I  am)  they  seized  me, 

And  bundled  me  out  at  the  gateway. 

On  waking  after  a  bad  night's  rest, — 

Sad  end  to  all  my  ambition  I — 
Poor  youth  that  I  am,  I  was  filling 

At  Cassel  a  sentry's  position. 

20.  AWAY ! 

THE  day's  enamour'd  of  the  night, 
The  springtime  loves  the  winter. 
And  life's  in  love  with  death, — 
And  thou,  thou  lovest  me  I 

Thou  lov'st  me — thou'rt  already  seized 
By  fear-inspiring  shadows, 
And  all  thy  blossoms  fade, 
To  death  diy  soul  is  bleeding. 

Away  from  me,  and  only  love 
The  butterflies,  gay  triflers. 
Who  in  the  sunlight  sport — 
Away  from  me  and  sorrow ! 

21.  MADAM  METTB. 
(From  the  Danish.) 
O  AYS  Bender  to  Peter  over  their  wine  : 
kP     **  I'll  wager  (though  doubtless  you  re  clever) 
*That  though  your  fine  singing  may  conquer  the  world, 
"  My  wife  'twill  conquer  never." 

Then  Peter  replied :  "  I'll  wager  my  horse 

'*  To  your  dog,  or  the  devil  is  in  it, 
*'  I'll  sing  Madsun  Mette  into  my  house 

**  This  evening,  at  twelve  to  a  minute." 

And  when  the  hour  of  midnight  drew  near, 
Friend  Peter  commenced  his  sweet  singing ; 

Right  over  the  forest,  right  over  the  flood 
His  charming  notes  were  ringing. 


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152  Heine's  poems. 

The  fir-trees  listen'd  in  silence  deep, 

The,  flood  stood  stiLl  and  listened, 
The  pale  moon  trembled  high  up  in  the  sky. 

The  wise  stars  joyously  glisten'd. 

Madam  Mette  awoke  from  out  of  her  sleep : 
*•  What  singing  I    How  sweet  the  seduction  I" 

She  put  on  her  dress,  and  left  the  house — 
Alas,  it  proved  her  destruction  I 

liight  through  the  forest,  right  through  the  flood, 

She  speeded  onward  straightway ; 
While  Peter,  with  the  might  of  his  song, 

Allured  her  inside  his  own  gateway. 

And  when  she  at  morning  retum'd  back  home, 

At  the  door  her  husband  caught  her  : 
"  Pray  tell  me,  good  wife,  where  you  spent  the  night  ? 

'*  Your  garments  are  dripping  with  water." 

"  I  spent  the  night  at  the  water-nymphs'  stream, 
"  And  heard  the  Future  told  by  them ; 

"  The  mocking  feiries  wetted  me  through 

"  With  their  splashes,  for  going  too  nigh  them.*' 

""  You  have  not  been  to  the  water-nymphs*  stream, 
"  The  sand  there  could  ne  er  make  you  muddy  ; 

"  Your  feet,  good  wife,  are  bleeding  and  torn, 
"  Your  cheeks  are  also  bloody." 

"  I  spent  the  night  in  the  elfin  wood, 

'*  To  see  the  elfin  dances ; 
'*  I  wounded  my  feet  and  face  with  the  thorns 

''  And  fir-boughs  cutting  like  lances.'* 

"  The  elfins  dance  in  the  sweet  month  of  May 

"  On  flowery  plains,  but  the  chilly 
"  Bleak  days  of  autumn  now  reign  on  the  earth, 

**  The  wind  in  the  forests  howls  shrilly." 

"At  Peter  Niel8en*s  I  spent  the  night, 

''  He  sang  so  mightily  to  me, 
''  That  through  the  forest,  and  through  the  fl(K}d 

*'  He  irresistibly  drew  me. 

**  His  song  is  mighty  as  death  itself, 

'*  To  night  and  perdition  alluring ; 
•*  Its  tuneful  glow  still  bums  in  my  heart, 

"  A  speedy  death  insuring." 


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BOOK  OF  SONCiS.  153 

The  door  of  the  church  is  hung  with  black, 

The  funeral  bells  are  ringing, 
Poor  Madam  Mette's  terrible  death 

To  public  notice  bringing. 

Poor  Bender  sighs,  as  he  stands  at  the  bier, — 

'Twas  sad  to  hear  him  call  so  ! — 
'  I  now  have  lost  my  beautiful  wife, 

"  And  lost  my  true  dog  also." 

22.  THE  MEETING. 

TEGS  music  under  the  linden-tree  sounds, 
The  boys  and  the  maidens  dance  lightly ; 
Amongst  them  two  dance,  whom  nobody  knows, 
Of  figures  noble  and  sightly. 

They  float  about  here,  they  float  about  there, 
In  a  way  that  strange  habits  expresses ; 

They  smile  at  each  other,  they  shake  their  heads, 
The  maiden  the  youth  thus  addresses : 

"  My  handsome  youth,  upon  thy  hat 

"  There  nods  a  lily  splendid, 
"  That  only  grows  in  the  depths  of  the  sea, — 

"  From  Adam  thou  art  not  descended. 

''  The  Kelpie  art  thou,  who  the  fair  village  maids 
"  Would'st  allure  with  thy  arts  of  seduction ; 

"  I  knew  thee  at  once,  at  the  very  first  sight, 
"  By  thy  teeth  of  fish-like  construction." 

They  float  about  here,  they  float  about  there, 
In  a  way  that  strange  habits  expresses ; 

They  smile  at  each  other,  they  shake  their  heads, 
The  youth  the  maid  thus  adiresses : 

"  My  handsome  maiden,  tell  me  why 

"  Thy  hand  so  icy  cold  is  ? 
'*  And  tell  me  why  thy  snow-white  dress 

"  So  moist  in  every  fold  is  ? 

*'  I  knew  thee  at  once,  at  the  very  first  sight, 

**  By  thy  bantering  salutation ; 
•*  Thou  art  no  mortal  child  of  man, 

•*  But  the  water-nymph,  my  relation." 


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1 


154  Heine's  poems. 

The  fiddles  are  silent,  and  finished  the  dance. 
They  part  like  sister  and  brother, 

They  know  each  other  only  too  well, 
And  shnn  now  the  sight  of  each  other. 

23.  KING  HAROLD  HARFAGAB. 

'^PHE  great  King  Harold  Harfagar 
JL    In  ocean's  depths  is  sitting, 
Beside  his  lovely  water-fay ; 
The  years  are  over  him  flitting. 

By  water-sprite's  magical  arts  chain'd  down, 
He  is  neither  living  nor  dead  now. 

And  while  in  this  state  of  baneful  bliss 
Two  hundred  years  have  sped  now. 

The  head  of  the  king  is  laid  on  the  lap 
Of  the  beautiful  woman,  and  ever 

He  yearningly  gazes  up  tow'rd  her  eyes, 
And  looks  away  from  her  never. 

His  golden  hair  is  silver  grey, 

His  cheekbones  (of  time's  march  a  token) 
Project  like  a  ghost's  from  his  yellow  face. 

His  body  is  wither'd  and  broken. 

And  many  a  time  from  his  sweet  dream  of  love 

He  suddenly  is  waking. 
For  over  him  wildly  rages  the  flood. 

The  castle  of  glass  rudely  shaking. 

He  oftentimes  fancies  he  hears  in  the  wind 
The  Northmen  shouting  out  gladly ; 

He  raises  his  arms  with  joyous  haste, 
Then  lets  them  fSall  again  sadly. 

He  oftentimes  fancies  he  hears  far  above 

The  seamen  their  voices  raising, 
The  great  King  Harold  Harfagar 

In  songs  heroical  praising. 

And  then  the  king  from  the  depth  of  his  heart 
Begins  sobbing  and  wailing  and  sighing. 

When  quickly  the  water-fay  over  him  bends, 
With  loving  kisses  replying. 


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BOOE  OP  SONGS.  lf>5 

24.  THE  LOWKR  WORLD. 
I. 

MANY  a  time  poor  Pluto  sigli*d  Bius  : 
"  Were  1  but  a  single  man ! 
"  Since  my  married  life  began, 
"  Hell,  IVe  learnt,  was  not  a  hell 
"  Till  I  to  a  wife  was  tied  thus  I 

"  Would  that  I  remained  still  single  I 

"  Since  I  Proserpine  did  wed, 

"  Each  day  wish  1 1  was  dead ! 

"  With  the  bark  of  Cerberus 

"Her  loud  scoldings  ever  mingle. 

"  Each  attempt  I  make  is  fruitless 
"  After  peace.     There's  not  a  ghost 
"  Half  so  sad  in  all  my  host, 
"  And  I  envy  Sisyphus, 

'*  And  the  Danaid's  labour  bootless. 


ON  golden  chair  in  the  regions  infernal, 
Beside  her  spouse,  the  monarch  eternal. 
Queen  Proserpine's  sitting 
With  mien  ill  befitting 
Her  station,  and  sadly  she's  sighing : 

"  For  roses  I  yearn,  and  the  rapturous  blisses 
**  Of  Philomel's  song,  and  the  sun's  sweet  kisses ; 

"  And  here  'mongst  the  pallid 

"  Lemures  and  squalid 
**  Dead  bodies,  my  youth's  days  are  flying. 

'  I'm  firmly  bound  in  the  hard  yoke  of  marriage 
In  this  hole,  which  I'm  sure  e'en  a  rat  would  disparage 
"  And  the  spectres  unsightly 
"  Through  my  window  peep  nightly, 

"    heir  wails  with  the  Styx's  groans  vying. 

"  This  very  day  I've  invited  to  dinner 

"  Old  Charon,  the  bald-pated  spindle-shank'd  sinner,— 

"  And  also  the  Judges, 

"  Those  wearisome  drudges — 
•*  Such  company's  really  too  trying  I" 


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156  HEIN£*S  POEMS. 

m. 
XTTThLLLST  these  murmurs  raiavailing 

T  T    In  the  lower  world  fomid  vent, 
Ceres  on  the  earth  was  wailing, 
And  the  crazy  goddess  went, 
With  no  cap  on,  with  no  collar. 

And  with  loose  dishevell*d  hidr, 
Uttering,  in  a  voice  of  dolour, 
That  lamemt  known  everywhere  :* 

"  Is't  the  beauteous  spring  I  see  ? 

"  Hath  the  earth  grown  young  again  ? 
"  Sunlit  hills  glow  verdantly, 

"  Bursting  through  their  icy  chain. 
*'  From  the  streamlet's  mirror  blue 

"  Smiles  the  now-unclouded  sky, 
'*  Zephyr's  wings  wave  milder  too, 

*'  Youthful  blossoms  ope  their  eye. 
'*  In  the  grove  sweet  songs  resound, 

"  While  the  Oread  thus  doth  speak : 
*' '  Once  again  thy  flow'rs  are  found, 

*' '  Vain  thy  daughter  'tis  to  seek.* 

"  Ah,  how  long  'tis  since  I  went 

'*  First  in  search  o'er  earth's  wide  face ! 
"  Titan,  all  thy  rays  I  sent, 

"  Seeking  for  the  loved  one's  trace ! 
"  Of  that  form  so  dear,  no  ray 

"  Hath  as  yet  brought  news  to  me, 
"  And  the  all-discerning  Day 

**  Cannot  yet  the  lost  one  see. 
"  Hast  thou,  Zeus,  her  from  me  torn  ? 

"  Or  to  Orcus'  gloomy  stream, 
"  Hath  she  been  by  Pluto  borne, 

"  Smitten  by  her  beauty's  bewna  ? 

"  Who  will  to  yon  dreary  strand 

•*  Be  the  herald  of  my  woe  ? 
*'  Ever  leaves  the  bark  the  land, 

"  Yet  but  shadows  in  it  go. 
"  To  each  blest  eye  evermore 

"  Closed  those  night-like  fields  remain ; 

*  The  three  following  verses  are  extracted  by  Heine  verbatim 
from  Schiller's  well-known  *'  Lament  of  Ceres."  The  version  o( 
them  here  given  is  taken  from  the  translation  of  Schiller's  Poema 
published  by  me  in  1851. 


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(( 


BOOK   UF   SONQS.  157 

•*  Sfc}'x  no  living  form  e'er  bore, 

''  Since  his  stream  first  wash'd  the  plain. 

**  Thousand  paths  lead  downward  there, 
*'  None  lead  up  again  to  light ; 

**  And  her  tears  no  witness  e'er 

**  Brings  to  her  sad  mother's  sight" 

IV. 

"  piERESt  my  good  wife's  relation  I 
vJ  **  Prythee  cease  to  weep  and  call  so ! 
I  now  grant  your  application — 
'*  I  have  suffer'd  greatly  also  I 

**  Comfort  take !  we'll  share  your  daughter's 

"  Sweet  society,  and  let  her 
*'  Have  on  earth  six  months  her  quarters 

"  Yearly,  if  you  like  it  better. 

*'  She,  when  men  in  summer  swelter, 

"  Can  assist  your  rural  labours, 
'*  'Neath  a  straw  hat  taking  shelter, 

"  Flow'r-bedizen'd,  like  her  neighbours'. 

"  She  can  rant,  when  colours  glowing 
"  Bobe  the  evening  sky  in  splendour, 

*'  When  beside  the  stream  is  blowing 
"  On  his  flute  a  bumpkin  tender. 

"  She'll  rejoice  with  lads  and  lasses  . 

**  At  the  harvest-home's  gay  dances, 
**  And  amongst  the  sheep  and  asses 

'*  Be  a  lioness,  the  chance  is. 

**  111  recruit  my  spirits  sinking 

'*  Here  in  Orcus  in  a  canter, 
"  Mingled  punch  and  Lethe  drinking, 

"  And  forget  my  wife  instanter !" 

V. 

**  IVr^'^^^^^^®  **  *^^®  *^y  ^^^  ^  shaded 
jjJL   "  With  yearnings  that  in  secret  dwell ; 

"  Thy  hapless  lot  I  know  full  well  ; 

•*  Lost  love,  a  life  untimely  faded  I 

*  Thou  nodd'st  a  sad  assent !  I  never 
"  Can  give  thee  back  thy  youthful  prime ; 
*'  Thy  heart's  woes  cannot  heal  witii  time : 

"  A  faded  life,  love  lost  for  ever  I" 

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158  Heine's  poems. 

15.  MISCELLANIES. 
1.  MULEDOM. 

TETY  father,  as  is  known  to  all, 
A  donkey  was,  beyond  denial ; 
Thy  mother  on  the  other  hand 

A  noble  brood-mare  proved  on  trial. 

Thy  mulish  nature,  worthy  friend, 
Though  little  liked,  a  thing  of  course  is ; 

Yet  thou  canst  say,  with  perfect  truth, 
That  thou  belongest  to  the  horses. 

Thou  spring*st  from  proud  Bucephalus ; 

Thy  fathers  were  with  the  invaders 
Who  to  the  Holy  Sepulchre 

Of  old  time  went,  the  famed  Crusaders. 

Thou  countest  'mongst  thy  relatives 
The  charger  ridden  by  the  glorious 

Sir  Godfrey  of  Bouillon  the  day 

He  took  God's  town  with  arm  victorious. 

Thou  canst  aver  that  Bayard's  steed 
Thy  cousin  was,  and  say  (andante) 

Thine  aunt  the  knight  Don  Quixote  bore, 
The  most  heroic  Eosinante. 

But  Sancho's  donkey  thoult  not  own 
As  kin,  he  being  much  too  lowly ; 

Thoult  e'en  disown  the  ass's  foal 
That  whilome  bore  the  Saviour  holy. 

And  thou  art  not  obliged  to  stick 
A  long-ear  surely  in  thy  scutcheon ; 

Of  thine  own  value  be  the  judge. 

And  thou  wilt  never  lay  too  much  on. 

2.  THE  SYMBOL  OF  MADNESS. 

WE'LL  now  begin  to  sing  the  song 
Of  a  Number  of  much  reputation, 
Known  by  the  name  of  Number  Three : 
To  joy  succeeds  vexation. 

Though  sprung  from  an  old  Arabian  stock, 

In  Christian  estimation 
Nothing  in  Europe  higher  stood 

Than  this  Number  of  proud  reputation. 


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BOOK  OP  soNas.  159 

A  very  pattern  of  modesty, 

How  great  was  her  indignation 
At  finding  the  man  in  bed  with  the  maid  I 

She  gave  them  a  sound  castigation. 

Ill  summer  her  coffee  at  seven  a.m. 

She  drank  with  much  gratification, 
III  winter  at  nine,  and  slept  all  night 

Without  the  least  molestation. 

But  now  'tis  time  to  alter  our  rhyme, 

To-day  is  changed  to  to-morrow, 
And,  sad  to  say,  poor  Number  Three 

Must  suffer  pain  and  sorrow. 

There  came  a  cobbler  who  said  :  **  The  head 

'*  Of  Number  Three  at  present 
'^  Is  like  a  small  Seven  that's  placed  on  the  top 

**  Of  the  moon  when  she's  shaped  like  a  crescent. 
"  The  Seven  the  mystical  number  is 

**  Of  the  ancient  Pythagoreans  >; 
"  The  crescent  Diana's  worship  denotes, 

*'And  also  recals  the  Sabeans. 

"  The  Three  herself  the  famed  Shibboleth  is 

"  Of  the  senior  bonze  of  Babel, 
*'  Intriguing  with  whom  she  at  length  gave  birth 

'*  To  the  Holy  Trinity's  fable." 

A  tailor  came  next,  with  a  smile  on  his  face ; 

Poor  Number  Three,  he  insisted, 
Was  nought  but  a  name,  and  nowhere  else 

Except  upon  paper  existed. 

\VTien  poor  Three  heard  these  cruel  words, 

Like  a  duck  in  a  state  of  distraction 
She  waddled  here  and  waddled  there. 

Lamenting  with  vehement  action : 

"  I'm  just  as  old  ai^  the  sea  and  the  wold, 
^'  As  the  stars  that  in  heaven  are  blinking ; 

**  I've  seen  kingdoms  ascend,  and  presently  end; 
''  And  nations  rising  and  sinking. 

"  I've  stood  on  the  ceaselessly  whirling  loom 

"  Of  time  for  many  long  ages ; 
"  I've  peep'd  into  Nature's  fashioning  womb, 

"  Where  everything  rushes  and  rages. 


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160  HEINE'S   POEMfl. 

^*  And  nevertheless  I  withstood  all  assaults 

^*  Of  darkness  and  sensuality, 
**  And  safely  preserved  my  virgin  charms, 

*'  Despite  their  cruel  brutality. 

"  What  use  is  my  virtue  now?     By  the  wise 

*'  And  the  fools  I  am  evil  entreated; 
'*  The  world  is  wicked,  and  ne'er  content 

**  Till  every  one  is  cheated. 

"  But  cheer  up,  my  heart  I  thou  still  hast  left 

"  Thy  faith  and  hope  and  charity, 
"  With  excellent  coffee  and  glasses  of  rum 

*'  Above  the  reach  of  vulgarity." 

3.  PRroE. 

O  COUNTESS  GUDEL  of  Gudelfeld  town, 
Because  you  are  wealthy,  you're  held  in  renown 
With  not  less  than  four  horses  contented. 
At  court  you  are  duly  presented ; 
In  carriage  of  gold  you  go  lightly 
To  the  castle,  where  waxlights  gleam  brightly ; 
Up  the  marble  stairs  rustle 
Your  clothes  with  their  bustle, 
And  then  at  the  top,  on  the  landing 
The  servants  in  gay  dresses  standing 
Shout :  Madame  la  Comtesse  de  Gudelfeld  I 

Your  fan  in  your  hand,  talking  loudly. 

Through  the  chamber  you  wander  on  proudly ; 

With  ddamonds  gaily  bedizen'd. 

In  pearls  and  Brussels  lace  prison'd, 

Your  snowy  bosom  with  madness 

Is  heaving  in  uncontroU'd  gladness. 

What  smiles,  nods,  polite  interjections  I 

What  curtsies  and  deep  genuflexions! 

The  Duchess  of  Pavia 

Calls  you  her  cara  mia  ; 

The  nobles  and  courtiers  advancing 

Invite  you  to  join  in  the  dancing ; 

And  the  heir  to  the  crown  (who's  thought  witty) 

Says  loudly :  How  graceful  and  pretty 

Are  all  the  stem  movements  of  Gudelfeld ! 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  161 

But  if,  poor  creature,  you  money  did  lack. 

The  world  would  straightway  show  you  its  back ; 

The  very  lackeys  with  loathing 

Would  spit  on  your  clothing ; 

'Stead  of  bows  and  civility, 

Nought  but  vulgar  scurrility; 

The  Duchess  would  cross  herself  rudely, 

And  the  Crown  Prince  take  snuff,  and  say  shrewdly : 

She  smells  of  garlic — this  Gudelfeld ! 

4.  AWAY! 

IF  by  one  woman  thou'rt  jilted,  love 
Another,  and  so  forget  her ; 
To  pack  up  thy  knapsack,  and  straight  remove 
liom  the  town  will  be  still  better. 

Thoult  soon  discover  a  blue  lake  fair. 

By  weeping  willows  surrounded ; 
Thy  trifling  grief  thoult  weep  away  there, 

Thy  pangs  so  little  founded. 

Whilst  climbing  up  the  hillside  fast, 

Thoult  pant  and  groan  full  loudly ; 
But  when  on  the  rocky  summit  at  last, 

Thoult  hear  the  eagle  scream  proudly. 

An  eagle  thyself  thoult  seem  to  be. 
New  life  the  change  will  bestow  thee  ; 

Thoult  feel  thou  hast  lost,  when  thus  set  firea 
Not  much  in  the  world  below  thee. 

5.  WINTEB. 

THE  cold  may  burn  us  sadly 
Like  fire,  and  mortals  hurry 
Amidst  the  snowdrift  madly, 
With  still-increasing  flurry. 

0  winter  stem  and  chilly. 
When  frozen  are  our  noses, 

And  piano-strumming  silly 
Our  ears  so  discomposes  I 

1  like  the  summer  only 

When  in  the  wood  I'm  roving 
With  my  own  griefs  all-lonely. 
And  scanning  verses  loving. 


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^ 


162  Heine's  poems. 

6.  the  old  chimneypiecb. 

OUTSIDE  fall  the  snowflakes  lightly 
Through  the  night,  loud  rayes  the  Btorm 
In  my  room  the  fire  glows  brightly, 
And  'tis  cosy,  silent,  warm. 

Musing  sit  I  on  the  settle 

By  the  firelight's  cheerful  blaze, 
Listening  to  the  busy  kettle 

Humming  long-forgotten  lays* 

And  beside  me  sits  a  kitten, 

Warming  at  the  blaze  her  feet ; 
Strangely  are  my  senses  smitten 

As  the  flickering  flames  they  meet. 

Many  a  dim  long- buried  story 

O'er  me  soon  begins  to  rise, 
But  with  dead  and  faded  glory, 

And  in  strange  and  mask'd  disguise 

Lovely  women  with  shrewd  faces 

Greet  me  with  a  secret  smile. 
Then  the  harlequins  run  races. 

Laughing  merrily  the  while. 

Distant  marble-gods  nod  kindly, 

Dreamily  beside  them  grow 
Fable-flow*rs,  whose  leaves  wave  blindly 

In  the  moonlight  to  and  fro. 

Magic  castles,  once  resplendent,   • 

Euin'd  now,  in  sight  appear ; 
Knights  in  armour,  squires  attendant 

Quickly  follow  in  their  rear. 

All  these  visions  I  discover 

As  with  shadowy  haste  they  pass,— 

Ah,  the  kettle's  boiling  over, 
And  the  kitten's  burnt,  alas  i 

7.  LONGING. 

THOU  beholdest  in  thy  vision 
Fable's  silent  flow'rs  before  thee, 
And  a  yearning  wild  steals  o'er  thec 
At  their  fragrant  scent  elysian. 

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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  163 

Bnt  thou  from  those  flow*rs  art  parted 
By  a  guK  both  deep  and  fearful ; 
Thou  becomest  sad  and  tearful, 

And  at  last  art  broken-hearted. 

How  they  glitter  I  how  they  lure  me  I 
Could  I  but  the  gulf  pass  over  I 
How  the  secret  to  discover, 
And  a  bridge  across  procure  me  ? 

8.  HELENA. 

THOU  hast  call'd  me  forth  from  out  of  the  grave 
By  means  of  thy  magic  will  now. 
And  filled  me  full  of  love's  fierce  glow — 
This  glow  thou  never  canst  still  now. 

O  press  thy  mouth  against  my  mouth, 

Man's  breath  with  heaven  is  scented ; 
Thy  very  soul  I'll  drain  to  the  dregs. 

The  dead  are  never  contented. 

9.  THE  WISE  STARS. 
^^HE  flowerets  sweet  are  crush'd  by  the  feet 
J-    Full  soon,  and  perish  despairing  ; 
One  passes  by,  and  they  must  die, 

The  modest  as  weU  as  the  daring. 

The  pearls  all  sleep  in  the  caves  of  the  deep. 
Where  one  finds  them,  despite  wind  and  weather 

A  hole  is  soon  bored  and  they're  strung  on  a  cord. 
And  there  fast  yoked  together. 

The  stars  are  more  wise,  and  keep  in  the  skies, 

And  hold  the  earth  at  a  distance ; 
They  shed  their  light  in  tho  heavens  so  bright, 

In  safe  and  endless  existence. 

10.  THE  ANGELS. 

FAITHLESS  as  Saint  Thomas,  never 
Could  I  in  the  heaven  believe 
Which  both  Jew  and  Priest  endeavour 
To  compel  men  to  receive. 

That  the  angels,  though,  are  real 

I  have  never  held  in  doubt ; 
Spotless,  and  of  grace  ideal. 

On  this  earth  they  move  about. 


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164  hbinf/s  poems. 

Still  I  doubt  if  such  a  being 
Winged  is,  it  must  be  coidfess'd ; 

I  have  recently  been  seeing 
Wingless  angels,  I  protest. 

With  their  dear  and  loving  glanoes 
With  their  loving  hands  so  white 

Men  they  guard,  and  all  advances 
Of  misfortune  put  to  flight. 

Every  one  can  comfort  borrow 
From  their  favour  and  regard ; 

Most  of  all  that  child  of  sorrow 
Whom  the  people  call  a  bard. 

16.  POEMS  FOR  THE  TIMES. 

1.  SOUND  DOOTEINE. 

QUICK,  beat  the  drum,  and  be  not  a&aid. 
The  suttler-maiden  lovingly  kiss; 
This  is  the  whole  of  knowledge,  in  truth. 
The  deepest  book-learning  lies  in  this. 

Quick,  drum  the  people  out  of  their  sleep,- 

And  drum  the  reveille  with  the  ardour  of  youth 

And  as  you  march,  continue  to  drum — 
This  is  the  whole  of  knowledge,  in  truth. 

All  Hegel's  philosophy  here  is  found, 
The  deepest  book-learning  lies  in  this  ; 

IVe  found  it  out,  because  I*m  no  fool, 
And  also  because  I  drum  not  amiss. 

2.  ADAM  THE  FIRST. 

GENDARMES  of  heaven  with  flaming  swoida 
Thou  sent'st  in  cruel  fashion, 
And  drov'st  me  out  of  Paradise 
Without  the  least  compassion. 

In  search  of  another  country,  I 

And  my  wife  from  Eden  hasted ; 
Thou  canst  not  alter  the  fact  that  there 

The  tree  of  knowledge  I  tasted. 


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BOOK  OP   SONGS.  16^ 

Then  canst  not  alter  the  fact  that  I  know 

Thy  weakness  and  many  blunders, 
However  mighty  thou  seemest  to  be 

When  wielding  death  and  thunders. 

0  heavens,  how  pitiful  is  this 
Consilium  abeundi ! 

1  call  it  a  Magnificus 

Of  earth,  a  Lumen  Mundi. 

I  shall  not  miss  the  spacious  realms 

Of  Paradise  one  minute  • 
It  is  no  genuine  Paradise 

When  trees  forbidden  are  in  it. 

I  claim  my  foil  unfettered  rights ! 

The  slightest  limitation 
Changes  my  Paradise  at  once 

To  hell  and  desolation. 

3.  WARNING. 

TXrOETHY  friend,  'twHl  be  perdition 
T  T   Books  like  this  to  think  of  printing  » 
Wouldst  thou  money  earn  or  honour 
Thou  must  bend  in  meek  submission. 

Never  in  this  manner  flighty 

Shouldest  thou  before  the  public 

Thus  have  spoken  of  the  parsons 
And  of  monarchs  high  and  mighty  1 

Friend,  thou*lt  be  by  all  forsaken ! 
Princes  have  long  arms,  the  parsons 
Have  long  tongues,  and  then  the  public 

Have  long  ears,  or  I'm  mistaken  I 

4.  TO  A  QUONDAM  FOLLOWER  OF  GOETHS 

(1832.) 

HAST  thou,  then,  superior  risen 
To  the  chilly  dream  of  glory 
Which  great  Weimar's  poet  hoary 
Wove  around  thee,  like  a  prison  ? 

Are  thy  old  friends  bores  now  voted  ? — 

Clara,  Gretchen, — ^names  familiar, — 

Serlo's  chaste  maid,  and  Ottilia 
In  the  ''  Wahlverwandschaft "  noted  ? 


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166  Heine's  poems. 

Thou'i-i  with  Germany  enclianted, 
Art  become  a  Mignon-hater^ 
And  thou  seek'st  for  freedom  greater 

Than  Philina  ever  granted. 

Like  a  Lxmeburgomaster, 

Thou  dost  battle  for  the  nation, 

Holding  up  to  execration 
Kings,  as  causing  all  disaster. 

And  I  hear  with  pleasure  hearty, 

What  a  pitch  thy  praises  grow  to, 

And  how  thou'rt  a  Mirabeau,  too, 
At  each  Luneburg  tea-party  I 

5.  THE  SECRET. 

TT7"E  sigh  not,  and  the  eye's  not  moisten'd, 

▼  T     We  laugh  at  times,  we  often  smile ; 
In  not  a  look,  in  not  a  gesture 

The  secret  comes  to  light  the  while. 

Deep  in  our  bleeding  spirit  hidden. 

It  lies  in  silent  misery ; 
If  in  our  wild  heart  it  finds  language, 

The  mouth's  still  closed  convulsively. 

Ask  of  the  suckling  in  the  cradle. 
Ask  of  the  dead  man  in  the  grave  ; 

They  may  perchance  disclose  the  secret 
To  which  I  never  utt 'ranee  gave. 

6.  ON  THE  WATCHMAN  S  ARRIVAL  IN  PARIS. 

**  /^  OOD  watchman  with  face  so  sad  and  despairing, 
vjr-*  Why  runnest  thou  hither  with  headlong  speed  ? 

"  My  dear  fellow-countrymen,  how  are  they  faring  ? 
"  My  fatherland,  is  it  from  tyranny  freed  ?" 

All's  going  on  well,  and  liberty's  blessing 

Is  showering  silently  on  us  its  stores, 
And  Germany,  calmly  and  safely  progressing, 

Unfolds  and  develops  herself  within  doors. 

Unlike  France,  superficial  are  none  of  her  blossoms, — 
There  freedom  but  touches  the  outside  of  life ; 

'Tis  but  in  the  depths  of  their  innermost  bosoms 
That  freedom  with  Germans  is  found  to  be  rife^ 


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BOOK  OF   SONOS.  167 

They'll  finish  Cologne's  great  cathedral,  they  tell  us, 
The  HohenzoUems*  have  brought  this  to  pass ; 

A  Hapsburg^  has  shown  himself  equally  zealous, 
A  Wittelsbach^  gives  it  some  fine  painted  glass. 

That  true  Magna  Charta,  a  free  constitution,       [keep ; 

They've  promised,  and  surely  their  promise  they'll 
A  king's  word's  a  prize,  without  circmnlocution, — 

Like  the  Nibelung  stone  in  the  Ehine  it  lies  deep. 

The  Brutus  of  rivers,  the  free  Ehine,  they  surely 
Can  never  remove  him  from  out  of  his  bed ; 

The  Dutchman  his  feet  have  fasten'd  securely. 
The  Switzers  securely  are  holding  his  head. 

God  will  grant  us  a  fleet,  if  we  prove  persevering  ; 

Our  patriotic  exuberant  strength 
Will  find  a  vent  in  sailing  and  steering. 

The  pain  of  imprisonment  ending  at  length. 

The  seeds  cast  tiieir  shells  and  the  spring's  blooming 
sweetly, 

We  draw  a  free  breath  at  this  time  of  the  year ; 
If  permission  to  print  is  denied  us  completely, 

The  censorship  will  of  itself  disappear. 

7.  THE  DRUM-MAJOB.t 

THE  old  drum-major  it  is  that  we  see ; 
Poor  fellow,  he's  pull'd  down  sadly  I 
In  the  Emperor's  time  a  youngster  was  he. 
And  merrily  lived  and  gladly. 

He  used  to  balance  his  ponderous  stick, 
While  a  smile  on  his  face  play'd  lightly; 

The  silver-lace  on  his  tunic  so  thick 
In  the  rays  of  the  sun  gleam'd  brightly. 

Whene'er  with  a  mighty  roll  of  the  drum 

He  enter'd  a  village  or  city, 
He  caused  an  echo  responsive  to  come 

In  the  heart  of  each  girl,  plain  or  pretty 

*  Kames  lof  the  three  royal  houses  of  Pruauia,  Austria,  and 
Bavaria. 

t  Bee  the  dccount  of  the  Old  Drum-Major  Le  Grand  contained 
in  the  prose  section  of  Heine's  **  Pictures  of  Tm?el,"  entitled 
'•BookLeGnnd." 


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168  Heine's  poemb. 

He  came  and  saw  and  conqner'd  too 
Each  fair  one  welcomed  him  in ; 

His  black  moustache  was  wetted  through 
With  tears  of  German  women. 

Besistance  was  vain  !  In  every  land 
That  the  foreign  invaders  came  to, 

The  Emperor  vanquished  the  gentlemen,  and 
The  drimi-major  each  maiden  and  dame  toe 

Our  sorrows  full  long  we  patiently  bore 
Like  oaks,  with  no  one  to  heed  'em, 

Until  the  Authorities  gave  us  once  more 
The  signal  to  battle  for  freedom. 

Like  buffaloes  rushing  on  to  the  fray, 
We  toss'd  our  horns  up  proudly. 

The  yoke  of  France  we  cast  away, 
The  songs  of  Eomer  sang  loudly. 

0  terrible  verses !  the  tyrant's  ear 

At  their  awful  sound  revolted  ; 
The  Emperor  and  the  drum-major  in  fear 

Precipitately  bolted. 

They  both  of  them  reap'd  the  wages  of  sin, 
And  came  to  an  end  inglorious ; 

The  Emperor  Napoleon  tumbled  in 
The  hands  of  the  Britons  victorious. 

Li  Saint  Helena  his  time  he  now  pass'd 
Li  martyrdom,  banish*d  from  liVance,  Sir, 

And,  after  long  suff*ring,  died  at  last 
Of  that  terrible  ailment  cancer. 

The  poor  drum-major,  too,  fell  in  disgrace^ 

And  lost  his  situation ; 
Li  our  hotel  he  took  the  place 

Of  boots, — what  degradation  I 

He  warms  the  oven,  he  scours  the  pots, 

And  wood  and  water  fetches ; 
His  grey  head  wags  as  he  wheezingly  trots 

Up  the  staii*s,  so  weak  the  poor  wretch  is. 

When  Fritz  comes  to  see  me,  he  finds  himsfili 

Liclined  to  jeer  and  rally 
The  comical  lanky  poor  old  elf 

And  his  motions  shilly-shjJly. 


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BOOK  OF  SONOS.  169 

0  Fritz,  a  truce  to  raillery,  please ! 
The  sons  of  Grermany  never 

Should  feJlen  greatness  love  to  tease, 
Or  to  torment  endeavour. 

Such  people  you  ought  to  regard  with  pride 

And  £lial  piety  rather  ; 
Perchance  upon  the  mother's  side 

The  old  man  is  your  father  I 

8.  DEGENERACY. 

HAS  Nature's  self  been  going  backward. 
And  human  faults  assuming,  then  ? 
The  very  plants  and  beasts,  I  fancy, 
Now  lie  as  much  as  mortal  men. 

1  trust  not  in  the  lily's  chasteness  ; 
The  coloured  fop,  the  butterfly. 

Toys  with  her,  kisses,  round  her  flutters, 
Till  lost  is  aU  her  purity. 

The  violet's  modesty  moreover 

I  hold  full  cheap.     The  little  flower 
With  the  coquettish  breezes  trifles, 

In  secret  pants  for  fame  and  power. 

I  doubt  if  Philomel  appreciates 

The  tune  she  sings  with  pompous  mien ; 

She  overdoes  it,  sobs,  and  warbles 

Methinks  from  nought  but  pure  routine. 

Truth  from  the  earth  is  fast  departing, 

The  days  of  Faith  are  also  o'er ; 
The  dogs  still  wag  their  tails,  smell  badly 

And  yet  are  faithful  now  no  more. 

9.  HENBY. 

IN  Canossa's  castle  courtyard 
Stands  the  German  CsBsar  Henry, 
Barefoot,  clad  in  penitential 
Shirt — ^the  night  is  cold  and  rainy. 

From  the  window  high  above  him 

Peep  two  figures,  and  the  moonlight 
Gregory's  bald  head  illumines 

And  the  bosom  of  Mathilda. 


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170  H£INF/S  P0EB£8. 

Henry,  with  Lis  lips  all  pallid, 
Murmnrs  pious  paternosters ; 
Yet  in  his  imperial  heart  he 
Secretly  revolts  and  speaks  thus : 
"  In  my  distant  German  coimtry 
'*  Upward  rise  the  sturdy  mountains ; 
'*  In  the  mountain-pits  in  silence 
"  Grows  the  iron  for  the  war-axe. 
"  In  my  distant  German  country 
"  Upward  rise  the  fine  oak-forests ; 
*^  In  the  loftiest  oak-stem  'mongst  them 
"  Grows  the  handle  for  the  war-axe. 
"  Thou,  my  dear  and  foithful  country, 
"  Wilt  beget  the  hero  also 
**  Who  in  time  will  crush  the  serpent 
'*  Of  my  sorrows  with  his  war-axe." 

10.  LIFE'S  JOURNEY. 
"TTT^HAT  laughter  and  singing !     The  sun*s  rays 

T  T       crossing 
Each  other  gleam  brightly  ;  the  billows  are  tossing 
The  joyous  bark,  and  there  I  reclined 
With  friends  beloved  and  lightsome  mind. 
The  bark  was  presently  wrecked  and  shatter'd. 
My  friends  were  poor  swimmers,  and   soon   were 

scattered. 
And  all  were  drown*d,  in  our  fatherland ; 
I  was  thrown  by  the  storm  on  the  Seine's  far  strand 
Another  ship  I  now  ascended, 
My  journey  by  new  companions  attended ; 
By  strange  waves  tosa'd  and  rock'd,  I  depart — 
How  far  my  home  I  how  heavy  my  heart  I 
Once  more  arises  that  singing  and  laughter ! 
The  wind  pipes  loud,  the  plaiiks  crack  soon  after — 
In  heaven  is  quench'd  the  last  last  star — 
How  heavy  my  heart !     My  home  how  far  I 

11.  THE  NEW  JEWISH  HOSPITAL  AT  HAMBUBG. 

A  HOSPITAL  for  Jews  who're  sick  and  needy, 
For  those  unhappy  threefold  sons  of  sorrow. 
Afflicted  by  the  three  most  dire  misfortunes 
Of  poverty,  disease,  and  Judaism. 


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BOOK  OF  80NGS.  171 

The  worst  by  fajp  of  all  the  three  the  last  is, 
That  family  misfortune,  thousand  years  old, 
That  plague  which  had  its  birth  in  Nile's  fai  valley, 
The  old  Egyptian  and  unsound  religion. 

Incurable  deep  pain  I  'gainst  which  avail  not 
Nor  douche  nor  vapour-bath,  the  apparatus 
Of  surgery,  nor  all  the  means  of  healing 
Which  this  house  offers  to  its  sickly  inmates. 

Will  Time,  eternal  goddess,  e'er  extinguish 
This  glowing  ill,  descending  from  the  father 
Upon  the  son, — and  will  the  grandson  ever 
Be  cured,  and  rational  become  and  happy  ? 

I  cannot  tell  I  Yet  in  the  meantime  let  us 
Extol  that  heart  which  lovingly  and  wisely 
Sought  to  alleviate  pain  as  far  as  may  be, 
Into  the  wounds  a  timely  balsam  pouring. 

Dear  worthy  man  I    He  here  has  built  a  refuge 
For  sorrows  which  by  the  physician's  science 

iOr  else  by  death's !)  are  curable,  providing 
Cushions,  refreshing  drinks,  and  food,  and  nurses. 

A  man  of  deeds,  he  did  his  very  utmost, 
Devoted  to  good  works  his  hard-earned  savings 
In  his  life's  evening,  kindly  and  humanely, 
Becmiting  from  his  toils  by  acts  of  mercy. 

lie  gave  with  open  hand — but  gifts  still  richer, 
His  tears,  full  often  from  his  eyes  were  rolling. 
Tears  fair  and  precious,  which  he  wept  deploring 
His  brethren's  great,  incurable  misfortime. 

12.  GEORGE  HERWEGH* 
TTTHEN  Germanv  first  drank  her  fill, 

T  T    You  then  were  her  obedient  vassal, 
Believing  in  each  pipe-bowl  still, 
And  in  its  black-red-golden  tasseL 

But  when  the  fond  delirium  ceased. 

Good  friend,  how  great  your  constemati* 

The  public  seem'd  a  very  beast. 
After  its  sweet  intoxication ! 

*  A  well-known  republican  poet  and  writer,  bom  at 
at  one  time  caressed,  and  afterwards  banished,  by  i 
*"  He  look  an  active  part  in  the  political  trou 


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172  HEnrars  poems. 

Pelted  by  yile  abnsiTe  swarms 

With  rotten  apples,  in  disorder, 
Under  an  escort  of  gendarmes 

You  reached  at  length  the  German  border 

There  you  stood  still.     A  tear  you  wiped 
Away,  the  well-known  posts  on  spying 

Which  like  the  zebra's  back  are  striped, 
With  heavy  heart  as  follows  sighing : — 

'*  Aranjuez,  in  lightsome  mood 

"  Once  stay'd  I  in  thy  halls  so  splendid, 

"  When  I  before  King  Philip  stood, 
^  By  all  his  proud  grandees  attended. 

"  He  gave  me  an  approving  smile 
**  When  I  the  Marquis  Posa  acted ; 

**  My  prose  he  could  not  relish,  while 
'*  My  verses  his  applause  attracted."* 

13.  THE  TENDENCY. 

GEEMAN  bard !  extol  our  glorious 
German  freedom,  that  thy  lay 
May  possess  our  souls,  and  fire  us, 
And  to  mighty  deeds  inspire  us, 
Like  the  Marseillaise  notorious. 

Be  no  more,  like  Werther,  tender. 

Who  for  Lotte  sigh'd  all  day ; 
Thou  shouldst  teU  tiie  people  proudly 
What  the  bells  proclaim  so  loudly, — 
Speak  of  dirks,  swords,  no  surrender 

Gentle  flutes  no  more  resemble. 

Be  not  so  idyllic,  pray ! 
Fire  the  mortars,  beat  to  quarters. 
Crash,  kill,  thunder,  make  them  tremble 

Orash,  kill,  thunder  like  a  devil 

Till  the  last  foe  flies  away  ; 
To  this  cause  devote  thy  singing, 
Thy  poetic  efforts  bringing 
To  the  common  public's  level. 

•  See  SchiUer's  Play  of  «*Don  Oarke.- 

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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  173 

14.  THE  CHILD. 

THE  good  their  gifts  in  dream  enjoy, 
How  di^  it  fare  with  thee  ? 
Scarce  feeling  it,  youVe  got  a  boy, 
Poor  virgin  Germany  I 

This  boy  an  urchin  frolicsome 

Ere  long  shall  we  behold ; 
A  first-rate  archer  hell  become, 

As  Cupid  was  of  old. 

He'll  pierce  the  soaring  eagle  through ; 

And,  proudly  though  he  fly, 
The  double-headed  eagle  too 

Struck  by  his  bolt,  shall  die. 

But  that  blind  heathen  God  of  love 

Will  he  resemble  not 
In  wearing  neither  clothes  nor  glove, 

Nor  be  a  sans-culotte. 

The  seasons  in  our  land  combine 

With  morals  and  police 
To  make  both  old  and  young  incline 

To  wear  their  clothes  in  peace. 

15.  THE  PROMISE. 

YOU  no  more  shall  barefoot  crawl  so 
Through  the  dirt,  poor  German  freedom 
Stockings  (as  you  find  you  need  'em) 
Tou  shall  have,  and  stout  boots  also. 

As  respects  your  head,  upon  it 

To  protect  your  ears  from  freezin' 

In  flie  chilly  winter-season 
You  shall  have  a  nice  warm  bonnet. 

You  shall  have,  too,  savoury  messes — 

Grand  the  future  that's  before  you  i 

Let  no  Saiyr,  I  implore  you, 
Lure  you  onward  to  excesses  I 

Do  not  haste  on  fast  and  faster ! 

Bender,  as  becomes  inferiors, 

Due  respect  to  your  superiori 
And  the  worthy  burgomaster. 

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174  Heine's  poems. 

16.  THE  CHANGELING. 

A  CHILD  with  monstrous  pumpkin  IugsA^ 
Grey  pigtail,  and  moustache  light  red, 
With  lanky  arms  and  yet  stupendous, 
No  bowels,  yet  with  maw  tremendous, — 

A  changling  which  a  Corporal 

Into  our  cradle  had  let  fall 

On  stealing  from  it  our  own  baby — 

This  monster,  falsehood's  child,  (or  may  be 

'Twas  in  reality  the  son 

Of  his  own  favourite  dog  alone) — 
What  need  to  say  how  much  we  spurn  it  ? 
For  heaven's  sake,  drown  it  or  else  bum  it  I 

17.  THE  EMPEROR  OF  CHINA  * 

MY  father  was  a  dreadful  bore, 
A  good-for-nothing  dandy; 
But  I'm  a  mighty  Emperor, 
And  love  a  bumper  of  brandy. 

These  glorious  draughts  all  others  surpass 

In  this,  their  magical  power  : 
As  soon  as  I  have  drained  my  glass. 

All  China  bursts  into  flower. 

The  Middle  Kingdom  bursts  into  life, 
A  blossoming  meadow  seeming ; 

A  man  I  wellnigh  become,  and  my  wife 
Soon  gives  me  signs  of  teeming. 

On  every  side  abundance  reigns, 
The  sick  no  longer  need  potions  ; 

Confucius,  Court-philosopher,  gains 
Distinct  and  positive  notions. 

The  ryebread  the  soldiers  used  to  eat 
Of  almond  cakes  is  made  now  ; 
irery  vagabonds  in  the  street 
silk  and  satin  parade  now. 

knightly  Order  of  Mandarins, 
LOse  weak  old  invalids,  daily 
fining  strength  and  filling  their  skins, 
id  shaking  their  pigtails  gaily. 

Evidently  a  satire  on  the  King  of  Pruflsia. 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  175 

Tli6  great  pagoda,  faith's  symbol  prized, 
Is  ready  for  those  who're  believing; 

The  last  of  the  Jews  are  here  baptized, 
The  Dragon's  order  receiving. 

The  noble  Manchoos  exclaim,  when  freed 

From  the  presence  of  revolution : 
"  The  bastinado  is  all  that  we  need, 

"  We  want  no  constitution !" 

The  pupils  of  iEjSculapius  perhaps 
May  tell  me  that  drink's  dissipation ; 

But  I  continue  to  drink  my  Schnaps, 
To  benefit  the  nation. 

And  so  in  drinking  I  persevere ; 

It  tastes  like  very  manna  ! 
My  people  are  happy,  and  drink  their  beer, 

And  join  in  shouting  Hosanna ! 

18.  CHURCH-COUNSELLOR  PROMETHEUS. 

GOOD  Sir  Paulus,*  noble  robber. 
All  the  gods  are  on  thee  gazing 
With  their  brows  in  anger  knitted, 
Furious  at  the  theft  amazing 

Thou  hast  practised  in  Olympus — 

Sorry  for  it  they  will  make  thee ! 
Fear  the  fate  of  poor  Prometheus 

If  Jove's  bailiffs  overtake  thee  I 

Worse  indeed  his  theft,  because  he 

Stole  the  light  in  heaven  dwelling 
To  enlighten  us  weak  mortals — 

Thou  didst  steal  the  works  of  Schelling, 

Just  the  opposite  of  light,— nay, 

Darkness  we  can  feel  and  handle 
Like  the  old  Egyptian  darkness, — 

Not  one  solitiury  candle ! 

♦  A  famous  theological  writer,  who  died  in  1850,  at  the  age  ot 
ninety.  He  was  fonneriy  Counsellor  of  the  Consistory  {Kirchet^ 
rath)  at  Wiirzbur^,  and  for  many  years  Professor  of  Chnix^ 
History,  &o.  at  Heidelberg. 


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176  Heine's  poems. 

19.  TO  THE  WATCHMAN 
(On  a  recent  occafiion^. 

IF  heart  and  style  remam  still  true, 
ril  not  object,  whatever  you  do.  • 

My  friend,  I  never  will  mistake  you, 
E'en  though  a  Counsellor  they  make  you. 

They  now  are  raising  a  terrible  din 

Because  you've  been  sworn  as  a  Coimsellor  in ; 

From  the  Seine  to  the  Elbe,  regardless  of  reason, 

For  months  they've  declaim'd  thus  against  your  sad 

treason : 
His  progress  onward  is  changed  of  late 
To  progress  backward ;  0,  answer  us  straight — 
On  Swabian  crabs  are  you  really  riding  ? 
Is't  only  court-ladies  you  now  take  pride  in  ? 

Perchance  you  are  tired,  and  long  for  rest ; 

All  night  on  your  horn  you've  been  blowing  your  best 

And  now  on  a  nail  you  quietly  stow  it ; 

No  longer  for  Germany's  hobby  youll  blow  it. 

You  lie  down  in  bed,  and  straightway  close 
Your  eyes,  but  vainly  you  seek  for  repose ; 
Before  the  window  the  mockers  salute  us  : 
Awake,  Liberator  I     What !  sleeping,  Brutus  ? 

Ah,  bawlers  like  these  can  never  know  why 
The  best  of  watchmen  ceases  to  cry  ; 
These  young  braggadocios  cannot  discover 
Why  man  his  exertions  at  length  gives  over. 

You  ask  me  how  matters  are  going  on  here  ? 
No  breeze  is  stirring,  the  atmosphere's  clear ; 
The  weathercocks  a.11  are  perplex'd,  not  discerning 
The  proper  direction  in  which  to  be  turning. 

20.  CONSOLING  THOUGHTS. 
^tf/'E  sleep  as  Brutus  slept  of  yore, — 
T  T   And  yet  he  awoke,  and  ventured  to  bore 
In  Caesar's  bosom  his  chilly  dagger  I 
The  Eomans  their  tyrants  loved  to  stagger.— 

No  Eomans  are  we,  tobacco  we  smoke, 
Each  nation  its  favourite  taste  can  invoke ; 
Each  nation  its  special  merit  possesses — 
The  finest  dumplings  Swabia  dresses. 


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BOOK  OF  soNas.  177 

But  Qermans  are  we,  kindliearted  and  brave, 
We  sleep  as  soundly  as  though  in  the  grave ; 
And  when  we  awake,  our  thirst  is  excessive, 
i5ut  not  for  the  blood  of  tyrants  oppressive, 

'Tis  our  great  pride  to  be  as  true 

As  heart  of  oak  and  linden  too ; 

The  land  which  oaks  and  lindens  gives  birth  to 

Can  never  produce  a  Brutus  of  worth  too. 

And  e'en  if  amongst  us  a  Brutus  were  found, 
No  CsBsar  exists  in  the  country  round ; 
Despite  all  his  search,  he  wotdd  find  him  never, — 
We  make  good  gingerbread  however. 

We've  six-and-thirty  masters  and  lords, 
(Not  one  too  many  I)  who  wear  their  swords 
And  stars  on  their  regal  breasts  to  protect  them ; 
The  Ides  of  March  can  never  affect  them. 

We  call  them  Father,  and  Fatherland 
We  call  the  country  they  command 
By  right  of  descent,  and  love  to  call  so — 
We  love  sour-crout  and  sausages  also. 

And  when  our  Father  walks  in  the  street 
We  take  off  our  hats  with  reverence  meet ; 
Our  guileless  Germany,  injuring  no  man. 
Is  not  a  den  of  murderers  Eoman. 

21.  THE  WORLD  TURNED  UPSIDE  DOWN. 

THE  world  is  topsy-turvy  tum'd. 
We  walk  feet-upwards  in  it ; 
The  woodcocks  shoot  the  sportsmen  down, 
A  dozen  in  a  minute. 

The  calves  are  seen  to  roast  the  cook. 

On  men  are  riding  the  horses ; 
On  freedom  of  teaching  and  laws  of  light 

The  Catholic  owl  discourses. 

The  herring  is  a  sans-culotte. 

The  truth  is  told  by  Bettina, 
And  puss-in-boots  brings  Sophocles 

On  the  stage,  with  learned  demeanour. 


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178  hkike'b  poehs. 

An  ape  for  German  heroes  has  bnilt 

A  Pantheon,  for  glory  zealous ;  * 
And  Massmami  has  lately  been  using  a  oamh^ 

As  German  papers  tell  us. 

The  German  bears,  I  grieve  to  say, 

Are  atheists  unbelieving, 
And  in  their  place  the  parrots  of  Franoe 

The  Christian  faith  are  receiving. 

The  Moniteur  of  Uckermark 

With  equal  frenzy  seems  smitten ; 
The  dead  have  on  the  living  there 

The  vilest  epitaph  written.*!" 

Then  let  us  not  swim  against  the  stream, 
Good  friends  I  'twould  serve  us  but  badly ; 

But  let  us  ascend  the  Templehof  hill ,  J 
"  Long  life  to  the  king  1'*  shouting  gladly. 

22.  ENLIGHTENMENT. 

HAVE  the  scales  that  dimm'd  thy  vision 
Fallen,  Michael  ?    Canst  thou  see 
How  they're  stealing  in  derision 
All  the  choicest  food  from  thee  ?    ^ 

In  return,  divine  enjoyment 

Promise  they  in  realms  above. 
Where  the  angels'  sole  employment 

Is  to  cook  us  fleshless  love. 

Michael,  hath  thy  faith  grown  weaker, 

Or  thy  appetite  more  strong  ? 
Thou  dost  grasp  life's  sparkling  beaker. 

And  thou  sing'st  a  hero-song. 

Fear  not,  Michael !  take  thy  pleasure 
While  on  earth,  and  eat  what's  good ; 

When  thou'rt  dead,  thou'lt  have  full  leisure 
To  digest  in  peace  thy  food. 

*  A  polite  allusion  to  the  late  King  of  Bavaria  and  hii 
Walhalla. 

t  This  refers  to  a  poem  of  Freiligrath's,  entitled  "  The  Dead 
to  the  Living/'  for  which  he  was  proeecatod,  but  acquitted,  in 
1848.  * 

X  A  hill  close  to  Berlin. 


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23.    WAIT  AWHILE! 


BECAUSE  my  lightnings  are  so  striking, 
You  think  that  I  can't  thunder  too  I 
You're  wrong,  for  I've  a  special  liking 
For  thunder,  as  I'll  prove  to  you. 

This  will  be  seen  with  awful  clearness 
When  the  right  moment  is  at  hand ; 

You'll  hear  my  voice  in  startling  nearness,— 
The  word  of  thunder  and  command. 

The  raging  storm  will  surely  shiver 
Full  many  an  oak  upon  that  day ; 

Each  palace  to  its  base  shall  quiver, 
And  many  a  steeple  proud  give  way. 

24.  NIGHT  THOUGHTS. 

WHEN,  Germany,  I  think  of  thee 
At  night,  all  slumber  flies  from  me ; 
I  cannot  close  mine  eyes  for  yearning. 
And  down  my  cheeks  run  tears  all  burning. 

How  swiftly  speeds  each  rolling  year  I 
Since  I  have  seen  my  mother  dear 
Twelve  years  have  pass'd  away ;  the  longer 
I  wait,  my  yearning  grows  the  stronger. 

My  yearning's  growing  evermore ; 
That  woman  has  bewitch'd  me  sore ! 
Dear,  dear  old  woman !  with  what  fervour 
I  think  of  her  I  may  God  preserve  her  I 

The  dear  old  thing  in  me  delights, 
And  in  the  letters  that  she  writes 
I  see  how  much  her  hand  is  shaking, — 
Her  mother's  heart,  how  nearly  breaking ! 

My  mother's  ever  in  my  mind ; 
Twelve  long  long  years  are  left  behind. 
Twelve  years  have  follow'd  on  each  other 
Since  to  my  heart  I  clasp'd  my  mother. 

For  ages  Germany  will  stand ; 
Sound  to  the  core  is  that  dear  land  I 
Its  oaks  and  lindens  I  shall  ever 
Find  just  the  same,  they  alter  never. 


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180  hedib's  poems. 

For  Germany  I  less  shonlcl  care 
If  my  dear  mother  were  not  there ; 
My  fiktherland  will  never  perish 
But  she  may  die,  whom  most  I  cherish. 

Since  I  my  native  land  saw  last, 
Into  the  tomb  have  many  pass'd 
Whom  I  so  loved — When  of  them  thinking 
How  sadly  bleeds  my  spirit  sinking ! 

I  needs  must  count  them, — as  I  count 
My  sorrows  higher,  higher  moimt ; 
I  feel  as  though  each  corpse  were  lying 
Upon  my  breast — Thank  God,  they're  flying  ! 

Thank  God !  for  through  the  window-pane 
France's  clear  daylight  breaks  again; 
My  fair  wife  enters,  sweetly  smiling. 
And  all  my  German  cares  beguiling  I 


NEW  SPBING. 
PROLOGUE. 


SOMETIMES  when  o'er  pictures  turning, 
You  have  seen  the  man  perchance, 
Who  is  for  the  battle  yearning, 

Well-equipp'd  with  shield  and  lance. 

Yet  young  loves  are  hov'ring  roimd  him. 
Stealing  lance  and  sword  away ; 

They  with  flow'ry  chains  have  bound  him 
Though  he  struggle  in  dismay. 

I,  too,  in  such  charming  fetters. 

Bind  myself  with  sad  delight. 
And  I  leave  it  to  my  betters 

In  time's  mighty  fight  to  fight. 

1. 

•^TVTEATH  the  white  tree  sitting  sadly, 
1. 1    Thou  dost  hear  the  fietr  winds  wailing^ 
Seest  how  the  mute  clouds  o'er  thee 
Are  their  forms  in  miat  fast  veiling ; 


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J 


BOOK  or  SOKOS.  181 

See'st  how  all  beneath  seems  perished, 
Wood  and  plain,  how  shorn  and  dreaiy ; 

Bonnd  thee  winter,  in  thee  winter, 
Frozen  is  thy  heart  and  weary. 

Sndden  downward  &11  upon  theo 
Flakes  all  -vdiite,  and  widi  vexation 

Thou  dost  think  the  tree  is  show'ring 
Snow-dost  from  that  elevation. 

Soon  with  joyful  start  thou  findest 
'Tis  no  snow-dust  cold  and  freezing ; 

Fragrant  blossoms  'tis  of  springtime 
Goy'ring  thee  and  fondly  teasing. 

What  a  shudd'ring-sweet  enchantment  t 

Into  May  is  winter  turning. 
Snow  hath  changed  itself  to  blossoms, 

And  thy  heart  with  love  is  yearning. 

2. 

IN  the  wood,  the  verdure's  shooting, 
Joy-oppress'd,  like  some  fair  maiden ; 
Yet  the  sun  laughs  sweetly  downward : 
"  Welcome,  young  spring,  rapture-laden  T 

Nightingale  I  I  hear  thee  also. 

Piping,  blissful-sad  and  lonely. 
Sobbing  tones  and  long-protracted, 

And  thy  song  of  love  is  only  I 

a 

THE  beauteous  eyes  of  the  spring's  fair  night 
With  comfort  are  downward  gazing : 
If  love  hath  made  thee  so  small  in  our  sight, 
Yet  love  hath  the  power  of  raising. 

Sweet  Philomel  sits  on  the  linden  green, 

Her  notes  melodiously  blending  ; 
And  as  to  my  soul  her  song  pierceth  e'en, 

My  soul  once  more  is  distending. 

4. 
TTTHICH  flower  I  love,  I  cannot  disooTor; 

f  T  This  grief  doth  impart. 

In  every  calix  I  search  like  a  lover. 
And  seek  a  heart. 


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182  Heine's  poems. 

The  flowers  smell  sweet  in  the  sun's  setting  splendour^ 

The  nightingale  sings. 
I  seek  for  a  heart  that  l&e  my  heart  is  tender, 

And  like  it  springs. 

The  nightingale  sings ;  his  sweet  song,  Toid  of  gladness, 

Comes  home  to  my  breast ; 
We're  both  so  oppressed  and  heavy  with  sadness. 
So  sad  and  oppressed. 

5. 

SWEET  May  hath  come  to  love  us, 
Flowers,  trees,  their  blossoms  don ; 
And  through  the  blue  heavens  above  us 
The  rosy  clouds  move  on. 

The  nightingales  are  singing 

On  leafy  perch  aloft ; 
The  snowy  lambs  are  springing 

In  clover  green  and  soft. 

I  cannot  be  singing  and  springing, 

111  in  the  grass  I  lie  ; 
I  hear  a  distant  ringing. 

And  dream  of  days  gone  by. 

«. 

SOFTLY  through  my  spirit  ring 
Blissful  tones  loved  dearly ; 
Sound,  thou  little  song  of  spring. 
Echoing  far  and  clearly. 

Sound,  till  thou  the  home  com'st  nigh 

Of  ttie  violet  tender ; 
And  when  thou  a  rose  dost  spy, 

Say,  my  love  I  send  her. 


WITH  the  rose  the  butterfly's  deep  in  love^ 
A  thousand  times  hovering  round ; 
But  round  himself,  all  tender  like  gold, 
The  sun's  sweet  ray  is  hovering  found. 

With  whom  is  the  rose  herself  in  love  ? 

An  answer  I'd  fain  receive. 
Is  it  the  singing  nightingale  ? 

Is  it  ftie  wlent  star  of  eve  ? 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  183 

I  know  not  with  whom  the  rose  is  in  love, 

But  every  one  love  I : 
The  rose,  tiie  nightingale,  sun's  sweet  ray, 

The  stor  of  eve  and  butterfly. 


ALL  the  trees  with  joy  are  shouting, 
All  the  birds  are  singing  o'er  us — 
Tell  me,  who  can  be  the  leader 
Lx  this  green  and  forest  chorus  ? 

Can  it  be  the  grey  old  plover, 
Wise  nods  evermore  renewing  ? 

Or  yon  pedant,  who  is  ever 

In  such  measured  time  coo-coo-ing  ? 

Can  it  be  yon  stork,  the  grave  one. 

His  director  s  airs  betraying, 
And  his  long  leg  rattling  loudly. 

Whilst  the  music's  round  him  playing  ? 

No,  the  forest  concert's  leader 
In  my  own  heart  hath  his  station, 

All  the  while  he's  beating  time  there, — 
Amor  is  his  appellation. 


"  rpHE  nightingale  appear'd  the  first, 
Jl    "  And  as  her  melody  she  sang, 

•*  The  apple  into  blossom  burst, 

"  To  life  the  grass  and  violets  sprang. 

"  She  her  own  bosom  then  did  bite, 

"  Her  red  blood  flow'd,  and  from  the  blood 

**  A  beauteous  rose-tree  came  to  light, 
**  To  whom  she  sings  in  loving  mood. 

**  That  blood  atones  for,  to  this  day, 
"  Us  birds  within  the  forest  here ; 

"  Yet  when  the  rose-song  dies  away, 
**  Will  all  the  wood  too  disappear." 

Thus  to  his  youthful  brood  doth  speak 

The  sparrow  in  his  oaken  nest ; 
Pia  mate  pips,  while  she  trims  her  beak, 

And  proudly  sits  and  looks  her  best 


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18i  HEINE'S  POEMS. 

She  is  a  homely  wife  and  kind, 
Broods  well,  and  ne'er  is  seen  to  pout ; 

The  fiftther  makes  his  children  find 
Pastime  in  studying  things  devont. 

la 

THE  warm  and  balmy  spring-night's  air 
Hath  waken'd  every  flower, 
And  take  I  not  the  greatest  care. 

My  heart  must  succumb  to  love's  power. 

But  which  of  all  the  flowery  throng 

Is  likely  most  to  snare  me  ? 
The  nightingales  say,  in  their  blissful  song. 

Of  the  lily  I  ought  to  beware  me. 

11. 

I'M  sore  perplex'd,  the  bells  are  ringing, 
And  by  my  senses  I  feel  forsaken  ; 
The  spring  and  two  fair  eyes  together 
Against  my  heart  an  oath  have  taken. 

The  spring  and  two  fair  eyes  together 
Lure  on  my  heart  to  a  new  illusion ; 

Methinks  the  nightingales  and  roses 

Have  much  to  do  with  all  my  confosion. 

12. 

AH  !  I  yearn  for  tears  all-burning. 
Tears  of  love  and  gentle  woe, 
And  I  tremble  lest  this  yearning 
At  the  last  should  ov^ow. 

Ah !  love's  pangs,  that  sweetly  languish, 
And  love's  bitter  joy,  so  blest, 

Creep  again,  with  heavenly  anguish, 
Into  my  scarce  healed  breast. 

13. 

THE  eyes  of  spring,  so  aanire. 
Are  peeping  from  the  ground ; 
They  are  the  darling  violets. 
That  I  in  nosegays  bound. 


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BOOK  OF  BONOS.  185 

I  pluck  them,  thinTring  deeply, 

And  all  the  thoughts  so  dear. 
That  in  mj  heart  are  sighing, 

The  nightingale  sings  clear. 

Yes,  all  my  thoughts  she  singeth 

And  warbleth,  echoing  far ; 
So  that  my  tender  secrets 

Known  to  the  whole  wood  are. 

14. 

WHEN  thy  dress  doth  gently  touch  me. 
As  thou  pass'st  before  my  face, 
How  my  heart  exults,  how  wildly 
Follows  it  thy  lovely  trace  I 

Then  thou  tumest  round  and  gazest 

With  thy  large  bright  eyes  on  me, 
And  my  heart  doth  feel  so  startled, 

That  it  scarce  can  follow  thee. 

15. 

THE  slender  water-lily 
Peeps  dreamingly  out  of  the  lake ; 
The  moon,  oppressed  with  love's  sorrow, 
Looks  tenderly  down  for  her  sake. 

With  blushes  she  bends  to  the  water 

Once  more  her  head  so  sweet — 
Then  sees  she  the  poor  pale  fellow 

Lying  before  her  feet 

16. 

rthou  hast  good  eyes,  and  look'st 
In  my  songs,  when  thou  hast  tried  them. 
Thou  wilt  see  a  fair  young  maiden 
Wandering  up  and  down  inside  them. 

If  thou  hast  good  ears  as  well, 

Thou  canst  hear  her  voice  quite  clearly. 

And  her  sighing,  laughing,  singing 
Thy  poor  hecurt  will  madden  nearly. 

For  she  will,  with  look  and  word, 
Thee,  like  me,  make  wellnigh  oraiy : 

An  enamour'd  springtime-dreamer 
Thou  wilt  tr^id  tibe  forest  mazy. 


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186  Heine's  poems. 

17. 
"TTTHAT  drives  thee  on,  in  the  spring's  dear  night  ? 
▼  T     Thou  hast  driven  the  flowers  all  mad  with  fright. 
The  violets  tremble  and  shiver ; 
The  roses  are  all  with  shame  so  red, 
The  lilies  are  death-pale,  and  hang  their  head, 
They  mourn,  and  fialter,  and  quiver. 

O  darling  moon,  what  an  innocent  race 

Those  sweet  flowers  are  I  They  are  right  in  this  case, 

I  really  have  acted  badly ; 
Tet  how  could  I  tell  that  in  wait  she  would  lie, 
When  I  was  addressing  the  stars  on  high. 

With  fierce  love  raving  so  madly  ? 

18. 

THOU  sweetly  lookest  on  me 
With  eyes  so  blue  and  meek ; 
My  senses  feel  all-dreamy. 
And  not  a  word  can  I  speak. 

I  everywhere  am  thinking 

Of  thy  blue  eyes'  sweet  smile ; 
A  sea  of  blue  thoughts  is  spreading 

Over  my  heart  the  while. 

19. 

ONCE  again  my  heart  is  vanquish'd. 
And  my  rancour  is  subsiding ; 
Once  again  hath  May  breath'd  on  me 
Fee^gs  tender  and  confiding. 

Once  more  late  and  early  haste  I 

Through  the  walks  the  most  firequented, 

Under  every  bonnet  seek  I 

For  my  fair  one's  face  lamented. 

Once  more  at  the  verdant  river 

On  the  bridge  I  take  my  station ; 
Peradventure  she  will  come  there, 

And  will  see  my  desolation. 

In  the  waterfall's  loud  rxmsio 

Hear  I  once  again  soft  sighing, 
And  my  gentle  heart  well  £ioweth 

What  tiie  white  waves  are  replying. 


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BOOK  OP  SONGS.  187 

Once  again  in  mazy  pathways 

I  am  lost  in  dreamy  vision. 
And  the  birds  in  every  thicket 

Hold  the  fond  fool  in  derision. 

ao. 

THE  rose  is  fragrant — ^yet  if  she  divineth 
Her  own  sweet  fragrance,  if  the  nightingale 
Herself  feels  what  round  man's  soul  softly  twineth. 
When  echoes  her  sweet  song  across  the  vale, — 

I  cannot  tell.  Yet  man  is  with  vexation 
Oft  fill'd  by  truth.     If  nightingale  and  rose 

The  feeling  only  feign'd,  the  fabrication 
Would  still  be  useful,  we  may  well  suppose. 


BECAUSE  I  love  thee,  be  not  scornful. 
If,  flying,  I  avoid  thy  face ; 
How  ill  accords  my  visage  mournful 
With  thine,  so  fair  and  full  of  grace  I 

Because  I  love  thee,  every  feature 
Grows  pale  and  thinner  day  by  day ; 

Thoult  find  me  but  a  hideous  creature,— 
ril  shun  thee, — be  not  scornful,  pray. 

22. 

IWANDEE  'mid  the  flowers. 
And  blossom  with  them  too ; 
I  wander  as  in  vision, 

And  at  each  step  totter  anew. 

O  hold  me  fast,  my  loved  one, 

Or  at  thy  feet  I'll  fall, 
With  love  intoxicated, 

In  the  garden,  in  presence  of  all  I 

23. 

AS  the  moon's  fair  image  quaketh 
In  the  raging  waves  of  ocean. 
Whilst  she,  in  the  vault  of  heaven, 
Moves  with  silent  peaceful  motion. 


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188  heinb's  poems. 

Thus,  beloved  one,  thou  art  moving, 
Still  and  peacefiil,  and  nought  quaketh 

In  my  heart  save  thy  dear  image, 

While  my  own  heart  'tis  that  shaketh^ 

2i. 

THE  hearts  of  us  two,  my  loved  one, 
A  Holy  Alliance  have  made ; 
They  well  understood  each  other, 
When  close  together  laid. 

Alas  !  the  rose  so  youthful 

That  decks  thy  gentle  breast, 
Our  poor  ally  and  associate. 

To  death  was  wellnigh  press'd. 

25. 

TELL  me  who  first  taught  clocks  to  chime, 
Made  minutes,  hours,  divisions  of  time  ? 
It  was  a  cold  and  sorrowful  elf; 
He  sat  in  the  winter-night,  wrapp'd  in  himself, 
And  counted  the  mouse's  squeakmgs  mysterious. 
And  the  wood-worm's  regular  tick  so  serious. 

Tell  me  who  first  did  kisses  suggest  ? 
It  was  a  mouth  all  glowing  and  blest ; 
It  kiss'd  and  it  thought  of  nothing  beside. 
The  fair  month  of  May  was  then  in  its  pride, 
The  flowers  were  all  from  the  earth  fast  springing^ 
The  sun  was  laughing,  the  birds  were  singing. 

26. 

HOW  the  pinks  are  breathing  fragrance  I 
How  the  thronging  stars  so  tender, 
Golden  bee  like,  sadly  glunmer 

'Mid  the  heaven's  blue-violet  splendour! 

Through  the  gloom  of  yonder  chestnuts 
Gleams  the  manse,  so  white  and  stately, 

And  I  hear  the  glass  door  rattling 
While  the  dear  voice  thrills  me  greatly* 

Sweet  alarm  and  blissful  tremor. 
Soft  embraces,  terror-bringing — 

And  the  youthful  rose  is  list'ning. 
And  the  nightingales  are  singing. 


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BOOK  OF  SONGS.  189 

27. 

HAVE  I  not  the  selfHsame  vision 
Dreamt  before  of  all  these  blisses  ? 
Were  there  not  these  same  elysian 

Looks  of  love,  and  flowers,  and  kisses  ? 

By  the  stream  the  moon  was  peeping 

Through  the  foliage  of  our  bower ; 
Marble-gods  still  watch  were  keeping 

At  the  entrance  in  that  hour. 

Ah !  I  know  how  soon  is  over 

Every  sweet  and  blissful  vision, 
How  the  snow's  cold  dress  doth  cover 

Heart  and  tree  in  sad  derision. 

How  e'en  we  are  fast  congealing, 

Careless,  and  no  love  possessing, 
We,  who're  now  so  softly  feeling, 

Heart  to  heart  so  softly  pressing  I 

28. 

KISSES  that  one  steals  in  darkness,         ^ 
And  in  darkness  then  returns — 
How  such  kisses  Are  the  spirit. 
If  with  honest  love  it  bums ! 

Pensive,  and  with  fond  remembrance, 

Then  the  spirit  loves  to  dwell 
Much  on  days  that  long  have  vanished, 

Much  on  future  days  as  well. 

Yet  methinks  that  too  much  thinking 

Dang'rous  is,  if  kiss  we  will ; — 
Weep,  then,  rather,  darling  spirit. 

For  to  weep  is  easier  still. 

29. 

THEBE  was  an  aged  monarch. 
His  heart  was  sad,  his  head  was  grey ; 
This  poor  and  aged  monarch 
A  yoimg  wife  married  one  day. 

There  was  a  handsome  page,  too. 

Fair  was  his  hair,  and  light  his  mien ; 

The  silken  train  he  carried 
Of  the  aforesaid  young  Queon. 


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190  HEINE  S  POEMS. 

Dost  know  the  ancient  ballad  ? 

It  sounds  so  sweet,  it  sounds  so  sad  1 
riiey  both  of  them  must  perish, 

For  too  much  affection  they  had. 

30. 

IN  my  remembrance  blossom 
The  images  long  forsaken — 
Within  thy  voice  what  is  there 
By  which  so  deeply  I*m  shaken  ? 

Say  not  that  thou  dost  love  me  I 
I  know  that  earth's  fairest  treasury 

Sweet  love  and  happy  spring  time, 
'T  would  shame  beyond  all  measure. 

Say  not  that  thou  dost  love  me  I 
A  silent  kiss  I'll  bestow  thee ; 

Then  smile,  when  I  to-morrow 
The  withered  roses  show  thee. 

81. 

"  T  INDEN  blossoms  drunk  with  moonlight 
-Li     **  Fly  about  in  fragrant  showers, 

**  And  the  nightingale's  sweet  music 
"  Fills  the  air  and  leafy  bowers. 

"  Ah  I  how  sweet  it  is,  my  loved  one, 
"  'Neath  these  lindens  to  be  sitting, 

'*  When  the  glimm'ring  golden  moonbeams 
"  Through  the  fragrant  leaves  are  flitting. 

"  If  thou  lookest  on  the  lime-leaf, 
"  Thou  a  heart's  form  wilt  discover ; 

"  Therefore  are  the  lindens  ever 
"  Chosen  seats  of  each  fond  lover. 

'^  Yet  thou  smilest,  as  though  buried 
"  In  far  distant  visions  yearning — 

"  Speak,  beloved,  all  the  wishes 

"  That  in  thy  dear  heart  are  burning." 

Ah,  my  darling  1 1  will  tell  thee 

Whence  my  thoughts  proceed,  and  whither : 
Fain  I'd  see  the  chilly  north-wind 

Sudden  bring  white  snowstorms  hither 


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BOOK  OF  BONOS.  191 

So  that  we,  with  furs  well  cover'd, 

And  in  gaudy  sledges  riding, 
Cracking  whips,  with  bells  loud  ringing. 

Might  o'er  stream  and  plain  be  gHdmg. 

82. 

THBOUGH  the  forest,  in  the  moonlight, 
I  the  elves  saw  riding  proudly ; 
And  I  heard  their  trumpets  sounding. 

And  I  hear  their  bells  ring  loudly. 
Their  white  horses  had  upon  them 

Grolden  staghoms,  whilst  proceeding 
Swiftly  on— like  flights  of  wild  swans 

Through  the  air  the  train  was  speeding. 
Smilingly  the  queen  bent  tow'rds  me. 

Smiling,  as  tibe  band  rode  by  me ; 
Is't  a  sign  that  new  love's  coming. 

Or  a  sign  that  death  is  nigh  me  ? 

33. 

IN  the  morning  send  I  violets, 
Early  in  the  wood  discovered, 
And  at  evening  bring  I  roses 

Pluck'd  while  twilight's  hour  still  hovered. 
Enowest  thou  the  hidden  language 

By  these  lovely  flowerets  spoken  ? 
Truth  by  day-time,  love  at  night-time — 
'Tis  of  this  that  they're  the  token  I 

34. 

THY  letter,  sent  to  prove  me, 
Inflicts  no  sense  of  wrong ; 
No  longer  wilt  thou  love  me, — 

Thy  letter,  though,  is  long. 
Twelve  sides,  to  tell  thy  views  all  I 

A  manuscript,  in  fact ! 
In  giving  a  reAisal 
Far  otiberwige  we  act. 

35. 

CAKE  not,  if  my  love  I'm  telling 
Unto  all  the  world  around. 
When  my  mouth,  thy  beauty  praising, 
Full  of  metaphor  is  found. 


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192  HEIKE'8  POBM& 

Andorneatli  a  wood  of  flowers 

Lies,  in  shelter  safe  below, 
All  that  deep  and  glowing  secret, 

All  that  deep  and  secret  glow. 

If  suspicious  sparks  should  issue 
From  the  roses, — fearless  be  I 

This  dull  world  in  flames  believes  not, 
But  believes  them  poetry. 

DAT  and  night  alike  the  springtime 
Makes  with  soimding  Hfe  all-teeming  | 
Like  a  verdant  echo  can  it 
Enter  even  in  my  dreaming. 

Then  the  birds  sing  yet  more  sweetly 
Than  before,  and  softer  breezes 

Fill  the  air,  the  violet's  fragrance 
With  still  wilder  yearning  pleases. 

E'en  the  roses  blossom  redder, 
And  a  child-like  golden  glory    ' 

Bear  they,  like  the  heads  of  angels 
LidJie.pibtures  of  old  story. 

Arit  myself  I  almost  fancy 

Some  sWeet  nightingale,  when  singing 
Of  my  love  to  those  fair  roses. 

Wondrous  songs  my  vision  bringing—* 

Till  I'm  waken'd  by  the  sunlight, 

Or  by  that  delicious  bustle 
Of  the  nightingales  of  springtime 

That  before  my  window  rustle. 

87. 

STABS  with  golden  feet  are  wand'ring 
Yonder,  and  they  gently  weep 
That  they  cannot  earth  awaken, 
Who  in  night's  arms  is  asleep. 

List'ning  stand  the  silent  forests, 

Every  leaf  an  ear  doth  seem  I 
How  its  shadowy  arm  the  mountain 

Stretcheth  out,  as  though  in  dream 


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BOOK  OF  SONOe.  193 

What  call'd  yonder  ?    In  my  bosom 

Eings  the  echo  of  the  tone. 
Was  it  my  beloved  one  speaking, 

Or  the  nightingale  alone  ? 

38. 

THE  spring  is  solemn,  mournful  only 
Are  all  its  dreams,  each  flower  appears 
Weigh'd  down  by  grief,  the  song  all-lonely 

Of  Philomel  wakes  secret  tears. 
0  smile  thou  not,  my  darling  beauty, 

O  smile  not,  fall  of  charming  grace ! 
But  weep,  that  it  may  be  my  duty 

To  kiss  a  tear  from  off  thy  face.  ^ 

39. 

ONCE  more  from  that  fond  heart  I'm  driven 
Which  I  so  dearly  love,  so  madly; 
Once  more  from  that  fond  heart  I'm  driven-  - 

Beside  it  would  I  linger  gladly. 
The  chariot  rolls,  the  bridge  is  quaking, 

The  stream  beneath  it  flows  so  sadly  ; 
Once  more  the  joys  am  I  forsaking 

Of  that  fond  heart  I  love  so  mudly. 
In  heav'n  rush  on  the  starry  legions, 

As  though  before  my  sorrow  flying-— 
Sweet  one,  farewell !  in  distant  regions 

My  heart  for  thee  will  still  be  sighing. 

40. 
[Y  cherish'd  wishes  blossom, 
And  wither  again  at  a  breath. 
And  blossom  again  and  wither, 

And  so  on  until  death. 
This  know  I,  and  it  saddens 

All  love  and  joy,  once  so  blest ; 
My  heart  is  so  wise  and  witty, 
And  bleeds  away  in  my  breast. 

41. 

LIKE  an  old  man's  face  confounded 
Is  the  sky  so  broad  and  airy, 
Bed,  one-eyed,  and  close  surrounded 
By  the  grey  clouds'  locks  all  hairy. 

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W 


194  Heine's  fqemb. 

When  upon  the  earth  it  gazes, 

Flower  and  bud  grow  pale  and  sickly  | 

Love  and  song  in  all  their  phases 

Fade  away  from  men's  nunds  quickly. 

42. 
"TT71TH  sullen  thoughts  in  chilly  bosom  cherish'd, 
T  T    I  travel  sullen  through  the  world  so  cold  ; 
The  autumn's  end  hath  come,  a  humid  mist  doth  hold 
Deep  veil'd  from  si^t  the  country  drear  and  perish'd. 

The  winds  are  piping,  hither,  thither  bending 

The  red-tinged  leaves,  that  from  the  trees  fell  fest, 
The  bare  plain  steams,  the  wood  sighs  'neath  the  blast, 

The  worst  of  all  comes  next — the  rain's  descending ! 

43. 

LATE  autumnal  mists  all-dripping 
Spread  o'er  hill  and  valley  fair ; 
Storms  the  trees  of  leaves  are  stripping, 
And  they  ghostly  look,  and  bare. 

But  one  single  sad  tree  only 

Silent  and  unstripp'd  is  seen ; 
Moist  with  tears  of  woe,  and  lonely, 

Shaketh  he  his  head  still  green. 

Ah !  this  waste  my  heart  displayeth, 

And  the  tree,  stni  full  of  life, 
Summer-green,  thy  form  portrayeth, 

Much  beloved  and  beauteous  wife  I 

44. 

GEE Y  'S  the  sky  and  every-day  like, 
And  the  town  still  looks  afflicted ; 
Ever  weak  and  castaway  like. 
In  the  Elbe  its  form's  depictefl. 

Long  each  nose  is,  and  its  blowing 

Tedious  an  affair  as  ever ; 
All  with  pride  are  overflowing, 

Both  at  pomp  and  cringing  clever. 

Beauteous  South !  O,  how  adore  I 
All  thy  gods,  thy  sky's  sweet  blissofl. 

Since  these  human  dregs  once  more  I 
See,  and  weather  foul  as  this  iftl 


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195 


PICTURES  OF  TRAVEL. 


THE  BETUBN  HOME. 

182ft-4. 

1. 

ON  my  life,  a  life  of  darkness, 
Once  a  vision  sweet  shone  bright ; 
Now  that  vision  sweet  hath  faded, 
And  I'm  veil'd  in  utter  night. 

When  in  darkness  children  wander, 

Soon  their  spirits  die  away, 
And  to  overcome  their  terror, 

Some  loud  song  straight  carol  they, 

I,  a  foolish  child,  am  singing 

In  the  darkness  spread  around  ; 
Though  my  song  may  give  no  pleasure, 

Yet  mine  anguish  it  hath  drown'd. 

2. 

IN  vain  would  I  seek  to  discover 
Why  sad  and  mournful  am  I ; 
My  thoughts  without  ceasing  brood  over 
A  tale  of  the  times  gone  by. 

The  air  is  cool,  and  it  darkletb. 

And  calmly  flows  the  Rhine ; 
The  peak  of  the  mountain  sparkleth. 

While  evening's  sun  doth  shine. 

Ton  sits  a  wondrous  maiden 

On  high,  a  maiden  fair ; 
With  bright  golden  jewels  all-ladesi, 

8ho  cconbB  her  golden  hair. 

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196  heikb's  poems. 

She  combe  it  with  comb  all-golden^ 
And  sings  the  while  a  song ; 

How  strange  is  that  melody  olden, 
As  loudly  it  echoes  along  I 

It  fills  with  wild  terror  the  sailor 

At  sea  in  his  tiny  skiff; 
He  looks  but  on  high,  and  grows  paler, 

Nor  sees  the  rock-girded  cHff. 

The  waves  will  the  bark  and  its  master 
At  length  swallow  up,  then  methougbt 

'Tis  Lore-ley  who  this  disaster 

With  her  false  singing  hath  wrought 

3. 

MY  heart,  my  heart  is  mournful. 
Yet  May  is  gleaming  like  gold ; 
I  stand,  'gainst  the  linden  reclining^ 
High  over  the  bastion  old. 

Beneath,  the  moat's  blue  water 

Flows  peacefully  along ; 
A  boy  his  bark  is  steering. 

And  fishes,  and  pipes  his  song. 

Beyond,  in  pleasing  confusion, 
In  distant  and  chequered  array, 

Are  men,  and  villas,  and  gardens. 
And  cattle,  woods,  meadows  so  gay. 

The  maidens  are  bleaching  the  linen, 
And  spring  on  the  grass,  like  deer ; 

The  mill-wheel's  powd'ring  diamonds. 
Its  distant  murmur  I  hear. 

Beside  the  old  grey  tower 

A  sentry-box  is  set ; 
A  red-accoutred  fellow 

Walks  up  and  down  there  yet. 

He's  playing  with  his  musket. 

While  gleameth  the  sun  o'erhead ; 

He  first  presents  and  shoulders — 
I  would  that  he'd  shoot  me  dead  t 


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MOTUBBS  OF  TRAVEL.  197 


1T7TTH  tears  through  the  forest  I  wander, 
▼  T   The  throstle's  sitting  on  high; 
She,  springing,  sings  softly  yonder : 
O  wherefore  dost  thou  sigh  ? 

"  Sweet  bird,  thy  sister  the  swallow 
**  Can  tell  thee  the  cause  of  my  gloom ; 

**  She  dwells  in  a  nest  all  hollow, 
*'  Beside  my  sweetheart's  room," 


THE  night  is  damp  and  stormy. 
No  star  is  in  the  sky ; 
In  the  wood,  'neath  the  rustling  branches 
In  silence  wander  I. 

A  distant  light  is  twinkling 

From  the  hunter's  lonely  cot ; 
But  within,  the  scene  is'  but  saddening, 

And  the  light  can  allure  me  not. 

The  blind  old  grandmother's  sitting 

In  her  leather  elbow-chair. 
Ail-gloomily  fix'd  like  a  statue. 

Not  a  word  escapeth  her  there. 

With  curses  to  and  fro  paces 

The  forester's  red-headed  son ; 
With  fury  and  scorn  he's  laughing. 

As  he  throws  'gainst  the  wall  his  gun. 

The  fair  spinning-maiden's  weeping, 
And  moistens  the  flax  wij;h  her  tears ; 

The  father's  terrier,  whining, 
Curl'd  up  at  her  feet  appears. 

6. 

WHEN  I,  on  my  travels,  by  hazard; 
My  sweetheart's  family  found. 
Her  sister  and  father  and  mother, — 
They  gave  me  a  welcome  all  round. 

When  they  for  my  health  had  inquired. 

They  added,  all  of  a  breath. 
That  til^ey  thought  me  quite  unalter'd, 

Though  my  fkce  was  pale  as  death. 

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198  heike's  poems. 

I  ask'd  for  their  aunts  and  their  coiwixis, 
And  many  a  tiresome  friend ; 

I  ask'd  for  the  little  puppy 
Whose  soft  bark  ^ew  no  end. 

And  then  for  my  married  sweetheart 
I  ask'd,  as  if  just  call'd  to  mind, 

And  they  answered,  in  friendly  fashion, 
That  she  had  but  just  been  confin'd. 

I  gave  them  my  very  best  wishes, 
And  lovingly  begg'd  them  apart 

That  they'd  give  her  a  thousand  greetings 
From  the  bottom  of  my  heart. 

Then  cried  the  little  sister : 
*'  The  small  and  gentle  hound 

"  Grew  to  be  big  and  savage, 

"  And  in  the  Ehine  was  drown'd." 

That  little  one's  like  my  sweetheart, 
So  like  when  she  wears  a  smile  I 

Her  eyes  are  the  same  as  her  sister's 
Which  caused  all  my  mis'ry  the  whila 


WE  sat  by  the  fisherman's  cottage, 
O'er  ocean  cast  our  eye; 
Then  came  the  mists  of  evening, 
And  slowly  rose  on  high« 

The  lamps  within  the  light-house 
Were  kindled,  light  by  light, 

And  in  the  farthest  distance 
A  ship  was  still  in  sight. 

We  spoke  of  storm  and  shipwreck, 
And  of  the  sailor's  strange  life, 

'Twixt  sky  and  water,  'twixt  terror 
And  joy  in  endless  strife. 

We  spoke  of  distant  regions, 
Of  North  and  South  spoke  we^ 

The  many  strange  races  yonder, 
And  customs,  strange  to  see. 


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PIOTUBBS   OF   TRAVEL.  199 

The  air  on  the  Ganges  is  balmy. 

And  giant-trees  extend, 
And  fair  and  silent  mortals 

Before  the  lotos  bend. 

In  Lapland,  the  people  are  dirty, 

Flat-headed,  broad-mouthed,  and  small ; 

They  squat  round  the  fire,  bake  fishes, 

Ajid  squeak,  and  speak  shrilly,  and  squall* 

The  maidens  earnestly  listened, 

At  length  not  a  word  was  said ; 
The  ship  from  sight  had  vanish'd, 

For  diEurkness  o'er  all  things  was  spread. 

THOU  pretty  fisher-maiden, 
Quick,  push  thy  bark  to  land ; 
Come  hither,  and  sit  beside  me, 
And  toy  with  me,  hand  in  baud. 

Becline  thy  head  on  my  bosom, 

Nor  be  so  fearful  of  me ; 
Thou  trustest  thyself,  void  of  terror. 

Each  day  to  the  raging  sea. 

Iffy  heart  is  like  the  ocean. 

Hath  tempest,  ebb,  and  flow, 
And  many  pearls  full  precious 

Lie  in  its  depths  below« 

9. 

THE  moon  hath  softly  risen, 
And  o'er  the  waves  doth  smile ; 
Mine  arms  hold  my  sweetheart  in  prison. 
Our  hearts  both  swelling  the  while. 

Blest  in  h«r  sweet  embraces 

I  calmly  repose  on  the  strand : 
Hear'st  thou  aught  in  the  wind  as  it  races  ? 

Why  shrinks  thy  snow-white  hand  ? 

^  O,  'tis  not  the  tempest's  commotion, 
'*  'Tis  the  song  of  the  mermaids  below ; 

"  *Tis  the  voice  of  my  sisters,  whom  Ocean 
«'  Swollow'd  up  in  its  depths  long  ago.** 

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200  Heine's  poems. 

10. 

ON  the  clouds  doth  rest  the  moon. 
Like  a  giant-orange  gleaming ; 
Broad  her  streaks,  with  golden  rays 
O'er  the  dusky  ocean  beaming. 

Lonely  roam  I  by  the  strand 

While  the  billows  white  are  breaking ; 

Many  sweet  words  hear  I  there, 
From  the  water's  depths  awaking. 

Ah  I  the  night  is  long,  full  long, 

And  my  heart  must  break  its  slumbers; 

Beauteous  nymphs,  come  forth  to  light, 
Dance !  and  sing  your  magic  numbers! 

To  your  bosom  take  my  head. 

Soul  and  body  I  surrender  I 
Sing  me  dead,  caress  me  dead. 

Drain  my  life  with  kisses  tender. 

11. 

IN  their  grey-hued  clouds  envelop'd. 
Now  tiie  mighty  gods  are  sleeping ; 
And  I  listen  to  their  snoring, 
Stormy  weather  o'er  us  creeping. 

Stormy  weather  I  Raging  tempests 
On  the  poor  ship  bring  disaster ; 

On  these  winds  who'll  place  a  bridle, — 
On  these  waves  that  own  no  master  ? 

I  the  storm  can  never  hinder. 

Nor  the  mast  and  planks  from  creaking, 
So  I  wrap  me  in  my  mantle. 

Like  the  gods  for  slumber  seeking. 

12. 
rriHE  wind  puts  on  its  breeches  again, 
JL      Its  white  and  watery  breeches ; 
It  flogs  each  billow  with  might  and  main, 
Till  it  howls  and  rushes  and  pitches. 

From  the  darksome  height,  with  furious  might 
Pours  the  rain  in  wild  commotion ; 

It  seems  as  though  the  ancient  Night 
Would  drown  the  ancient  Ocean. 


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PICTUEES   OF   TBAVEL.  20i 

To  the  ship's  high  mast  the  sea-mew  clings, 
With  hoarse  and  shrill  shrieking  and  yelling  ; 

In  anxious-wise  she  flutters  her  wings, 
Approaching  disasters  foretelling. 

13. 

THE  storm  strikes  up  for  dancing, 
It  blusters,  pipes,  roars  with  delight ; 
Hurrah,  how  the  bark  is  springing  I 
How  merry  and  wild  is  the  night ! 

A  living  watery  mountain 

The  raging  sea  builds  tow'rd  the  sky ; 
A  gloomy  abyss  here  is  gaping, 

There,  mounts  a  white  tower  on  high. 

A  vomiting,  cursing,  and  praying 
From  the  cabin  bursts  forth  'mid  the  roar  5 

[  cling  to  the  mast  for  protection, 
And  wish  I  was  safely  on  shore. 

14. 
'rillS  evening,  darker  'tis  getting, 
JL     Mist  veils  the  sea  from  the  eye  ; 
The  waves  are  mysteriously  fretting, 
White  shadows  are  rising  on  high. 

From  the  billows  the  mermaid  arises, 

And  sits  herself  near  me  on  shore ; 
The  veil  which  her  figure  disguises 

Her  snow-white  bosom  peeps  o'er. 

She  warmly  doth  caress  me. 

And  takes  my  breath  away  : 
Too  closely  dost  thou  press  me, 

Thou  lovely  water-fay  1 

"  My  arms  thus  closely  caress  thee, 

*'  I  clasp  thee  with  aU  my  might ; 
"  In  hope  of  warmth  do  I  press  thee, 

"  For  cold  indeed  is  the  night." 

The  moon  from  her  dusky  cloister 

Of  clouds,  sheds  a  paler  ray ; 
Thine  eye  grows  sadder  and  moister^ 

Thou  lovely  wat^r-fay  I 

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202  HEINE  S  POEMS. 

"  No  sadder  nor  moister  *tis  growfiig, 
"  Mine  eye  is  moist  and  wet, 

"  For  when  from  the  wave  I  was  going, 
**  A  drop  remained  in  it  yet** 

The  sea-mew  mourns  shrilly,  while  ocean 
Is  growling  and  heaving  ite  spray ; 

Thy  heart  throbs  with  raging  emotion, 
Thou  lovely  water-fay  I 

**  My  heart  throbs  with  raging  emotion, 

*^  Emotion  raging  and  wild ; 
"  For  I  love  thee  with  speechless  devotion. 

"  Thou  darling  human  child  1" 

15. 

TTTHEN  I  before  thy  dwelling 
T  T     At  morning  happen  to  be, 
I  rejoice,  my  little  sweet  one, 
When  thee  at  thy  window  I  see. 

With  thy  dark-brown  eyes  so  piercing 

My  figure  thou  dost  scan : 
Who  art  thou,  and  what  ails  thee. 

Thou  strange  and  sickly  man  ? 

"  I  am  a  German  poet, 

*'  Well  known  in  the  German  land ; 
"  When  the  best  names  in  it  are  reckon*d, 

"  My  name  amongst  them  will  stand. 

"  My  little  one,  that  which  ails  me 
*'  Ails  crowds  in  the  German  land ; 

"  When  the  fiercest  sorrows  are  reckoned, 
"  My  sorrows  amongst  them  will  stand." 

16. 
^PHE  gleam  o'er  the  ocean  had  faded  not, 
JL      While  the  eve's  last  rays  were  flitting ; 
We  sat  by  the  lonely  fisherman's  cot, 
Alone  and  in  silence  sitting. 

The  waters  swell'd,  while  the  mist  rose  above, 
The  restless  sea-mew  was  screaming ; 

From  out  thine  eyes,  so  full  of  love. 
The  tears  were  quickly  streaming. 


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PICTURES   OF   TRAVEL.  203 

I  saw  them  falling  on  thy  fair  hand, 

And  on  my  knees  soon  sank  I, 
And  then  from  off  thy  snow-white  hand 

The  tears  with  rapture  drank  I. 

Since  that  hour,  my  body  hath  fast  decay'd, 

My  soul  is  dying  with  yearning ; 
I  was  poison'd,  alas !  by  the  hapless  maid 

With  her  falling  tears  so  burning. 

17. 

UP  high  on  yonder  mountain 
Stands  a  stately  castle  alone. 
Where  dwell  three  beauteous  maidens. 
Whose  love  in  turns  I  have  known. 

On  Saturday  Harriet  kiss'd  me, 

While  Sunday  was  Julia's  right ; 
On  Monday  Cunigund  followed. 

Who  well  nigh  stifled  me  quite. 

To  hold  a  f^te  in  the  castle 

On  Tuesday  my  maidens  agreed ; 
The  neighbouring  lords  and  ladies 

All  came  with  carriage  or  steed* 

But  I  was  never  invited, 

To  your  great  wonder,  no  doubt ; 
The  whispering  aunts  and  cousins 

Observed  it,  and  laugh'd  right  out 

]& 

ON  the  dim  and  far  horizon 
Appeareth,  misty  and  pale, 
The  city,  with  all  its  towers, 
In  evening  twilight's  veil. 

A  humid  gust  is  ruffling 

The  paQi  o'er  the  waters  dark ; 
With  mournful  measure,  the  sailor 

Is  rowing  my  tiny  bark. 

The  sun  once  more  ariseth, 

And  over  the  earth  gleams  he. 
And  shows  me  the  spot  out  yonder 

Where  my  loved  one  was  lost  to  me 

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204  heinb's  poexb. 

19. 

ALL  hail  to  thee,  thou  stately 
Mysterions  town,  all  hail, 
Who  erst  within  thy  bosom 
My  loved  one's  form  didst  veil  I 

O  say,  ye  towers  and  gateways, 

O  where  can  my  loved  one  be  ? 
To  your  keeping  of  yore  was  she  trusted, 

And  ye  must  her  bail  be  to  me. 

The  towers,  in  truth,  are  guiltless. 

From  their  places  they  could  not  come  dowii| 

When  she,  with  her  trunks  and  boxes, 
So  hastily  went  from  the  town. 

The  gates,  however,  they  suffered 

My  darling  to  slip  through  them  straight ; 

A  gate  is  ever  found  willing 

To  let  a  fool  "  gang  her  ain  gait.'** 

20. 

ONCE  more  my  steps  through  the  olden  path 
And  the  well-known  streets  are  taken, 
Until  I  come  to  my  loved  one's  house. 
So  empty  now  and  forsaken. 

How  narrow  and  close  the  streets  appear  ! 

How  nauseous  the  smell  of  the  plaster  I 
The  houses  seem  tumbling  down  on  my  head. 

So  I  haste  away,  fearing  disaster. 

21. 

ONCE  more  through  the  halls  I  pass'd 
Where  her  troth  to  me  was  plighted ; 
On  the  spot  where  her  tears  fell  fast 
A  serpent's  brood  had  alighted. 

22. 

THE  night  is  still,  and  the  streets  are  deserted. 
In  this  house  my  love  had  her  dwelling  of  yore; 
*Tis  long  since  she  from  the  city  departed. 

Yet  her  house  still  stands  on  the  spot  as  before. 

*J.  have  here  attempted  to  imitate  a  wretched  pim  Id  the 
original. 


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PICTURES  OF  TBAVEL.  2(j'^ 

There  stands,  too,  a  man,  who  stares  up  at  her  casement, 
'And  wrings  his  hands  with  the  weight  of  his  woes ; 

I  look  on  his  face  with  shuddering  amazement, — 
The  moon  doth  the  form  of  myself  disclose. 

Thou  pallid  fellow,  thou  worthless  douhle  1 

Why  dare  to  mimic  my  love*s  hard  lot. 
Which  many  a  night  gave  me  grief  and  trouble 

In  former  days,  on  this  very  spot  ? 

23. 

HOW  canst  thou  sleep  in  quiet. 
And  know  that  I'm  still  alive  ? 
I  burst  the  yoke  that's  upon  me, 
When  my  olden  wrath  doth  revive. 

Dost  know  the  ancient  ballad : 

How  of  yore  a  dead  stripling  brave 

At  midnight  came  to  his  loved  one. 
And  carried  her  down  to  his  grave  ? 

Believe  me,  thou  wondrous  beauty. 

Thou  wondrously  lovely  maid, 
I'm  alive  still,  and  feel  far  stronger 

Than  the.  whole  of  the  dead's  brigade  I 

24. 

THE  maiden's  asleep  in  her  chamber, 
**  In  peep&  the  quivering  moon ; 
"  Outside  is  a  singing  and  jinglmg, 
'*  As  though  to  a  waltz's  tune. 

"I  needs  must  look  through  my  window, 

"  To  see  who's  disturbing  my  rest ; 
"  There  stands  a  skeleton  ghastly 

"  Who's  fiddling  and  singing  his  best : 

^  Thy  hand  for  the  dance  thou  didst  pledge  me, 
"  And  then  thy  promise  didst  break ; 

"  To-night  there's  a  ball  in  the  churchyard, 
**  Come  with  me,  the  dance  to  partake. 

"  He  forcibly  seizes  the  maiden, 

"  And  lures  her  from  out  her  abode ; 
"She  follows  the  skeleton  wildly, 

«<  Who  fiddles  and  sings  on  the  road. 


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I 


206  Heine's  poems. 

"  He  hops  and  he  skips  and  he  fiddles, 

"  His  bones  they  rattle  away ; 
*'  With  his  skull  he  keeps  nidding  and  nodding 

"  By  the  moonlight's  glimmering  ray." 

25 
STOOD,  while  sadly  mused  I, 
And  her  likeness  closely  did  scan, 
And  her  beloved  features 

To  glow  with  life  began. 
Around  her  lips  there  gather 'd 
A  sweet  and  wondrous  smile, 
And  as  through  tears  of  sorrow 

Her  clear  eyes  shone  the  while. 
And  then  my  tears  responsive 

Adown  my  cheeks  did  pour — 
And  ah  1    I  scarce  can  believe  it. 
That  I've  lost  thee  evermore. 

26. 

UNHAPPY  Atlas  that  I  am  I  I'm  doom'd  . 
To  bear  a  world,  a  very  world  of  sorrows ; 
Unbearable's  the  load  I  bear,  and  e'en 
The  heart  within  me's  breaking. 
0  thou  proud  heart !  thy  doing  'twas  indeed, 
Thou  wouldst  be  happy,  utterly  be  happy, 
Or  utterly  be  wretched,  O  proud  heart. 
And  now  in  truth  thou'rt  wretched  ! 

27. 

THE  years  are  coming  and  going, 
To  the  grave  whole  races  descend, 
And  yet  the  love  in  my  bosom 

Shall  never  wax  fainter  or  end. 
O  could  I  but  once  more  behold  thee. 
Before  thee  sink  down  on  my  knee, 
And  die,  as  these  words  I  utter : 
Dear  Madam,  I  love  but  thee ! 

28. 

I  DREAMT :  the  quivering  moon  gleam'd  abo^ 
And  the  stars  cast  a  mournful  ray ; 
I  was  borne  to  the  town  where  dwelleth  my  love^ 
Many  hundred  miles  away 


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PIOTUEES  OF   TRAVEL.  207 

And  when  I  arrived  at  her  dwelling  so  blest, 

I  kiss'd  the  stones  of  the  stair, 
Which  her  little  foot  so  often  had  press'd, 

And  the  train  of  her  garment  fair. 

The  night  was  long,  the  night  was  chill. 
And  cold  were  the  stones  that  night ; 

Her  pallid  form  from  the  window-sill 
Look'd  down  in  the  moonbeam's  light. 

29. 

yi^HAT  means  this  tear  all-lonely 
▼  T     That  troubles  now  my  gaze  ? 
Of  olden  times  the  offspring 
Still  in  mine  eye  it  stays. 

It  had  its  shining  sisters, 

Who  all  have  faded  from  sight, 
With  all  my  joys  and  sorrows, 

Yea,  faded  in  storm  and  night. 

Like  clouds  have  also  fleeted 

The  stars  so  blue  and  mild, 
Which  into  my  yearning  bosom 

Those  joys  and  sorrows  once  smiled. 

Ah  !  even  my  love's  devotion 

Like  idle  breath  did  decay ; 
Thou  old,  old  tear  all-lonely, 

Do  thou,  too,  pass  away  I 

80. 

THE  pallid  autumnal  half-moon 
Looks  down  from  the  clouds  on  high  ; 
The  parsonage,  silent  and  lonely, 

By  the  side  of  the  churchyard  doth  lie. 

The  mother  is  reading  her  Bible, 

The  son  on  the  li^t  turns  his  eyes, 
All-sleepy,  the  elder  daughter 

Doth  stretch,  while  the  younger  thus  crief 

•*  Good  heavens,  how  dreadfully  tedious 
"  The  days  are  I  I'm  quite  in  despair  I 

•*  'Tifi  only  when  there's  a  burial 
^  Ono  sees  aught  of  life,  I  declare  I 


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208  Heine's  poemh. 

The  mother  then  says,  midst  her  reiMling : 
**  You're  mistaken,  four  only  have  died 

**  Since  the  time  when  they  buried  your  father 
"  By  the  gate  of  the  churchyard  outside." 

The  elder  daughter  says  gaping : 
"  1*11  starve  no  longer  with  you ; 

"  ril  go  to  the  Count  to-morrow, 
"  He's  rich  and  he  loves  me  too." 

The  son  bursts  out  into  laughter : 

"  At  the  tavern  drink  huntsmen  three ; 

"  They're  making  money,  and  gladly 
**  Would  teach  the  secret  to  me." 

The  mother  then  throws  her  Bible 

Full  hard  in  his  lanky  face : 
"  Wouldst  thou  dare,  thou  accursed  of  heaven^ 

"  As  a  robber  thy  Mends  to  disgrace  ?" 

They  hear  a  knock  at  the  window, 

Aiid  see  a  beckoning  hand ; 
And  behold,  outside  the  dead  father 

In  his  black  preaching-garment  doth  stand. 

31. 

THE  weather  is  bad  and  stormy. 
With  rain  and  tempest  and  snow ; 
I  sit  at  the  window,  gazing 
On  the  gloomy  darkness  below. 

One  single  light  I  see  glimm'ring 
That  slowly  moves  in  the  street ; 

'Tis  a  woman  holding  a  lantern, 
And  walking  with  tottering  feet. 

I  expect  that  she's  making  a  purchase 

Of  meal  and  butter  and  eggs ; 
'Tis  to  bake  a  cake  for  her  daughter 

That  she  is  out  now  on  her  legs. 

The  daughter's  at  home  in  the  arm-chair 

And  sleepily  looks  at  the  light, 
Eer  golden  locks  stray  over 

Her  face  so  lovely  and  bright. 


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PIOrUEES   OF   TRAVEL.  209 

82. 
'npiS  thought  that  I  am  tormeuted, 
A    By  love's  bitter  sorrow  distressed, 
And  at  length  I  myself  believe  it 

As  well  as  all  the  rest. 
Thou  great-eyed  little  maiden, 

I  ever  have  whispered  apart : 
I  love  thee  beyond  expression, 

YiThile  love  is  gnawing  my  heart. 
'Twas  but  in  my  lonely  chamber 

That  I  dared  my  love  to  proclaim, 
And,  ah !  I  have  ever  been  silent, 

When  into  thy  presence  I  came. 
When  there,  the  evil  angels 

Appeared,  and  my  lips  they  held ; 
And,  ah  I  *tis  by  evil  angels 

That  my  joy  hath  now  been  dispelled. 

33. 

OTHY  tender  lily-fingers. 
Could  I  once  again  but  kiss  theui. 
Press  them  softly  to  my  heart. 
And  then  die  in  silent  weeping ! 
0  thy  violet  eyes  so  radiant 
Hover  neir  me  day  and  night, 
And  I'm  troubled :  what  forebodeth 
All  this  sweet,  this  blue  enigma? 

34. 
"TTATH  she  then  no  word  e'er  spokeu 

XX   "  Of  thy  passion,  hapless  lover  ^ 
**  In  her  sweet  eyes  couldst  thou  never 
"  Signs  of  answering  love  discover  ? 
**  Through  her  sweet  eyes  couldst  thou  uevor 

'*  Beach  her  soul,  and  so  get  at  her? 
*'  Yet  thou  art  not  thought  a  blockhead, 
*'  Worthy  friend,  in  such  a  matter." 

35. 

THEY  loved  each  other,  but  noithor 
Would  be  the  first  to  confess ; 
Like  foes,  they  gaz'd  at  each  other, 
And  would  die  of  their  love's  distresfi. 

r 

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210  HETNB*S  POEMS. 

They  parted  at  length,  and  thereafter, 

Except  in  vision,  ne'er  met ; 
From  life  they  long  have  departed, 

And  scarcely  know  of  it  yet. 

36. 

AND  when  I  to  yon  my  grief  did  confide, 
You  only  yawn'd,  and  nothing  replied ; 
But  when  I  reduced  my  sorrow  to  rhyme. 
You  praised  me  greatly,  and  call'd  it  sublime. 

37. 

ICALL'D  the  devil,  and  he  came. 
And  with  wonder  his  form  did  I  closely  scan ; 
He  is  not  ugly,  and  is  not  lame. 

But  really  a  handsome  and  charming  man. 
A  man  in  the  prime  of  life  is  the  devil. 
Obliging,  a  man  of  the  world,  and  civil ; 
A  diplomatist  too,  well  skill'd  in  debate, 
He  talks  right  glibly  of  church  and  state. 
He's  rather  pale,  but  it's  really  not  strange, 
For  his  studies  through  Sanskrit  and  H^el  range. 
Fouqu^  is  still  his  favourite  poet ; 

But  criticism  hell  touoh  no  more, 

But  has  handed  that  subject  entirely  o'er 
To  his  grandmother  Hecate,  that  she  may  know  it 
My  juridical  works  did  he  kindly  praise. 
His  favourite  hobby  in  former  days. 
He  said  that  my  friendship  was  not  too  dear. 
And  then  he  nodded,  and  look'd  severe. 
And  afterwards  asked  if  it  wasn't  the  case 

We  had  met  at  the  Spanish  ambassador's  rout  ? 
And  when  T  look'd  him  full  in  the  face 

I  saw  him  to  be  an  old  friend  without  doubt. 

38. 

MAN,  revile  not  thou  the  devil. 
For  the  path  of  life  is  short, 
And  damnation  everlasting 
Is  too  true,  not  mere  report. 

Man,  pay  all  the  debts  thou  owest« 

For  the  path  of  life  is  long. 
And  thou'lt  often  have  to  borrow 

Just  as  usual,  right  or  wrong. 


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PIC3TUR358  OF   TRAVEL.  211 

39. 

THE  three  holy  kings  from  the  Eastern  land 
Inquired  in  every  city  : 
Where  goeth  the  road  to  Bethlehem, 
Ye  boys  and  maidens  pretty  ? 

The  yomig  and  the  old,  they  could  not  tell, 
The  kings  went  onward  discreetly  ; 

They  followed  the  track  of  a  golden  star, 
That  sparkled  brightly  and  sweetly. 

The  star  stood  still  over  Joseph's  house, 
And  they  entered  the  dwelling  lowly; 

The  oxen  bellow'd,  the  infant  cried, 
While  sang  the  three  kings  holy. 

40. 

MY  child,  we  once  were  children, 
Two  children,  little  and  gay ; 
We  crawl'd  inside  the  henhouse. 
And  hid  in  the  straw  in  play. 

We  crow*d  as  the  cocks  are  accustom'd, 

And  when  the  people  ^ame  by, 
"  Cock-a-doodle-doo ! " — and  they  fancied 

*Twas  really  the  cock's  shrill  cry. 

The  chests  within  our  courtyard 

With  paper  we  nicely  lined, 
And  in  them  lived  together, 

In  a  dwelling  quite  to  our  mind. 

The  aged  cat  of  our  neighbour 

Came  oft  to  visit  us  there ; 
We  made  her  our  bows  and  our  curtsies, 

And  plenty  of  compliments  fair. 

For  her  health  we  used  to  inquire 

In  language  friendly  and  soft ; 
Since  then  we  have  ask'd  the  same  |ueBtion 

Of  many  old  cats  full  oft. 

We  used  to  sit,  while  we  wisely 

Discoursed,  in  the  way  of  old  men. 
And  lamented  that  all  was  better 

In  the  olden  days  than  then ; 


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212  Heine's  POEifSk 

How  love  and  truth  and  religion 
From  out  of  the  world  had  fled. 

How  very  dear  was  the  coffee, 
How  scarce  was  the  gold,  we  said. 

Those  childish  sports  have  Tanish'd, 
And  all  is  ia^i  rolling  away ; 

The  world,  and  the  times,  and  religion, 
And  gold,  love,  and  truth  all  decay. 


M 


41. 

Y  heart  is  sore  oppressed,  with  sighing 
I  think  upon  the  days  of  yore ; 
The  world  was  then  in  calmness  lying, 
And  men  were  peaceful  evermore. 

All  now  is  changed,  in  mournful  chorus 
Want  and  confusion  round  us  spread ; 

The  Lord  seems  dead  that  erst  rul'd  o'er  us 
Beneath  us,  is  the  Devil  dead. 

All  now  appears  so  drear  and  sadden'd, 
Decayed  and  cold,  of  joy  bereft, 

That,  were  we  not  by  love  still  gladden'd. 
No  single  resting-place  were  left. 

42. 

AS  the^  gleaming  moon  is  piercing 
Through  the  darksome  clouds  above, 
So  from  out  time's  darksome  mirror 
Peeps  a  vision  full  of  love. 

All  upon  the  deck  were  sitting, 
Proudly  sailing  down  the  Khine, 

And  the  shores,  in  summer  verdure. 
In  the  setting  sun  did  shine. 

Thoughtfully  was  I  reclining. 

Bent  before  a  lovely  maid  ; 
In  her  beauteous,  pallid  features 

Lo,  the  golden  sunlight  play'd. 

Lutes  were  sounding,  youths  wer6  singings 

'  Won»lrous  was  our  joy  that  day ; 

And  the  heavens  became  still  bluer. 

And  our  souls  soar'd  high  away. 


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PfOTUBBS  OF  TRAVEL,  213 

Hills  and  castles,  woods  and  meadowi. 

Like  a  Tision  fleeted  by, 
Aiid  I  saw  them  all  xeflected 

In  the  lorely  maiden's  eya 

43. 

IN  yision  saw  I  my  loved  one 
A  worn,  sad  woman  one  day ; 
Her  once  so-blooming  figure 
Had  withered  and  ^Uen  away. 

A  child  in  her  arms  she  carried, 

By  the  hand  another  she  led, 
And  grief  and  poverty  plainly 

In  her  walk,  looks,  and  garments  I  read. 

Across  the  market  she  totter'd. 

And  then  did  I  meet  her  eye ; 
She  looked  upon  me,  and  gently 

I  spake  to  her  thus,  with  a  sigh : 

**  Come  with  me  to  my  dwelling, 

^'  For  thou  art  pale  and  ill, 
*^  And  food  and  drink  I'll  earn  thee 

'^  By  industry  and  skill. 

^  I'll  also  nourish  and  cherish 

*'  The  children  that  with  thee  I  see ; 

**  But,  my  child  so  poor  and  unhappy, 
"  I'll  care  the  most  for  thee. 

"  I  never  will  remind  thee 

"  That  I  loved  thee  so  dearly  of  yore, 
^'  And  when  at  length  thou  diest, 

'*  m  weep  at  thy  grave  full  sore." 

U. 

**  T?RIEND !  why  always  thus  endeavour 
Jj    "  To  repeat  the  same  old  story  ? 

"  Wilt  thou  brooding  sit  for  ever 

"  On  love's  eggs  grown  old  and  hoary  ? 

*'  Ah  I  'tis  but  the  usual  custom, 

*^  Chickens  from  the  shells  are  crawling  ; 

*  In  a  book  thou  seek'st  to  thrust  'em, 
«  While  they're  fluttering  and  calling  V* 

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214  Heine's  poems. 

45. 

PRYTHEE,  be  not  thou  impatient 
If  there  still  are  loudly  ringing 
Many  of  my  old  sad  numbers 
,  In  the  newest  songs  I'm  singing. 

Wait  awhile,  and  soon  the  echo 

Will  have  died  away  of  sorrow, 
And  a  new-born  song-spring  softly 

From  the  heal'd  heart  shoot  to-morrow* 

46. 
*rilIS  now  full  time  that  my  folly  I  drop, 
JL    And  return  to  sober  reason ; 
This  comedy  now  *twere  better  to  stop 
That  weVe  played  for  so  long  a  season. 

In  a  gay  and  highly  romantic  style 
The  gorgeous  coulisses  were  painted ; 

My  knight's  cloak  glittered,  whUe  I  was  the  wliile 
With  the  finest  sensations  acquainted. 

And  now  that  I,  while  more  sober  I  grow, 

Am  against  this  toying  inveighing, 
I  feel  that  I'm  still  as  wretched  as  tibough 

A  comedy  still  I  were  playing. 

Alas  I  unconsciously  and  in  jest 
Of  my  feelings  was  I  the  narrator ; 

And  I've  pla/d,  with  my  own  death  in  my  breast, 
The  dying  gladiator. 

47. 

THE  monarch  Wiswamitra 
Is  restlessly  striving  now ; 
He  must  needs,  by  fighting  and  penance, 
Obtain  Wasischta's  cow. 

O  monarch  Wiswamitra, 

O  what  an  ox  art  thou, 
To  have  all  this  fighting  and  penance, 

And  all  for  nought  but  a  cow  I 

48. 

LET  not  grief,  my  heart,  come  o'er  thee 
Bear  thy  lot  with  faith  imshaken, 
For  what  winter  may  have  taken 
Will  returning  spring  restore  thee 

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PICTURES   OF   TRAVEL.  215 

And  Iiow  much  remainetli  over  I 
And  how  fair  the  world  is  still  I 
And,  my  heart,  if  'tis  thy  will. 

Thou  of  All  mayst  be  the  lover ! 

49. 

AFLOWKET  thou  resemblest, 
So  pure  and  fair  and  blest ; 
But  when  I  view  thee,  sorrow 

Straight  creepeth  to  my  breast. 
I  feel  as  though  inspired 

My  hands  on  thy  head  to  lay. 
And  pray  that  God  may  keep  thee 
So  blest,  fair,  pure,  for  aye. 

50. 

CHILD  1  it  would  be  thy  perdition. 
And  the  greatest  pains  I've  taken 
Ne'er  within  thy  fond  heart  tow'rd  me 

Loving  feelings  to  awaken. 
Now  that  I've  so  soon  succeeded, 

To  my  vow  I'm  wellnigh  faithless. 
And  this  thought  steals  o'er  me  often : 
Would  that  thou  could'st  love  me  nathlem 

51. 

"TTTHEN  on  my  couch  I'm  lying 

f  T     In  night  and  pillows  conceal'd, 
A  sweet  and  charming  image 

Before  me  stands  reveal'd. 
As  soon  as  silent  slumber 

Hath  closed  mine  eyes  in  sleep, 
Into  my  dream  this  image 

Doth  softly,  gently  creep. 
Yet  with  the  dream  of  morning 

It  ne'er  doth  melt  away, 
For  in  mine  inmost  bosom 

I  bear  it  all  the  day. 

52. 

MAIDEN  with  the  mouth  so  rosy, 
With  the  eyes  so  sweet  and  bright, 
O  my  darling  littie  maiden, 
I  of  thee  think  day  and  night 

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216  heink's  poems. 

Long  is  now  the  winter  evening, 
Fain  wonld  I  disperse  its  gloom. 

Sitting  by  thee,  talMng  with  thee 
In  thj  trusty  little  room. 

To  my  lips  Fd  fain  be  pressing 

Thy  dear  little  snowy  hand. 
With  my  filing  tears  caressing 

Thy  dear  littie  snowy  hand. 

53. 

THOUGH  outside  snow-piles  are  forming, 
Though  'tis  hailing,  though  'tis  storming. 
Battling  'gainst  the  window-pane, 
Nevermore  will  I  complain. 
For  within  my  breast  I  bear 
Spring-joys  and  love's  image  fair. 

54. 

SOME  make  prayers  to  the  Madonna^ 
Others  unto  Paul  and  Peter ; 
Thee  alone,  of  suns  the  fairest, 
Thee  alone  will  I  e'er  honour. 

Let  me  be  with  kisses  laden. 

Be  thou  kindly,  be  thou  gracious, 
Itfongst  all  maidens  sun  the  fairest, 

'Neath  ^e  Bun  the  fairest  maiden ! 

55. 

DID  not  my  pallid  face  betray 
My  loving  woe  unto  thee  ? 
And  wilt  thou  that  my  haughty  mouth 
With  begging  words  shaU  woo  thee  ? 

Alas !  this  mouth  is  far  too  proud, 

'Twas  made  but  for  kissing  and  sighing ; 

Perchance  it  may  speak  a  scornful  word. 
While  I  with  sorrow  am  dying. 

56. 

WORTHY  Mend,  thou'rt  deep  in  love, 
And  beneath  new  pangs  thou'rt  fretting; 
Darker  grows  it  in  thy  head. 
In  thy  heart  'tis  lifter  getting. 


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WCTUBES  OP  TRAVEL.  217 

Worthy  Mend,  thou'rt  deep  in  love, 

And  thou  fein  would'st  hide  thy  yearning 

Yet  I  see  thy  heart's  fierce  glow 

Through  thy  waistcoat  hotly  burning. 

57. 

I  FAIN  would  linger  by  thee, 
And  rest  beside  thee  too ; 
Away  thou  needs  must  hie  thee. 
Thou  hast  so  much  to  do. 

I  said  that  I  surrendered 

My  very  soul  to  thee ; 
An  answering  bow  was  tender'd, 

Thou  laughedst  fall  of  glee. 

Thou  cruelly  didst  use  me, 

And  treat  my  love  amiss  ; 
At  last  thou  didst  refuse  me 

The  usual  parting  kiss. 

Don't  think  that  I  deem  it  my  duty 

To  shoot  myself  any  the  more ; 
For  all  of  this,  my  beauty, 

Has  happened  to  me  before 

58. 

AP  AIB  of  sapphires  are  thine  eyei^ 
So  clear,  so  sweetly  roving ; 
O  three  times  happy  is  the  man 
Whom  those  fair  eyes  are  loving. 

Thy  heart,  it  is  a  diamond, 

A  sparlding  radiance  throwing ; 
0  three  times  happy  is  the  man 

For  whom  with  love  'tis  glowing. 

Thy  lips  are  very  rubies  bright, 

One  never  can  see  fairer ; 
0  three  times  happy  is  the  man 

Who  of  their  love  is  sharer. 

O  did  I  know  the  happy  man  I 

O  could  I  unattended 
Within  the  green  wood  meet  with  hun,— 

His  luck  would  soon  be  ended  1 


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218  Heine's  poems. 

59. 

WHILE  with  loving  words,  but  lying, 
I  have  bound  me  to  thy  breast, 
Now  in  my  own  fetters  dying, 
Into  earnest  turns  my  jest. 

When  thou  jestingly  dost  fly  me, 

By  a  rightful  impulse  led. 
Then  the  powers  of  hell  draw  nigh  me. 

And  I  really  shoot  me  dead. 

60. 

TOO  fragmentary  is  World  and  Life  ; 
1*11  go  to  the  German  professor,  who's  rife 
With  schemes  for  putting  Life's  pieces  together, 

Whereby  a  passable  System's  unfurFd ; 
Ragged  nightcaps  and  dressing-gowns  keep  out  the 
weather, 
Stop  the  gaps  in  the  edifice  crack'd  of  the  world« 

61. 

THIS  evening  they've  a  party. 
The  house  is  fiU'd  with  light ; 
By  yonder  shining  window 
A  shadowy  form's  in  sight. 

Thou  seo'st  me  not,  in  darkness 

I  stand  below  and  apart ; 
Still  less  canst  thou  see  ever 

Inside  my  darksome  heart. 

My  darksome  heart  doth  love  thee, 

It  loves  thee  and  it  breaks, 
And  breaks,  and  bleeds,  and  quivers, 

But  thou  see'st  not  how  it  aches. 

62. 

I  WOULD  that  my  woes  all  their  folneas 
In  one  single  word  could  convey ; 
To  the  merry  winds  straight  would  I  give  it. 
Who  would  merrily  bear  it  away. 

That  word  so  teeming  with  sadness 

They  would  carry,  my  loved  one,  to  thee 

Thou  wouldst  hear  it  at  every  moment, 
Wouldst  hear  it  where'er  thou  mightet  be. 


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PIOTUBES   OP  TRAVEL.  219 

As  soon  as  thine  eyelids  at  nighttime 

Are  peacefully  closM  in  sleep, 
My  word  would  straightway  pursue  thee 

Far  into  thy  visions  most  deep. 

63. 

THOU  hast  pearls,  thou  hast  diamonds  also. 
Hast  all  that  mortals  adore ; 
Thine  eyes  are  among  the  fairest, — 

My  loved  one,  what  wouldst  thou  have  more? 
Upon  thine  eyes  so  beauteous 

I've  written  many  a  score 
Of  sweet  immortal  ballads, — 

My  loved  one,  what  wouldst  thou  have  more  ? 
And  with  thine  eyes  so  beauteous 

Hast  thou  tormented  me  sore. 
And  brought  me  to  utter  perdition, — 

My  loved  one,  what  wouldst  thou  have  more  ? 

64. 

HE  who  for  the  first  time  loveth, 
Though  'tis  hopeless,  is  a  God ; 
But  the  man  who  hopeless  loveth 
For  the  second  time's— -a  fooL 
I,  a  fool  like  this,  am  loving 
Once  more,  with  no  love  responsive  ; 
Sun  and  moon  and  stars  are  laughing, 
I,  too,  join  the  laugh  and — die. 

65. 
iyrE\rEE  match'd  the  timid  coldness 
X 1      Of  thy  spirit,  from  the  first, 
With  my  love's  untutor'd  boldness. 

Which  through  rocks  delights  to  bursts 
Thou  in  love  dost  love  the  highway. 

And  I  see  thee  walk  through  life 
With  thy  husband  taking  thy  way. 

As  an  honest  teeming  wife  I 

66. 

COUNSEL  they  gave  me,  and  good  instruction, 
Pour'd  on  me  honours,  by  way  of  seduction 
Said  I  had  only  to  wait  for  a  while. 
And  their  protection  upon  me  should  smile> 

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220  Heine's  poems. 

Spite  the  protection  they  bid  me  hold  cherish'd, 
I  before  long  should  of  hunger  ha've  perish'd, 
Had  I  not  happened  a  good  man  to  seo, 
Who  took  an  interest  landly  in  me. 

Good  man  indeed  !  for  he  gives  me  my  food ; 

Never  can  I  forget  conduct  so  good. 

Pity  I  cannot  with  kisses  reply, 

For  the  good  man  is  no  other  than — 1 1 

67. 

THIS  young  man,  so  good  and  worthy. 
Cannot  be  too  much  respected ; 
Oft  he  gives  me  wine  and  oysters, 
Gives  me  liquors  well  selected. 

Coat  and  trousers  fit  him  neatly, 
His  cravat  is  still  more  sightly ; 

And  so  comes  he  every  morning 
For  my  health  to  ask  politely. 

Of  my  wide-spread  glory  speaks  ho, 

Of  my  talents  and  my  graces ; 
Eagerly  at  my  disposal 

All  his  services  he  places. 

And  in  company  at  evening. 

With  a  face  as  if  inspired 
He  declaims  before  the  ladies 

All  my  poems  so  admired. 

O  it  is  indeed  most  pleasant 

Such  a  young  man  to  discover 
In  the  present  day,  when  surely 

All  things  good  will  soon  be  over. 

68. 

I  DREAMT  that  I  was  Lord  of  all^ 
And  sat  in  heaven  proudly ; 
The  angels,  ranged  around  my  throiM^ 
All  praised  my  verses  loudly. 

And  cakes  I  ate,  and  comfits  too. 

In  value  many  a  fiorin ; 
And  Caidinal  I  drank  the  while^ 

And  had  no  need  of  scorin'. 


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PICTURBS   OF   TRAVEL.  221 

Plagued  by  ennui,  I  long'd  to  be 

On  earth,  with  all  its  evil ; 
And  were  I  not  the  Lord  of  all, 

I'd  fain  have  been  the  deviL 

Thou  long-legg'd  Angel,  Grabriel,  go, 

And  hasten  downward  thither, 
And  find  my  worthy  friend  Eugene, 

And  bring  him  to  me  hither. 

Within  the  College  seek  him  not. 

But  o'er  a  glass  of  brandy ; 
Seek  for  him  not  in  Hedwig's  Church, 

But  at  Miss  Meyer's  so  handy. 

The  Angel  then  spread  out  his  wings, 

And  with  his  whole  soul  in  it 
Flew  down,  and  seized  my  worthy  friend, 

And  brought  him  in  a  minute. 

Ay,  youth,  I  am  the  Lord  of  all, 

And  rule  o'er  every  nation ; 
I  always  told  thee  I  should  come 

To  power  and  reputation. 

Each  day  I  work  such  miracles 

As  greatly  would  delight  thee ; 
The  town  of  A I'll  happy  make 

To-day,  and  so  excite  thee. 

The  paving-stones  upon  the  road 

Shall  all  be  now  converted. 
And,  lo,  an  oyster,  fresh  and  clear, 

In  each  shall  be  inserted. 

A  constant  shower  of  lemon-juice 

Like  dew,  shall  serve  as  pickle. 
And  in  the  gutters  of  the  streets 

The  finest  wine  shall  trickle. 

How  all  the  A — er's  straight  rejoice^ 

And  to  the  banquet  hasten ! 
The  judges  from  the  gutter  drink 

As  if  it  were  a  basin. 

And  how  at  this  divine  repast 

Bejoice  the  poets  needy ! 
Lieutenants  lick  the  streets  quite  dry. 

And  ensigns  poor  and  greedy. 


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222  Heine's  poems. 

The  ensigns  and  lieutenants  are 
Wise  in  their  generation ; 

They  always  think  the  present  time 
The  weightiest  in  creation. 


FllOM  beauteous  lips  compelled  to  part,  and  caiTied 
Away  from  beauteous  arms  fast  clasp'd  around  me. 
Yet  one  more  day  I  gladly  would  have  tarried, 

When  came  the  post-boy  with  his  steeds,  and  found  me. 

Child,  this  is  very  life,  an  endless  wailing, 
An  endless  farewell-taking,  endless  parting ; 

Is  then  thy  heart  to  clasp  mine  unavailing  ? 

Could  not  thine  eye  retain  me,  e'en  at  starting  ? 

70. 
"VTT'E  travelled  alone  in  the  gloomy 

T  T      Post-chaise  the  whole  of  the  night; 
Each  lean'd  on  the  other's  bosom. 

And  jested  with  hearts  so  light. 

When  morning  dawn'd  upon  us, ' 

My  child,  how  we  did  stare, 
For  the  blind  passenger,*  Amor, 

Was  sitting  between  us  there  I 

71. 

HEAVEN  knows  where  the  haughty  hussy 
May  have  will'd  to  pitch  her  tent ; 
Swearing,  with  the  rain  fast  falling, 
All  the  city  through  I  went. 

From  one  tavern  to  another 

Ran  I  swiftly  in  the  rain. 
And  to  every  surly  waiter 

Did  I  turn  myself  in  vain.  * 

Then  I  saw  her  at  a  window. 

Nodding,  tittering  as  well : 
Could  I  tell  that  thou  wouldst  live  in, 

Maiden,  such  a  grand  hotel  ? 

•  A  •*  blind  passenger  "  means  in  German  a  person  who  travsU 
witltout  paying  liis  fare. 


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PIOTUBBS  OF   TBAYEL.  228 

72. 

LIKE  darkling  yisions  the  houses 
Are  standing  all  in  a  row ; 
Deep  hidden  in  my  mantle, 
In  silence  I  onward  go. 

The  high  cathedral  tower 

The  hour  of  twelve  doth  proclaim  : 
My  love,  with  her  charms  and  kisses, 

Awaits  me  with  rapturous  flame. 

The  moon  is  my  attendant, 

And  kindly  gleams  in  the  sky, 
And  when  I  arrive  at  her  dwelling, 

I  joyfully  call  up  on  high : 

I  thank  thee,  my  olden  companion, 
That  thou  hast  thus  lighted  my  way  ; 

I  now  at  length  can  release  thee, 

Light  the  rest  of  the  world  now,  I  praj 

And  flnd'st  thou  some  mortal  enamour'd. 

In  solitude  mourning  his  fate, 
As  me  thou  of  old  time  didst  comfort, 

Him  also  0  comfort  thou  straight ' 

73. 

OWHAT  falsehood  lies  in  kisses ! 
In  mere  show  what  joy's  convey *d  t 
In  betrayal,  O  what  bliss  is  I 
Sweeter  still  to  be  betrayed  I 

Though  thou  mayst  resist  me,  fairest, 

Yet  I  know  what  thou  allowest ; 
I'll  avow  whatever  thou  swearest, 

I  will  swear  what  thou  avowest. 

74. 

UPON  thy  snowy  bosom 
My  head  all-soffcly  I  lay. 
And  secretly  can  listen 

To  what  thy  heart  doth  say. 

The  blue  hussars  are  blowing. 

And  riding  in  at  the  gate ; 
To-morrow  my  heart-beloved  one 

Will  surely  desert  me  straight 


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224  HEINE  8  FOEM8. 

If  thou  wilt  desert  me  to-morrow. 
At  least  to-day  thou  art  mine, 

And  in  thine  arms  so  beauteous 
With  twofold  bliss  TU  recline 

75. 

TEEE  blue  hussars  are  blowing, 
And  riding  out  at  the  gate ; 
I  come  then,  my  loved  one,  and  bring  thee 
A  nosegay  of  roses  straight. 

Those  were  indeed  wild  doings, 
Much  folk  and  warlike  display  I 

By  far  too  many  were  quartered 
Within  thy  bosom  that  day. 

76. 

I  IN  youthful  years  did  languish, 
Suffered  many  a  bitter  anguish 
From  love*8  fiery  glow. 

Wood  is  now  so  dear,  the  fire 
Will  for  lack  of  fuel  expire — 
Ma  fo%  !  'tis  better  so. 

Think  of  this,  O  youthful  fair  one ! 
Chase  away  the  tears  that  wear  one. 

And  all  foolish  love's  alarms ; 
If  thy  life  may  not  have  perish'd, 
O  forget  thy  love  once  cherish'd — 

Mafoi  !  within  my  arms. 

77. 

THE  eunuchs  controverted. 
When  I  raised  up  my  voice ; 
They  grumbled  and  asserted 
My  singing  was  not  choice. 

And  then  they  all  raised  sweetly 
Their  voicelets  petty  and  shnll ; 

They  sang  so  finely  and  neatly, 
Like  crystal  sounded  their  trilL 

They  sang  of  love's  fierce  yearning; 

Of  loving  effusions  and  love. 
To  tears  the  ladies  all  turning, 

With  tunes  so  adapted  to  move. 


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A' 


PIOTUBES  OF  TBAVBTi.  225 

78. 

I  LEFT  yon  at  first  in  July  at  tho  warmest. 
In  January" now  I  find  yon  onoe  more ; 
In  the  midst  of  the  heat  you  then  were  complaining, 

And  now  you  are  cooFd,  and  cold  to  the  core. 
I  shall  soon  leave  again,  and  when  next  I*m  returning 
Neither  warm  shall  I  find  you,  nor  yet  quite  cold ; 
I  shall  walk  o'er  your  grave  with  silent  composure, 
While  my  own  heart  within  me  is  wretched  and  old. 

79. 
BT  thou  then  indeed  so  hostile, 
Art  thou  tow'rds  me  changed  so  sadly? 
I  hy  all  means  shall  lament  it, 
Thou  hast  treated  me  so  badly. 

0  ungrateful  lips,  how  could  ye 
Sp^ik  with  malice  cruel-hearted 

Of  tiie  man  who  ofttimes  kiss*d  you 
Lovingly,  in  days  departed  ? 

80. 
H I  once  more  the  eyes  are  on  me, 
Which  did  greet  me  once  with  gladness, 
And  the  lips  once  more  address  me. 

Which  once  sweeten'd  life's  long  sadness. 
E'en  the  voice  I  hear,  whose  accents 
Charm'd  me,  as  they  sweetly  fiJter'd ; 

1  alone  am  not  the  same  one, 
Having  home  retum'd,  all-alter'd. 

By  those  arms  so  white  and  beauteous 

Lovingly  embraced  and  closely, 
To  her  heart  I  now  am  clinging. 

Dull  of  feeling  and  morosely. 

81. 

ON  the  walls  of  Salamanca 
Sof);  refreshing  winds  are  playing ; 
There,  with  my  beloved  Donna, 

On  a  summer's  eve  I'm  straying. 
Bound  the  fair  one's  slender  body 

Doth  my  arm  with  rapture  linger. 
And  her  bosom's  haughty  motion 
Feel  I  with  a  loving  finger. 


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226  rkine's  poems. 

Tet  a  whisper  fraught  with  sorrow 

Through  the  linden  trees  is  moyiiig^ 
And,  beneath,  the  dusky  millstream 

Murmurs  sad  dreams,  disapproying. 
•*  Ah,  Senora  I    a  foreboding 

^'  Tells  me,  I  shall  hence  be  driven 
^  On  the  walls  of  Salamanca 

**  Ne'er  again  to  walk  *tis  given/' 

82. 

THY  voice  and  thine  eye,  when  we  first  saw  each  other, 
Convinced  me  thou  saw'st  me  with  heart  not 
estranged; 
And  had  it  not  been  for  thy  tyrant  mother, 

I  think  that  we  kisses  should  straight  have  exchanged. 
To-morrow  again  I  depart  from  the  city. 
And  on,  in  my  olden  course,  wander  I ; 
At  the  wind^»»^  my  fair  one  is  lurking  in  pity. 
And  friencuy  greetings  I  throw  up  on  high. 

83. 

OYEE  the  mountains  the  sun  mounts  in  splendour, 
Afar  sound  the  bells 'Of  the  lambs  as  they  stray ; 
My  loved  one,  my  lamb,  my  sun  bright  and  tender, 

How  gladly  once  more  would  I  see  thee  to-day ! 
I  gaze  up  on  high,  with  looks  fond  and  loving — 

My  chQd,  fare  thee  well,  I  must  wander  from  thee ; 
In  vain !  for  her  curtain  is  still  and  unmoving — 
She  slumbering  lieth  and  dreameth  of  me. 

84. 
T  Halle,  in  the  market 
Two  mighty  lions  are  standing. 
Thou  lion-scorn  of  Halle, 
Methinks  they've  tamed  thee  finely  I 
At  Halle,  in  the  market, 
A  mighty  giant's  standing. 
He  hath  a  sword,  and  moves  not, 
He's  tum'd  to  stone  by  terror. 
At  Halle,  in  the  market, 
A  mighty  church  is  standing. 
The  students  of  each  faction 
Have  there  a  place  for  praying. 


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PIOTUaBS  OP  TRAVEL.  227 

85. 

GLIMM'BING  lies  the  suimner  even 
Over  wood  and  yerdant  meadows, 
And  the  gold  moon,  fragrance  shedding^ 
Gleameth  £rom  the  aznie  heaven. 

Crickets  at  the  brook  with  shrillness 

Chirp ;  there's  motion  in  the  water, 

And  the  wand'rer  hears  a  splashing. 
And  a  breathing  in  the  stillness. 

Tender  at  the  lone  stream  sparkling, 

See,  the  beauteous  eK  is  bathing ; 

Arm  and  neck,  so  white  and  lovely, 
Glisten  in  the  moonbeams  darkling. 

86. 

ON  the  strange  roads  night  is  lying. 
Heart  is  sick  and  limbs  are  weary ; 
But  the  moonbeams,  softly  vying, 

Shed  their  light  like  blessings  cheery. 

Ah,  sweet  moon  !  thy  radiant  splendour 

Scares  away  each  terror  nightly; 
All  my  woes  dissolve,  and  tender 

Dew  o'erflows  my  eyelids  lightly. 

87. 

DEATH  nothing  is  but  cooling  night, 
And  life  is  nought  but  sultry  day ; 
Darkness  draws  nigh,  I  slumber 
Wearied  by  day's  bright  light. 

Over  my  bed  ariseth  a  tree, 

There  sings  the  youthfiil  nightingale ; 

She  sings  of  love  exulting. 
In  dreams  'tis  heard  by  me. 

88. 
"  O  AY,  where  is  thy  beauteous  mistress, 

O    "  Whom  thou  sangest  in  the  hour 
"  When  thy  heart  was  pierced  so  strangely 

"  By  the  flames  of  magic  power  ?" 

AU  those  flames  are  now  extinguish'd, 

And  my  heart  is  cold  and  weary. 
And  this  book's  the  urn  that  holdetL 

^y  love's  ashes  sad  and  dreary^ 

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22;:^  heine's  pobicb 

89. 

FULL  long  have  I  my  head  tormented 
With  ceaseless  thinking,  day  and  night ; 
And  yet  thy  darling  eyes  compel  me 
To  love  thee,  in  my  own  despite. 

Now  stand  I,  where  thine  eyes  are  gleaming, 
Charm'd  by  their  sweet  expressive  light ; 

That  I  should  love  again  thus  deeply 
I  scarcely  can  believe  aright 

90. 

WEEEN  thou  hast  become  my  wedded  wife 
Thy  joy  shall  know  no  measure ; 
Thoult  live  in  happiness  all  thy  life, 
In  uninterrupt^  pleasure. 

And  I  will  very  patient  be 

E*en  'neath  thy  reviling  and  curses ; 

But  we  must  part  most  certainly 
If  thou  abusest  my  verses. 

91. 

LITTLE  by  thee  comprehended, 
Little  knew  I  thee,  good  brother ; 
When  we  in  the  mud  descended 
Soon  we  understood  each  other. 

92. 

NEAE  me  dwelleth  Don  Henriques, 
As  the  "  handsome  "  known  and  fSted ; 
Our  apartments  are  adjoining. 
By  a  thin  wall  separated. 

Salamanca's  dames  are  blushing 

As  he  in  the  streets  is  walking 
Rattling  spurs,  mustachios  twirling, 

With  his  dogs  behind  him  stal^g. 

Bi:t  at  evening's  silent  hour  he 

AU  alone  at  home  is  sitting, 
His  guitar  his  fingers  twanging, 

Sweet  dreams  tiirough  his  fancy  flitting. 

On  the  chords  with  vigour  plays  he, 
His  wild  phantasies  beginning — 

O  it  drives  me  mad  to  hear  him 
Keeping  up  his  wretched  dinning 

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PIimJBES  OF  TBAVEL.  229 

THE  EABTZ-JOUBNET. 

1824. 
PREFACE. 

IN  black  coats  and  silken  stockings, 
White  and  courtly  frills  they  hide  them. 
Gentle  speeches  and  embraces — 
Had  ^ej  only  hearts  inside  them  I 

Hearts  within  the  breast,  and  love,  too. 

In  the  heart,  yea,  love  all-burning ; 
Ah !  Fm  sick  ci  their  false  prating 

Of  lore's  sorrows  and  love's  yearning. 

Ill  ascend  the  distant  mountains 

Where  the  peaceful  huts  are  standing, 

Where  the  breezes  free  are  blowing, 
And  the  bosom  free's  expanding. 

I'll  ascend  the  distant  mountains 
Where  the  dusky  firs  are  springing, 

And  the  haughty  clouds  are  roaming, 
Brodcs  are  murmuring,  birds  are  singing. 

Fare  ye  well,  ye  polish'd  chambers, 
Pdlish'd  lords  and  dames  beguiling ; 

To  the  mountains  now  ascending 
111  look  down  upon  you,  smiling. 


ON  the  mountain  stands  the  cottage 
Of  the  aged  mountaineer ; 
There  the  dark-green  fir  is  rustling, 
And  the  golden  moon  shines  clear. 

In  the  cottage  stands  an  arm-chair, 
Bichly  carved  and  wondrously ; 

He  that  on  it  sits  is  happy. 
And  the  happy  one  am  I ! 

On  the  footstool  sits  the  maiden. 
On  my  knee  her  arms  repose  ; 

Eyes  are  like  two  stars  all  azure^ 
Mouth  is  like  the  purple  roMw 


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230  heinb's  poEsra. 

And  the  stars  so  sweet  and  aznre, 

Large  as  heaven,  she  on  me  tkrow% 
And  she  puts  her  lily-finger 

Mocking  on  the  purple  rose. 
No,  we're  seen  not  by  the  mother. 

For  with  industry  she  spins ;    " 
The  guitar  the  father  playing, 

Some  old  melody  begins. 
And  the  maiden  whispers  softly, 

Softly,  in  a  tone  suppressed ; 
Many  a  most  important  secret 

She  to  me  hath  soon  confessed  : 
"  Since  the  death  of  aunt,  howeyer, 

t'  We  can't  go  to  see  the  sight 
"  Of  the  shooting-match  at  Goslar, 

"  Which  was  such  a  great  delight. 
"  Whereas  here  'tis  very  lonely 

"  On  the  mountain-top,  you  know ; 
"  AU  the  winter  we're  entirely 

^^  As  though  buried  in  the  snow. 
"  And  I  am  a  timid  maiden, 

'^  And  as  fearful  as  a  child 
'*  Of  the  wicked  mountain  spirits,  I 

**  Who  at  night  roam  fierce  and  wild  *'— 
Sudden  is  the  sweet  one  silent, 

Terrified  by  what  she  said. 
And  her  little  eyes  she  covers 

With  her  little  hands  in  dread. 
Louder  roars  outside  the  fir-tree, 

And  the  spinning-wheel  loud  hums ; 
Meanwhile  die  guitar  is  tinkling, 

And  the  olden  tune  it  strums : 
"  Fear  thee  not,  my  little  darling, 

"  At  the  wicked  spirits'  might ; 
**  Angels  keep,  my  little  darling, 

"  Safe  watch  o'er  thee,  day  and  night.** 
2. 

FIB-TEEE  with  green  finger's  knocking 
At  the  window  smaU  and  low, 
And  the  moon,  the  yellow  list'ner, 

Through  it  her  sweet  light  doth  thi^w. 

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S-rOTUBES  OF  TBlYEL.  231 

?atber,  mother,  gently  snoring, 
In  the  neighbouring  chamber  sleep, 

Tet  we  two  are  gaiiy  talking, 
So  that  wide  awake  we  keep, 

^  That  thon'ri  wont  to  pray  too  often, 

'*  Is  a  thing  111  credit  ne'er, 
**  For  thy  lips*  convulsive  quiv'ring 

''  HI  accords  with  thoughts  of  prayer. 

"  Ay,  that  quivering,  cold  and  evil, 

**  Every  time  afi&ights  me  sore, 
'*  Yet  thine  eyes'  mild  lustre  husheth 

"  Thy  sad  anguish  evermore, 

"  I,  too,  doubt  if  thou  believest 
^'  All  that  \&  the  Christian's  boast ; 

"  Dost  believe  in  God  the  Father, 
•*  In  the  Son  and  Holy  Ghost  ?  "— 

Ah,  my  child !  when  yet  an  infant 

Sitting  on  my  mother's  knee, 
I  believed  in  God  the  Father, 

Buling  all  tilings  wondrously ; 

Who  the  beauteous  earth  created, 

And  the  men  that  on  it  move ; 
Who  to  suns,  moons,  stars  predestined 

All  their  trac^  wherein  to  rove. 

When,  my  diild,  I  grew  still  bigsr^. 

Many  more  lyings  I  conceived, 
And  my  reason  wax'd  yet  stronger. 

And  I  in  the  Son  bedieved. 

In  the  Son  beloved,  who,  loving, 

Opeii'd  to  us  love's  door  wide. 
And  who  in  reward,  as  usual. 

By  the  mob  was  crucified. 

Now  that  I  am  grown,  have  read  much, 

Wander'd  over  many  a  coast. 
Doth  my  heart  swell,  and  in  earnest 

I  believe  the  Holy  Ghost. 

He  hath  done  the  greatest  marvels, 

And  still  greater  doeth  he ; 
He  hath  burst  the  tyrants'  strongholdi^ 

Servants  from  their  yoke  set  free. 

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232  HEIHS'S  FOXM& 

Olden  deadly  wounds  he  heale^ 
And  renews  the  olden  law : 

An  men  equal  are,  and  noble 
From  ihe  earliest  breath  tiiey  dimw. 

Every  evil  clond  he  chaseth, 

Drives  the  brain's  dark  weft  away. 

That  cormpteth  love  and  pleasnre. 
Grinning  at  us  night  and  day. 

Thousand  knights  well  arm'd  for  battle 
Hath  the  Holy  Ghost  ordain'd, 

All  his  pleasure  to  accomplish. 
All  by  mighty  zeal  sustained. 

See,  their  trusty  swords  are  Reaming ! 

See,  their  noble  banners  wave ! 
Ah,  my  child !  hast  thou  seen  ever 

Knights  like  this,  so  proud  and  brave  t 

Now,  my  child,  look  on  me  boldly, 
Ejss  me,  look  upon  me  nigh ! 

Such  a  danng  knight,  my  fair  ono^ 
Of  the  Holy  Ghost  am  1 1 

8. 

SILENTLY  the  moon  is  hiding 
Li  the  dark  green  fir-tree's  rear. 
And  our  lamp  witiiin  ^e  diamber 
Flickers  £unt,  with  gammer  draur. 

But  my  azure  eyes  are  beaming 
With  a  light  that  bri^ter  ptaya. 

And  ^e  purple  rose  is  Rowing, 
And  tZie  darling  maiden  says : 

^^  Little  elves  and  little  people 
^  Pilfer  all  our  bread  and  bacon ; 

^  In  the  drawer  at  night  ^y're  lyingi 
^  But  by  morning  all  is  taken. 

'^  Next  our  cream  the  little  people 
**  From  the  milk  are  wont  to  sup, 

*  Leaving,  too,  the  bowl  uncovered, 
^*  And  the  caX  the  rest  drinks  upu 


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PICTUBES  OF  TRAVEL.  233 

*'  And  the  cat;  a  witcli  indeed  is, 

"  For  flhe  crawls,  while  night-storms  lower, 
'*  Up  the  spirit-monntain  yonder 

^'  To  the  ancient  ruined  tower. 

^^  There  a  castle  erst  was  standing, 

"  Full  of  joy  and  glittering  arms ; 
**  Knights  and  squires,  in  merry  torch-dance^ 

"  IHngled  willi  the  ladies'  charms. 

^'  Then  a  wicked  old  enchantress 

^'  Men  and  castle  too  bewitch'd ; 
**  Nought  remaineth  but  the  ruins, 

**  Where  the  owls  their  nest  have  pitcb'cL 

'^  Tet  my  late  aunt  used  to  tell  us : 

*'  If  the  proper  word  is  said 
'*  At  the  proper  hour  at  nighttime 

^  At  the  proper  place  o'erhead, 

'*  Then  the  ruins  will  be  changed 

*'  To  a  castle  &ir  once  more, 
**  Enights  and  squires  and  ladies  gaily 

"  Will  be  dancing  as  of  yore. 

**  Him  by  whom  that  word  is  spoken 

"  Men  and  castle  will  obey ; 
'^  Drums  and  trumpets  will  proclaim  him, 
"  Heralding  his  sovereign  sway." 

Thus  the  charming  legends  issue 

From  the  mouth  so  like  a  rose, 
While  an  azure  starry  radiance 

From  her  sweet  eyes  overflows. 

Bound  my  hand  the  little  maiden 

Twines  her  golden  hair  with  glee. 
Calls  by  pretty  names  my  fingers, 

Kisses,  laughs,  then  mute  is  she. 

AU  within  that  silent  chamber 

On  me  looks  with  trusting  eye ; 
Table,  cupboard, — I  could  ^<^ 

I  had  seen  them  formerly. 

like  a  friend  the  house-clock  prattles^ 

The  guitar  scarce  audibly 
Of  itself  begins  to  tinkle, 

And  as  in  a  dream  sit  L 

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234  HEINE*B  P0K1I8« 

NoVs  the  proper  place  discoTer'd, 

Now  the  proper  hoar  hath  sounded ; 
If  the  proper  word  I  ntter*d. 

Maiden,  thou  wonldst  be  astonnded. 
If  that  word  I  straightway  utter'd, 

Midnight  would  grow  dim  and  quake. 
Fir  and  streamlet  roar  more  loudly, 

And  the  aged  monntain  wake. 
Lnte's  soft  strains  and  pigmy  music 

From  the  mountain's  clefts  would  burst. 
And  a  flowering  wood  shoot  from  them 

As  in  joyous  spring-time  erst 
Flowers,  all-hardy  magic  flowers, 

Leayes  of  size  so  fabulous. 
Fragrant,  varied,  hasty-quiv'ring, 

As  though  passion  stirr'd  them  thus. 
Boees,  wild  as  flames  all-glowing, 

Dart  &om  out  the  mass  like  gems ; 
Lilies,  like  to  crystal  arrows. 

Upward  shoot  tow'rd  heaven  their  sterna. 
And  the  stars,  like  suns  in  greatness 

Downward  gaze  with  yearning  glow  ; 
In  the  liiys  giant-calix 

They  tlieir  gushing  radiance  throw. 
Yet  ourselves,  my  darling  maiden, 

Alter'd  more  than  all  we  seem ; 
Gold  and  silk  and  torches'  lustre 

Joyously  around  us  gleanu 
Thou,  yea  thou,  becom'st  a  princess, 

To  a  castle  turns  this  cot ; 
Enights  and  squires  and  ladies  gaily 

Dance  with  rapture,  tiring  not. 
Thee  and  all,  both  men  and  castle, 

I,  yea  I,  have  gain'd  to-day ; 
Drums  and  trumpets  loud  proclaim  me, 

Heralding  my  sovereign  sway  I 
4. 

SHEPHERD  boy's  a  king,--on  green  hilli 
As  a  throne  he  sitteth  down 
O'er  his  head  the  sun  all-radiant 
Ip  his  ever  golden  crown. 

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PIOTUBES  OF  TBAVEL.  235 

At  bis  feet  the  sheep  are  lying, 
Gentle  fawners,  streak'd  with  red ; 

Calves  as  cavaliers  attend  him, 
Proudly  o'er  the  pastures  spread. 

Ejds  are  all  his  conrt-performers, 

With  the  birds  and  cows  as  well, 
And  he  has  his  chamber-mnsic 

To  the  sound  of  flute  and  bell. 

And  it  sounds  and  sings  so  sweetly. 

And  the  time  so  sweetly  keep 
Water£Edl  and  nodding  fir-trees. 

And  the  king  then  goes  to  sleep. 

In  the  meantime  acts  as  ruler 

His  prime  minister,  the  hound, 
While  his  loud  and  surly  barking 

Echoes  all  the  country  round. 

Sleepily  the  young  king  murmurs : 

"  'Tis  a  heavy  task  to  reign ; 
^  Ah !  right  gladly  would  I  find  me 

"  With  my  queen  at  home  again  I 

^<  In  my  queen's  arms  soft  and  tender 

*'  Calmly  rests  my  kingly  head, 
'*  And  my  vast  and  boundless  kingdom 

"  In  her  dear  eyes  lies  outspread.'* 

5. 

BBIGHTEB  in  the  East  'tis  growing 
Through  the  sun's  soft  glimm'ring  motion ; 
Far  and  wide  the  mountain-summits 
Float  within  the  misty  ocean. 

With  the  speed  of  wind  I'd  hasten, 

If  I  seven-league  boots  had  only, 
Over  yonder  mountain-summits 

To  my  darling's  dwelling  lonely* 

Gently  would  I  draw  the  curtain 

From  the  bed  wherein  she's  lying, 
Gently  would  I  kiss  her  forehead, 

And  her  mouth,  with  rubies  vying. 

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236  heinb's  POEMa 

Still  more  gentlj  would  I  wiiisper 

In  her  lily-ear  so  tender : 
<<  Think  in  dreams,  we  love  each  othert 

«( And  our  love  will  ne'er  surrender.'* 


I 


6. 

AM  the  princess  Use, 

And  dwell  in  Usenstein ; 

Come  with  mo  to  my  castle, 

And  there  'midst  pleasures  be  mina 

Thy  head  I'll  softly  moisten 

With  my  pellucid  wave ; 
Thou  shalt  forget  thine  anguish, 

Poor  sorrow-stricken  knave ! 

Within  my  arms  so  snowy, 

Upon  my  snowy  breast, 
Shalt  thou  repose,  and  dream  there 

Of  olden  legends  blest. 

Ill  kiss  thee  and  embrace  thee, 

As  I  embraced  and  kiss'd 
The  darling  Kaiser  Henry, 

Who  dodi  no  longer  exist. 

None  live  except  the  living. 

The  dead  are  dead  and  gone ; 
And  I  am  fair  and  blooming. 

My  laughing  heart  beats  on. 

And  as  my  heart  is  beating, 

My  crystal  castle  doth  ring ; 
The  knights  and  maidens  are  dancing, 

The  squires  all-joyfdlly  spring. 

The  silken  trains  are  rustling, 

The  spurs  of  iron  are  worn. 
The  dwarfs  beat  drum  and  trumpet. 

And  fiddle  and  play  tiie  horn. 

But  thee  shall  my  arm  hold  warmly 

As  Kaiser  Henry  it  held ; 
I  held  him  fast  imprison'd. 

When  loudly  the  trumpet's  note  swell'd. 


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PIOTUBES  OF  TRAVEL.  237 

TEE  BALTIC. 
PABT  L  1825. 

1.  EVENING  TWILIGHT. 

BY  ocean's  pallid  strand 
Sat  I,  tormented  in  spirit  and  lonely* 
The  snn  sank  lower  and  lower,  and  threw 
£«d  glowing  streaks  upon  the  water, 
And  the  snowy,  spreading  billows, 
By  the  flood  hard-press*d, 
Foam'd  and  roar'd  still  nearer  and  nearer —    . 
A  wonderful  sound,  a  whisp'ring  and  piping, 
A  laughing  and  murmuring,  sighing  and  rushing. 
Between  times  a  lullaby-home-sounding  singing,— 
Methinks  I  hear  some  olden  tradition, 
Primeval,  fSEtvourite  legend. 
Which  I  erst  as  a  stripling 
Learnt  from  the  neighbours'  children, 
When  we,  on  the  summer  evenings, 
On  the  house-door's  steps  aU  cower'd 
Cosily  for  quiet  talking, 
With  our  little  hearts  all  attentive. 
And  our  eyes  aU  wisely  curious ; — 
Whilst  the  bigger  maidens. 
Close  by  their  firagrant  flowerpots 
Sat  at  tiie  opposite  window 
Bosy  their  fayces, 
Smiling,  illumed  by  the  moon. 

2.  SUNSET. 

THE  glowing  ruddy  sun  descends 
Down  to  the  fSeor  up-shuddering 
Silvery-grey  world-ocean ; 
Airy  images,  rosily  breath'd  upon, 
After  him  roll,  and  over  against  him, 
Out  of  the'  autumnal  glimmering  veil  of  doads, 
With  face  aU  mournful  and  pale  as  death, 
Bursteth  forth  the  moon, 
And  behind  her,  like  sparks  of  light, 
Misty-broad,  glimmer  the  stars. 

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•238  Heine's  poems. 

Onoe  in  the  heavens  there  glitter'd, 
Join'd  in  fond  nnion, 
Lona  the  goddess  and  Sol  the  god, 
And  around  them  the  stars  all  clnster'di 
Their  little,  innocent  children. 

But  eyil  tongnes  then  whispered  disunion. 
And  thej  parted  in  anger. 
That  glorious,  radiant  pair. 

Now,  in  the  daytime,  in  splendour  all  lonely, 

Wanders  the  Sun-god  in  realms  on  high, — 

On  account  of  his  majesty 

Greatly  sung-to  and  worshipped 

By  haughty,  bliss-harden'd  mortals. 

But  in  ihQ  night-time, 

In  heaven  wanders  Luna, 

Unhappy  mother, 

With  all  her  orphan'd  starry  children, 

And  she  gleams  in  silent  sorrow, 

And  loving  maidens  and  gentle  poets 

Devote  to  her  tears  and  songs. 

The  gentle  Luna  I  womanly  minded. 
Still  doth  she  love  her  beautiful  spouse. 
Towards  the  evening,  trembling  and  pale,' 
Peeps  she  forth  from  the  light  clouds  around, 
And  looks  at  the  parting  ode  mournfully, 
And  fain  would  cry  in  her  anguish  :  **  Come  f 
"  Come  I  the  children  all  long  for  thee — " 
But  the  disdainful  Sun-god, 
At  the  sight  of  his  spouse,  'gins  glowing 

With  still  deeper  purple, 

In  anger  and  grief. 

And  inflexibly  hastens  he 

Down  to  his  flood-chilly  widow'd  bed. 


Evil  and  backbiting  tongues 

Thus  brought  grief  and  destruction 

E'en  *mongst  the  godheads  immortal. 

And  the  poor  godheads,  yonder  in  heaven. 

Wander  in  misery, 

Comfortless  over  their  endless  tracks, 

And  death  cannot  reach  them, 


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PTCTUBES  OP  TBAVBL.  239 

And  with  them  they  trail 
Their  bright  desolation. 

But  I,  the  mere  man, 

The  lowly-planted,  the  blest-with-death  one^ 

I  sorrow  no  longer. 

3.  THE  NIGHT  ON  THE  STRAND. 

STAELESS  and  cold  is  the  night, 
The  ocean  boils ; 
And  over  the  sea,  £at  on  its  belly, 
Lies  the  misshapen  North  wind ; 
With  groaning  and  stifled  mysterious  voice, 
A  sullen  grumbler,  good-humour*d  for  once. 
Prates  he  away  to  the  waves, 
Telling  many  a  wild  tradition, 
Giant-legends,  murderous-humorous. 
Primeval  Sagas  from  Norway, 
And  the  while,  far  echoing,  laughs  he  and  howls  he 
Exorcists*  songs  of  the  Edda, 
Grey  old  Kunic  proverbs, 
So  darkly-daring,  and  magic-forcible. 
That  the  white  sons  of  Ocean 
Spring  up  on  high,  aU  exulting. 
In  maddened  excitement 

Meanwhile,  along  the  flat  shore, 

Over  the  flood-moisten*d  sand. 

Paces  a  stranger,  whose  heart  within  him 

Is  wilder  far  than  wind  and  waters ; 

There  where  he  walks 

Sparks  fly  out,  and  shells  are  crackling. 

And  he  veils  himself  in  his  dark-grey  mantle, 

And  quickly  moves  on  through  the  blustering  night  ;— 

Guided  in  safety  by  yon  little  light. 

That  sweetly,  invitingly  glimmers. 

From  the  lone  fisherman's  cottage. 

Father  and  brother  are  out  on  the  sea. 

And  all  all  alone  is  staying 

Within  the  hut  the  fisherman's  daughter. 

The  wondrously  lovely  fisherman's  daughter* 

By  the  hearth  she's  sitting. 

And  lists  t^>  the  water-kettle's 


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240  hbinb's  poescs. 

Homelj,  stveet  foreboding  humming, 

And  shakes  in  the  fire  the  crackling  bni8b^r'x>d« 

And  on  it  blows, 

So  that  the  lights,  all  ruddy  and  flickering, 

Magic-sweetly  are  reflected 

On  her  fair  blooming  features. 

On  her  tender,  snowy  shoulder, 

Which,  moving  gently,  peeps 

From  out  her  coarse  grey  smock, 

And  on  her  little,  anxious  hand. 

Which  fastens  fiimer  her  under-garmenf^ 

Over  her  graceful  hip. 

But  sudden,  the  door  bursts  open, 
The  nightly  stranger  entereth  in  ; 
Love-secure,  his  eye  reposes 
On  the  snowy,  slender  maiden. 
Who,  trembling,  near  him  stands, 
Like  to  a  startled  lily  ; 
And  he  throws  his  mantle  to  earth. 
And  laughs  and  speaks : 

«*  See  now.  my  child,  I've  kept  my  word, 

'^  And  I  come,  and  with  me  hath  come 

*'  The  olden  time,  when  the  gods  from  the  heavens 

"  Came  down  to  earth,  to  the  daughters  of  mortals, 

**  And  the  daughters  of  mortals  embraced  they, 

"  And  from  them  there  issued 

"  Sceptre-bearing  races  of  monarchs, 

"  And  heroes,  wonders  of  earth. 

"  But  start  not,  my  child,  any  longer 

"  Because  of  my  godhead, 

"  And  I  pray  thee  give  me  some  tea  mix'd  with  ron^ 

"  For  'tis  cold  out  of  doors, 

'*  And  amid  such  night  breezes 

'*  Freeze  even  we,  we  godheads  immortal, 

*'  And  easily  catch  the  divinest  of  colds, 

''  Aikd  a  cough  that  proves  quite  etemaL" 

i,  POSEIDON. 

THE  sun's  bright  rays  were  playing 
Over  the  wide-rolling  breadth  of  the  seal 
Far  in  the  roadstead  glitter'd  the  ship 
Destined  to  home  to  convey  me  • 


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PIGTUBBS  OF  TBAVBL.  241 

But  a  propitious  wind  was  yet  wanting, 

And  I  sat  on  the  white  downs  all  calmly 

Hard  by  the  lonely  strand, 

And  I  read  the  song  of  Odysseus, 

The  olden,  ever-youthful  song. 

From  out  whose  sea-beflutter'd  leaves 

Joyfully  rose  to  meet  me 

The  breath  of  the  deities. 

And  the  shining  spring-time  of  mortals, 

And  the  blooming  heaven  of  Hellas. 

My  generous  heart  accompanied  truly 

The  son  of  Laertes  in  wanderings  and  troubles, 

Placed  itself  with  him,  spirit-tormented. 

At  guestly  hearths, 

Where  beauteous  queens  were  spinning  their  purple^ 

And  help'd  him  to  lie,  and  succeed  in  escaping 

From  giants*  caverns  and  nymphs'  embraces. 

Followed  him  down  to  Cimmerian  night, 

And  in  tempest  and  shipwreck. 

And  with  him  endured  unspeakable  torments. 

Sighing  spake  I :  "  Thou  wicked  Poseidon, 
"  Thine  anger  is  fearful ; 
"  I  myself  am  anxious 
"  As  to  my  own  return.'* 

Scarce  breath'd  I  these  words. 
When  the  sea  foam*d  on  high. 
And  out  of  the  snowy  billows  arose 
The  sedge-becrowned  head  of  the  seagod, 
And  scornfully  cried  he : 

"  Fear  not,  little  poet ! 

**  1*11  not  for  one  moment  endanger 

*^  Thy  poor  little  vessel, 

"  And  thy  dear  life  shall  not  be  tormented 

"  By  any  critical  tossing. 

"  For  thou,  little  poet,  hast  never  annoy *d  me, 

"  No  single  turret  was  injured  by  thee 

"  In  Priam's  sacred  fortress, 

"  No  single  hair  didst  thou  e*er  singe 

"  In  the  eye  of  my  son  Polyphemus, 

**  And  thou  hast  ne'er  been  advised  or  protected 

♦*  By  the  goddess  of  wisdom,  Pallas  Athene !" 

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242  Heine's  POKMOk 

Thus  cried  Poseidon, 
And  sank  'neath  tlie  ocean  again ; 
And  at  the  vulgar  seaman's  wit 
Laugh'd  under  the  water 
Amphitrite,  the  clumsy  fishwoman. 
And  the  silly  daughters  of  Nereus. 

5.  HOMAGE. 

YE  songs !  0  my  trusty  numbers  ! 
Up,  up  I  and  on  witib  your  arms 
Bid  the  trumpet  to  blow. 
And  raise  high  on  my  shield 
The  youthful  maiden, 
Who's  now  to  rule  my  heart, 
My  undivided  heart,  as  queen. 

Hail  to  thee,  youthful  queen  I 

From  the  sun  on  high 

Tear  I  his  sparkling  ruddy  gold. 

And  of  it  weave  a  diadem 

For  thine  anointed  head. 

From  the  flattering  blue-silken  heaven's  veil. 

Wherein  night's  diamonds  are  gleaming. 

Cut  I  a  costly  piece. 

And  hang,  as  coronation  mantle, 

Upon  thy  regal  shoulders. 

I  give  to  thee,  as  courtiers. 

Some  well-bedizen'd  sonnets, 

Haughty  terzinas  and  courtly  stanzas ; 

My  wit  shall  serve  thee  as  footman, 

And  as  court-fool  my  phantasy, 

As  herald,  the  laughing  tears  on  my  scutcheoiv 

My  humour  shall  serve  thee. 

But  I,  O  my  queen. 

Before  thee  kneel  down, 

In  homage,  on  red  velvet  cushion, 

And  to  thee  hand  over 

The  small  bit  of  reason. 

Which,  out  of  compassion,  was  left  me 

By  her  who  last  govern'd  thy  kingdom. 

6.  DECLARATION. 

ONWAED  glimmering  came  the  evening, 
Wilder  tossdd  the  flood, 


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PIOTtTBES  OF  TBAYEL.  243' 

And  I  sat  on  the  strand,  regarding 

The  snowy  dance  of  the  billows, 

And  soon  my  bosom  swelled  like  the  sea ; 

A  deep  home-sickness  yearningly  seized  me 

For  thee,  thou  darling  form, 

Who  everywhere  surround'st  me, 

And  everywhere  call'st  me, 

Everywhere,  everywhere. 

In  the  moan  of  the  wind,  in  the  roar  of  the  ocean, 

In  the  sigh  within  my  own  breast. 

With  brittle  reed  I  wrote  on  the  sand  : 

"  Agnes,  I  love  thee  1" 

But  wicked  billows  soon  pour'd  themselves 

Over  the  blissful  confession. 

Effacing  it  all. 

Ah  too  fragile  reed,  ah  fest-scatter'd  sand, 

Ah  fugitive  billows,  111  trust  you  no  more  I 

The  heavens  grow  darker,  my  heart  grows  wilder. 

And  with  vigorous  hand  from  the  forests  of  Norway 

Tear  I  the  lughest  fir-tree. 

And  plxmge  it  deep 

In  Etna*s  glowing  abyss,  and  thereafter 

With  fire-imbued  giant-pen 

I  write  on  the  dark  veil  of  heaven : 

**  Agnes,  I  love  theef 

Every  night  gleams  thenceforward 

On  high  that  eternal  fiery  writing, 

And  iJl  generations  of  farthest  descendants 

Bead  gladly  the  heavenly  sentence : 

**  Agnes,  I  love  thee  1" 

7.  IN  THE  CABIN  AT  NIGHT. 

THE  sea  its  pearls  possesseth. 
And  heaven  its  stars  containetht 
But,  O  my  heart,  my  heart. 
My  heart  its  love  hath  also. 

Yast  is  the  sea  and  the  heavens, 
Tet  vaster  is  my  heart. 
And  fairer  than  pearls  or  the  start 
Glitt'reUi  and  b^mieth  my  lova. 

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244  HEDfE^  POSMd. 

Thou  little  yonthfol  maiden, 
Come  to  my  heart  so  vast ; 
My  heart  and  the  sea  and  the  heavem 
For  very  love  are  dying. 

«  «  «  « 

'Gainst  the  azure  veil  of  heaven, 
Where  the  beauteous  stars  are  twinklingi 
Fain  I'd  press  my  lips  with  ardour, 
Press  them  wildly,  inadly  weeping. 

Yonder  stars  the  very  eyes  are 
Of  my  loved  one,  thousand-changing 
Glimmer  they  and  greet  me  kindly 
From  the  azure  veil  of  heaven. 

Tow'rd  the  azure  veil  of  heaven, 
Tow'rd  the  eyes  of  my  beloved  one. 
Lift  I  up  my  arms  in  worship, 
And  I  pray,  and  thus  beseech  them : 

Beauteous  eyes,  ye  lights  of  mercy, 
O  make  happy  my  poor  spirit, 
Let  me  die,  and  as  my  guerdon, 
Win  both  you  and  all  your  heaven  I 
«  «  «  • 

From  those  heavenly  eyes  above  me 
Light  and  trembling  sparks  are  falling 
Through  the  night,  and  then  my  spirit 
Loving-wide  and  wider  stretcheth. 

O  ye  heavenly  eyes  above  me ! 
Weep  yourselves  into  my  spirit, 
That  my  spirit  may  run  over    ' 
With  those  tears  so  sweet  and  starry  1 
«  «  «  « 

Cradled  by  the  ocean  billows. 
And  by  thoughts  that  seem  like  visioiM^ 
Silent  lie  I  in  the  cabin. 
In  the  dark  bed  in  the  comer. 

Through  the  open  hatchway  see  I 
There  on  high  the  stars  all-radiant, 
Those  sweet  eyes  so  dearly  cherish'd 
Of  mv  sweet  and  dearly  loved  one. 


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PICTUBB8  OF   TRAVEL.  245 

Those  flweet  eyes  so  dearly  cherish'd 

Far  above  my  head  are  watching, 

And  they  tinkle  and  they  beckon 

From  the  azure  veil  of  heaven. 

Tow'rd  the  azure  veil  of  heaven 

Gaze  I  many  an  hour  with  rapture, 

Till  a  white  and  misty  curtain 

From  me  hides  those  eyes  so  cherish'd. 

'Gainst  the  boarded  side  of  the  ship, 

Where  my  dreaming  head  is  lying, 

Bave  the  billows,  the  furious  billows. 

They  roar  and  they  murmur 

Thus  soft  in  my  ear : 
'*  O  foolish  young  fellow  I 
**  Thine  arm  is  short,  and  the  heavens  are  wide, 
**  And  yonder  stars  are  firmly  nailed  there  ; 
"  In  vain  is  thy  yearning,  in  vain  is  thy  sighing, 
*'  The  best  thou  can'st  do  is  to  sleep  I'* 

»  ♦  »  • 

I  dreamt,  and  dreaming  saw  a  spacious  heath, 
Far  overspread  with  white,  with  whitest  snow. 
And  'neath  that  white  snow  buried  I  was  lying. 
And  slept  the  lonesome,  chilly  sleep  of  death. 

Yet  from  on  high,  from  out  the  darkling  heavens, 
Look'd  down  upon  my  grave  those  eyes  all-starry, 
Those  eyes  so  sweet  I  In  triumph  they  were  gleaming, 
In  calm  and  radiant  but  excessive  love. 

8.  STORM. 

THE  tempest  is  raging, 
It  floggeth  the  billows. 
And  the  biUows,  fierce-foaming  and  rearing, 
Rise  up  on  high,  and  with  life  are  all  heaving 
The  snowy  watOTy  mountains, 
And  the  small  ba^k  climbs  o'er  them, 
Labouring  hastily. 
And  suddenly  plungeth  it  down 
In  the  black,  wide-gaping  abyss  of  the  flood, — 

O  sea! 

Mother  of  beauty,  the  foam-arisen  one ! 
Grandmother  of  love !  O  spare  me ! 
Already  flutters,  corpse-scenting, 


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246  HEiNirs  FOEMa 

The  snowy,  spirit-like  sea-mew, 
And  wetteth  his  beak  'gainst  the  mast, 
And  longs, — eager  to  taste, — ^for  the  heart 
Which  proclaimeth  the  fame  of  thy  daughter. 
And  wluoh  thy  grandson,  the  little  rogue, 
Chose  for  his  plaything. 

In  vain  my  entreaties  and  prayers  ! 

My  cry  dies  away  in  the  blustering  storm. 

In  the  wind's  battle-shout ; 

It  roars  and  pipes  and  crackles  and  howls, 

Like  a  madhouse  of  noises  1 

And,  between  times,  I  audibly  hear 

Harp-strains  alluring. 

Songs  aU  wild  and  yearning. 

Spirit-melting  and  spirit-rending, 

And  the  voice  I  remember ! 

Far  away,  on  the  rock-coast  of  Scotland, 

Where  the  old  grey  castle  projecteth 

Over  the  wild  raging  sea. 

There  at  the  lofty  and  arch^  window, 

Standeth  a  woman,  beauteous  but  ill, 

Softly-transparent  and  marble-pale, 

And  she's  playing  her  harp  and  she's  singing, 

And  the  wind  through  her  long  locks  forceth  its  imj 

And  beareth  her  gloomy  song 

Over  the  wide  and  tempest-toss'd  sea. 

9.  CALM  AT  SEA. 

CALM  at  sea  I  His  beams  all  radiant 
Throws  the  sun  across  the  water. 
And  amid  the  heaving  jewels, 
Furrows  green  the  slup  is  tracing. 

Near  the  steersman  lies  the  boatswain 
On  his  stomach,  snoring  gently ; 
Near  the  mast,  the  sails  repairing. 
Squats  the  cabin-boy,  all-tarry. 

But  behind  his  cheeks  so  dirty 
Bed  blood  springs,  a  mournful  quivering 
Bound  his  wide  mouth  plays,  and  sadly 
Stare  his  eyes,  so  large  and  handsome. 


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PICTURES   OF   TRAVEL.  247 

For  tlie  captain  stands  before  him, 
Baying,  cursing,  "thief"  exclaiming: 
'*  Thief!  a  herring  you  have  stolen 
'*  From  the  barrel,  O  you  rascal  1" 

Cahn  at  sea  I    From  out  the  waters 
Lifts  himself  a  clever  £shkin ; 
In  the  sun  his  head  he  warmeth. 
Splashing  with  his  tail  so  gaily. 

But  the  sea-mew,  soaring  over, 
Shooteth  down  upon  the  £shkin, 
And  his  sudden  prize  fast  holding 
In  his  bill,  again  mounts  upward. 

10.  THE  OCEAN  SPECTRE. 

BUT  I  upon  the  ship's  edge  was  lying. 
And  gazed  with  my  eyes  all  dreamy 
Down  on  the  glassy  pellucid  water. 
And  gazed  yet  deeper  and  deeper — 
Till,  deep  in  the  ocean's  abysses, 
At  first  like  a  glimmering  mist, 
Then,  bit  by  bit,  with  hues  more  decided, 
Domes  of  churches  and  towers  appeared, 
And  at  last,  clear  as  sunlight,  a  city, 
Antiquarian  Netherlandish, 
And  swarming  with  life. 
Eeverent  men,  in  garments  of  black, 
With  snowy  frills  and  chains  of  honour, 
And  lengthy  swords  and  lengthy  ftwjes, 
Over  the  crowded  market  are  pacing 
Tow'rd  the  high-stair'd  council-chamber, 
Where  Emperors'  stony  images 
Keep  guard  with  sceptre  and  sword : — 
Hard  by,  in  front  of  the  long  row  of  houses, 
With  mirror-like  glistening  windows, 
Stand  the  lindens  all  trimm'd  into  pyramids, 
And  silken  rustling  maidens  are  wandering, 
A  golden  band  roxmd  their  slender  bodies, 
Their  blooming  fiEU^s  neatly  surrounded 
By  head-dresses  velvet  and  black, 
Yrom  whence  their  abundant  locks  are  escaping. 
Gkty  young  fellows,  in  Spanish  costume^ 
Proudly  are  paesing  and  nodding. 


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248  HKINElS  POEUS. 

Aged  women, 

In  garments  all  brown  and  strange-looldiig, 

Psalm-book  and  rosary  in  bandy 

Hasten  witb  tripping  step 

Toward  tbe  catbedral  cbnrcb, 

Impell*d  bj  the  soimd  of  the  beDs, 

And  the  ruisbing  notes  of  tbe  organ. 

Mysterious  awe  seizetb  me  too, 

Caused  by  tbe  distant  sound; 

A.  ne'er-ending  yearning  and  siftdnees  deep 

Steal  o'er  my  beart, 

My  scarcely-beal'd  heart ; 

It  seems  as  though  its  bitter  wonnds 

By  dear  lips  were  kissM  open, 

And  once  again  were  bleedii^ 

With  drops  hot  and  raddy, 

Which  long  and  slowly  downward  fall 

UpcHi  an  ancient  bonse  below 

In  yon  deep-ocean  city, 

Upon  an  ancient  and  hi  ^-gabled  honse^ 

Where  sits  in  lonely  melancholy 

A  maiden  at  the  window, 

Her  head  on  her  arm  reclined, 

Like  to  some  poor,  forgotten  child, 

And  I  know  ^ee,  tboti  poor,  forgotten  child 

Thus  deep^  tiins  deep,  then 

Thon  hidd'st  thyself  from  me 

In  some  childish  conceit. 

And  conldst  not  reaseend, 

And  sattest  strange,  among  strange  people^ 

Five  hundred  years, 

And  I  meanwhile,  with  sonl  full  of  grief. 

Sought  thee  oy&t  all  the  earth. 

And  ever  sought  thee^ 

Thou  ever-beloved  one^ 

Thou  long-time-lost  one. 

Thou  fin«dly-found  one, — 

IVe  found  thee  at  last,  and  again  behold 

Thy  countenanae  sweet, 

Thine  eyes  so  prudent  and  faithful. 

Thy  smile  so  dear — 

And  never  again  will  T  leave  tkee» 


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PIOTURBS  OF  TRAVEL.  249 

And  downward  hasten  I  to  thee, 
And  with  wide-spreading  arms 
Throw  myself  down  on  Qiy  heart. 

But  just  in  time 

1  was  seized  by  the  foot  by  the  Captain, 
A  nd  torn  from  the  side  of  the  ship, 
While  he  cried,  houghing  bitterly : 
*'  Why,  Doctor,  are  you  mad  ?" 

11.  PURIFICATION. 

REMAIN  thou  in  thy  ocean-depths. 
Delirious  dream, 
That  erst  so  many  a  night 
My  heart  with  false  joy  hast  tormented, 
And  now,  an  ocean-spectre. 
E'en  in  bright  daylight  threaten'st  me — 
Eemain  below,  eternally. 
And  1*11  throw  down  to  thee  there 
All  my  sins  and  my  sorrows, 
And  folly's  cap  and  bells 
That  round  my  head  so  long  have  rattled. 
And  the  cold  and  glistening  serpent-skin 
Of  hypocrisy, 

Which  so  long  hath  twined  round  my  spirit, 
My  sickly  spirit. 
My  God-Mienying,  angel-denying 
Unhappy  spirit — 

Hoiho  !  hoiho !  Here  comes  the  wind ! 
Over  the  plain  so  destructive  when  smooth 
Hastens  the  ship, 
And  my  rescued  spirit  rejoices. 

12.  PEACR 

ffGH  in  the  heavens  there  stood  the  sun 
Cradled  in  snowy  clouds, 
The  sea  was  still, 

And  musing  I  lay  at  the  helm  of  the  ship, 
Dreamily  musing, — ^and  half  in  waking 
And  half  in  slumber,  I  gazed  upon  dmst. 
The  Saviour  of  man. 
In  streaming  and  snowy  garment 
He  wander'd,  giant-great, 
Over  land  and  sea; 

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250  HEDffE*8  voeaoL 

His  head  reacli'd  iiigli  to  the  heavenfl. 

His  haads  lie  stretcVd  oat  in  blessing 

Over  land  and  sea ; 

And  as  a  heart  in  his  bosom 

Bore  he  the  san. 

The  son  all  ruddy  and  flaming, 

And  the  mddy  and  flaming  sonny-heart 

8hed  its  beams  of  mercy 

And  its  beanteons,  bliss-giving  light, 

Lighting  and  warming 

Over  land  and  sea. 

Sounds  of  bells  were  solemnly  drawing 

Here  and  there,  like  swans  were  drawing 

By  rosy  bands  the  gliding  ship, 

And  drew  it  sportively  toward  the  green  shore, 

Where  men  were  dwelling,  in  high  and  turrcted 

Overhanging  town. 

O  blessings  of  peace !  how  still  the  town ! 

Hnsh'd  was  the  hollow  sonnd 

Of  busy  and  sweltering  trade, 

And  through  ^e  clean  and  echoing  streets 

Were  passing  men  in  white  attire, 

Pahn-branches  bearing, 

And  when  two  chanced  to  meet, 

They  view'd  each  other  with  inward  intelligenoQ^ 

And  trembling,  in  love  and  sweet  denial, 

Eiss'd  on  the  forehead  each  other. 

And  gazed  up  on  high 

At  the  Saviour^s  sunny-heart, 

Which,  glad  and  atoningly 

Beamed  down  its  ruddy  blood, 

And  three  times  blest,  thus  spake  they : 

*"  PraisM  be  Jesus  Christ  1" 

«  •  «  • 

Oouldst  thou  this  vision  have  only  imagined. 
What  wouldst  thou  not  give  for  it, 
My  dearest  ^end  I 

Thou  who  in  head  and  loins  art  so  weak, 
And  so  strong  in  thy  faith, 
And  the  Trinity  worship'st  in  Unity,  \\ 

And  the  dog  and  the  cross  and  the  paw  li 

Of  thy  lofty  patroness  daily  kissest,  | 


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PIOTUBBS  OF  l^EAYEL.  251 

And  liast  work'd  thy  way  upward  by  canting 

As  an  Anlic  Connsellor,  Magistrate, 

And  at  last  as  a  Government  Counsellor 

In  the  pious  town  * 

Whore  flourish  both  sand  and  religion, 

And  the  patient  water  of  sacred  Spree 

Washes  souls  and  dilutes  the  tea — 

Couldst  thou  this  vision  have  only  imagined, 

My  dearest  friend  I 

Thou  hadst  borne  it  up  high,  to  the  market-place. 

Thy  countenance  pallid  and  blinking 

Had  been  dissolved  in  devotion  and  lowliness, 

And  her  Serene  Highness, 

Enchanted  and  trembling  with  rapture, 

Had  with  thee  sunk  in  prayer  on  the  knee, 

And  her  eyes,  beaming  brightly. 

Had  promised,  by  way  of  increase  of  salary, 

A  hundred  Prussian  dollars  sterling, 

And  thou,  with  folded  hands,  wouldst  have  stammer*d ; 

**  Prais^  be  Jesus  Christ  T' 

PART  n.  1826. 
1.  SEA  SALUTATION. 

T  HAL  ATT  A I  Thalattal 
Hail  to  thee,  O  thou  Ocean  eteme! 
Hail  to  thee  ten  thousand  times 
From  hearts  aU  exulting. 
As  formerly  hail'd  thee 
Ten  thousand  Grecian  hearts, 
Misfortune-contending,  homeward-aspiring, 
World-renown'd  Grecian  hearts. 

The  billows  were  heaving, 

They  heaved  and  they  bluster'd. 

The  sun  shed  hastily  downwards 

His  light  so  sportive  and  rosy-hued ; 

The  sudden-startled  flocks  of  sea-mews 

Fluttered  along,  loud  screaming. 

The  horses  were  stamping,  the  bucklers  wore  ringing, 

And  afar  there  resounded  triumphantly  : 

Thalattal  Thalattal 

*  Berlin. 


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252  Heine's  foems. 

Hail  to  thee,  0  thou  Ocean  eterae  I 
Like  voices  of  home  thy  waters  are  mshlBg, 
Like  yisions  of  childhood  saw  I  a  glimmering 
Over  thy  heaving  billowy-realm, 

jid  olden  remembrance  again  tells  me  stories 
Of  all  the  darling,  beautifiQ  playthings, 
Of  all  the  glittering  Christmas  presents, 
Of  all  the  ruddy  coral  branches. 
The  gold  fish,  pearls  and  coloured  shells 
Which  thou  mysteriously  dost  keep 
Down  yonder  in  bright  crystal  house. 

O  how  have  I  languished  in  drear  foreign  lands ! 

Like  to  a  withered  flower 

Li  the  tin  case  of  a  botanist, 

Lay  in  my  bosom  my  heart ; 

Methought  whole  winters  long  I  sat 

An  invalid,  in  darksome  sick-room, 

And  now  I  suddenly  leave  it, 

And  with  dazzling  rays  am  I  greeted 

By  emerald  springtime,  the  sunny-awaken'd. 

And  the  snowy  blossoming  trees  are  all  rustling, 

And  the  youthful  flowers  upon  me  gaze 

With  eyes  all  chequer'd  and  fragrant ;  [laugldng, 

There's  a  perfume  and  humming  and  breathing  and 

And  the  birds  in  the  azure  heavens  are  singing — 

Thalatta!  Thalatta! 

Thou  valiant  retreating  heart  I 

How  oft,  how  bitter-oft,  wast  thou 

Hard  pressed  by  the  Northern  barbarian  women ! 

From  large  victorious  eyes 

Shot  they  their  burning  arrows ; 

With  words  both  crooked  and  polish'd 

They  threatened  to  cleave  my  breast, 

With  cuniform  billets-doux  harassed  they 

My  poor  distracted  brain — 

In  vain  I  held  my  shield  to  resist  them. 

The  arrows  whizz'd  and  the  blows  crash'd  heavily. 

And  by  the  Northern  barbarian  women 

Back  to  the  sea  was  I  driven. 

And  freely  breathing  I  hailM  the  sea, 

The  darling  life-saving  sea, 

Thalatta  I  Thalatta! 


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PICTURES   OF   TRAVEij.  253 

2.  THUNDERSTORM. 

HEAVILY  lies  on  tlie  ocean  the  storm, 
And  through  the  darksome  wall  of  clouds 
Quivers  the  forked  lightning  flash, 
Suddenly  gleaming  and  suddenly  vanishing, 
Like  a  thought  from  the  head  of  Crouion. 
Over  the  desert,  far-heaving  water 
Afar  the  thimders  are  rolling, 
The  snowy  billowy  horses  are  springing, 
Which  Boreas*  self  did  engender 
Out  of  the  beautiful  mares  of  Erichton, 
And  the  seafowl  are  mournfully  fluttering. 
Like  shadowy  corpses  by  Styx, 
By  Charon  repulsed  from  his  desolate  bark. 

Poor,  but  merry  little  ship. 

Yonder  dancing  the  strangest  dance ! 

^olus  sends  it  his  briskest  attendants, 

Who  wildly  strike  up  for  the  frolicsome  dance  ; 

The  one  is  piping,  another  is  blowing, 

The  third  is  beating  the  hollow  double-bass— 

And  the  staggering  sailor  stands  at  the  rudder, 

And  on  the  compass  is  steadily  looking. 

That  trembling  soul  of  the  vessel. 

And  raises  his  hands  in  entreaty  to  heaven ; 

"  O  rescue  me,  Castor,  thou  hero  gigantic, 

*'  And  thou,  knight  of  the  ring,  Polydeuces  I" 

3.  THE  SHIPWRECKED  ONE. 

HOPE  and  love  I  AM  crumbled  to  atoms  I 
And  I  myselfi  like  to  a  corpse 
Thrown  up  by  the  growling  sea, 
Lie  on  the  strand, 
The  dreary,  naked  strand. 
Before  me,  the  watery  waste  is  heaving, 
Behind  me  lie  but  sorrow  and  misery. 
And  over  me  high  are  passing  the  clouds, 
The  formless  grey-hued  daughters  of  air, 
Who  out  of  the  sea,  in  misty  buckets. 
Draw  up  the  water. 
And  wearily  drag  it  and  drag  it. 
Then  spill  it  again  in  the  sea, 
A  mournful  and  tedious  business, 
And  useless  as  e'en  my  own  life* 

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254  HEINE'S  POEMS. 

The  billows  murmur,  the  sea-mews  aro  screaming^ 
Olden  remembrances  over  me  drift, 
Dreams  long  forgotten  and  images  perish'd. 
Painfully  sweet  oome  to  light. 

In  the  North  a  woman  is  living, 
A  beauteous  woman,  royally  fair. 
Her  slender  figure,  like  a  tall  cypress. 
By  an  alluring  white  robe  is  embraced ; 
Her  dark  and  flowing  tresses, 
Like  to  a  blissfal  night,  are  streaming 
Down  from  her  lofty,  braid-crowned  head, 
And  dreamilynsweetly  form  ringlets 
Over  her  sweet  pale  foce ; 
And  out  of  her  sweet  pale  face, 
Large  and  o'erpowering,  beams  an  eye 
Like  a  black  sun  in  radiance. 

0  thou  black  sun,  how  often, 

Enchantingly  often,  I  drank  from  thee 

Wild  flames  of  inspiration, 

And  stood  and  reefd,  all  drunk  with  fire, — 

Then  hover'd  a  mild  and  dovelike  smile 

Eound  the  high-contracted  haughty  lips. 

And  the  high-contracted  haughty  lips 

Breathed  forth  words  as  sweet  as  moonlight, 

And  tender  as  the  rose's  fragrance — 

And  then  my  spirit  ascended, 

And  flew,  like  an  eagle,  straight  up  into  heaven  t 

Peace,  ye  billows  and  sea-mews ! 
All  is  now  over,  happiness,  hope, 
Hope,  ay,  and  love  I  I  lie  on  the  shore, 
A  lonely  and  Shipwrecked  man. 
And  press  my  countenance  glowing 
Deep  in  the  humid  sand. 

4.  SUNSET. 

THE  beauteous  sun 
Hath  calmly  descended  down  to  the  sea ; 
The  heaving  waters  already  are  dyed 
By  dusky  night ; 
Nought  but  the  evening's  red 
With  golden  light  still  spreadeth  o'er  them. 
And  the  rushing  force  of  the  flood 

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PICTURES   OP  TRATEL.  255 

'Gainst  the  shore  presseth  the  snowy  billows 
Which  merrily,  hastily  skip, 
Like  wool-cover'd  flocks  of  lambkins 
Whom  the  singing  sheep-boy  at  even 
Homeward  doth  irive. 

"  How  fSedr  is  the  smi  l" — 

So  spake,  after  long  silence,  my  friend^ 

Who  with  me  wander'd  along  the  strand, 

And  half  in  sport  and  half  in  sad  earnest 

Assured  he  me  that  the  smi  was  only 

A  lovely  woman,*  whom  the  old  sea-god 

Ont  of  convenience  married ; 

All  the  day  long  she  joyously  wander'd 

In  the  high  heavens,  deck'd  out  with  purple^ 

And  glittering  with  diamonds. 

And  all-beloved  and  all-admired 

By  every  mortal  creature, 

And  every  mortal  creature  rejoicing 

With  her  sweet  glances'  light  and  warmth ; 

But  in  the  evening,  impelled  all-disconsolate, 

Once  more  retumeth  she  home 

To  the  moist  house  and  desert  arms 

Of  her  grey-headed  spouse. 

*'  Believe  me" — here  added  my  friend. 

With  laughter  and  sighing  and  laughter  again : 

•*  They're  living  below  in  the  tcndorest  imion ! 

*'  Either  they're  sleeping  or  quarrelling  fiercely, 

•*  So  that  up  here  e'en  Ihe  ocean  is  roaring, 

'*  And  the  fisherman  hears  in  the  rush  of  ihe  waves 

**  How  the  old  man's  abusing  his  wife : 

"  *  Thou  round  wench  of  the  universe  I 

"  *  Beaming  coquettish  one ! 

**  *  All  the  day  long  thou  art  glowing  for  others, 

•*  *  At  night  for  me  thou  art  frosty  and  tired.' 

"  After  tiiis  curtain  lecture 

**  As  a  matter  of  course  the  proud  sun 

**  Bursts  into  tears,  lamenting  her  misery, 

*'  And  cries  so  sadly  and  long,  that  the  sea-god 

^'  Suddenly  springs  from  his  bed  all  distracted, 

*'  And  hastily  swims  to  the  surface  of  ocean, 

"  To  recover  his  breath  and  his  senses. 

^  It  will  be  remembered  that  the  bud  is  feminine  in  German 

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256  HEINE'S  POEMS. 

*'  I  saw  him  myself,  in  the  night  just  past, 

<'  Bising  out  of  the  9ea  as  high  as  his  bosom ; 

*'  A  jacket  of  yellow  flannel  he  wore, 

"  And  a  lily-white  nightcap, 

**  And  a  face  all  wither'd  and  dry." 

5.  THE  SONG  OF  THE  OOEANIDES. 

SHADOWS  of  evening  o'er  ocean  are  falling. 
And  lonely,  with  none  but  his  lonely  soul  with  hiin, 
Sits  there  a  man  on  the  dreary  strand. 
And  looks,  with  death-chilly  look,  up  on  high 
Tow'rd  the  spacious,  death-chilly  vault  of  heaven, 
And  looks  on  the  spacious  billowy  main, 
And  over  the  spacious  billowy  main 
Like  airy  sailors,  his  signs  are  floating, 
Betuming  again  despondingly. 
For  they  have  found  fast  closeid  the  heart 
Wherein  they  fain  would  anchor — 
And  he  groans  so  loud,  that  the  snowy  sea-mews. 
Startled  away  from  their  sandy  nests. 
Flutter  around  him  in  flocks, 
And  he  speaks  unto  them  these  laughing  words : 

"  Ye  black-legged  birds, 

**  With  snowy  pinions  o'er  the  sea  fluttering, 

•*  With  crooked  beaks  the  sea- water  sucking  up, 

"  And  train-oily  seal's  flesh  devouring, 

**  Your  life  is  bitter  as  is  your  food  I 

'*  But  I,  the  happy  one,  taste  nought  but  sweetness ! 

'*  I  taste  the  rose's  sweet  exhalation, 

«  The  moonlight- nourished  bride  of  the  nightingale ; 

'*  I  taste,  too,  the  sweetness  of  all  things : 

^  Loving  and  being  loved ! 

*'  She  loves  me !  she  loves  me !  the  beauteous  maiden ! 
<*  Now  stands  she  at  home  in  her  house's  high  btJcony, 
*'  And  looks  in  the  twilight  abroad,  o'er  the  highway, 
'*  And  darkens,  and  for  me  doth  yeaniT— I  assure  you  I 
''  Li  vain  she  looketh  around  and  she  sigheth, 
*'  And  sighing  descends  she  down  to  the  garden, 
*•  And  wanders  in  fragrance  and  moonlight, 
*'  And  speaks  to  the  flowers  and  telleth  fiiem 
**  How  I,  the  beloved  one,  so  precious  am, 
"  So  wortliy  of  love — I  assure  you ! 


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PICTURES   OF   TRAVEIi.  257 

•  And  then  in  bed,  in  slumber,  in  dream, 

'*  My  darling  form  around  her  sports  blissfully, 

'*  And  then  at  morning  at  breakfast 

"  Upon  her  glistening  bread  and  butter 

**  Sees  she  my  countenance  smiling, 

"  And  she  eats  it  for  love — I  assure  you  !'* 

Thus  is  he  boasting  and  boasting, 

And  betweentimes  the  sea-mews  are  screaming, 

Like  old  ironical  chuckling ; 

The  mists  of  twilight  rise  up  on  high ; 

Out  of  the  violet  clouds,  all- gloomily, 

Peepeth  the  grass-yellow  moon ; 

High  are  roaring  the  billows  of  ocean. 

And  from  the  depths  of  the  high-roaring  sea, 

Mournful  as  whispering  gales  of  wind, 

Soundeth  the  song  of  the  Oceanides, 

The  beauteous  compassionate  sea-nymphs, 

And  loudest  of  all  the  voice  so  enthralling 

Of  Peleus*  spouse,  the  silvery-footed  one. 

And  they're  sighing  and  singing : 

"  O  fool,  thou  fool !  thou  hectoring  fool  I 

"  Thou  sorrow-tormented  one  I 

"  Cruelly  murder'd  are  all  thy  bright  hopes, 

"  Thy  bosom's  frolicsome  children, 

"  And  ah  I  thy  heart,  thy  Niobe-heart 

**  Through  grief  tum'd  to  stone ! 

"  Within  thy  head  'tis  now  night, 

**  And  through  it  are  flashing  Qie  lightnings  of  frenzy 

**  And  thou  boastest  of  sorrow ! 

**  O  fool,  thou  fool  I  thou  hectoring  fool  I 

"  Headstrong  art  thou  as  thy  forefather, 

**  The  lofty  Titan,  who  heavenly  fire 

*^  Stole  from  the  gods  and  gave  unto  mortals, 

"  And,  vulture-tormented,  chained  to  the  rock, 

*'  Defied  e'en  Olympus,  defied,  groaning  loudly, 

**  So  that  in  ocean's  fkr  depths  did  we  hear  it, 

*'  And  to  him  came  with  a  comforting  song. 

*'  O  fool,  thou  fool  I  thou  hectoring  fool ! 

*'  But  thou  art  more  powerless  even  than  he, 

*'  And  thou  would'st  do  well  to  honour  the  deities, 

•*  And  patiently  bear  the  burden  of  sorrow, 

•*  And  patiently  bear  with  it,  long,  ay,  full  long,     r^^^^]^ 

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258  Heine's  poems. 

*'  Till  Atlas  himself  bis  patience  hath  los^ 

^'  And  the  heavy  world  from  his  shoulders  throws  off 

"  Into  eternal  night." 

Thus  sounded  the  song  of  the  Oceanides, 
The  beauteous  compassionate  water-nymphs, 
Till  still  louder  billows  at  last  overpower'd  it-^ 
Then  went  the  moon  in  the  rear  of  the  clouds, 
And  night  'gan  to  yawn, 
And  long  I  sat  in  the  darkness,  with  weeping. 

6.  THE  GODS  OF  GREECE. 

FULL-BLOSSOMING  moon !  In  thy  &ir  light 
Like  liquid  gold,  the  ocean  gleams : 
Like  daylight's  clearness,  yet  charm'd  into  twilight, 
Over  the  strand's  wide  plain  all  is  lying ; 
In  the  starless  clear  azure  heavens 
Hover  the  snowy  clouds, 
Like  colossal  figures  of  deities 
Of  glittering  marble. 

No,  'tis  not  so,  no  clouds  can  they  be  I 
'Tis  they  themselves,  the  Gods  of  old  Hellas, 
Who  once  so  joyously  ruled  o'er  the  world, 
But  now,  tormented  -and  perish'd. 
Like  monster  spectres  are  moving  along 
Over  the  midnight  heaven. 

Wond'ring  and  strangely  blinded,  observed  I 
The  airy  pantheon. 

The  solemnly  mute  and  fearfully  moving 
Figures  gigantic. 

He  yonder's  Cronion,  the  monarch  of  heaven; 
Snow-white  are  the  locks  of  his  head. 
Locks  so  famous  for  shaking  Olympus  ; 
He  holds  in  his  hand  his  extinguished  bolt, 
And  in  his  face  lie  misfortune  and  grief. 
And  yet  without  change  his  olden  pride. 
Those  times  indeed  were  better,  O  Zeus, 
When  thou  didst  take  pleasure  divinely 
In  youths  and  in  nymphs  and  in  hecatombs  1 
But  even  the  Gods  can  reign  not  for  ever. 
The  younger  press  hard  on  their  elders. 
As  thou  didst  once  on  thy  grey-headed  fiftthsffj 


PIOTUBES  OF  TBAYEL.  259 

And  all  thy  Titan  nndes  hard  press, 

Jupiter  Parricida ! 

Thee,  too,  I  recognise,  haughty  Here! 

Spite  of  all  thy  jealous  anxiety, 

Hath  another  thy  sceptre  obtain'd, 

And  thou  art  no  longer  the  queen  of  the  heavens, 

And  fixed  is  now  thy  beaming  eye. 

And  powerless  lie  thy  lily-wlute  arms, 

And  nerer  more  thy  vengeance  can  reach 

The  Gkd-impregnated  virgin. 

And  the  wonder-working  son  of  the  deity. 

Thee,  too,  I  recognise,  Pallas  Athene ! 

With  shield  and  wisdom  conldest  thou  not 

Avert  the  destruction  of  deities  ? 

Thee,  too,  I  recognise,  thee,  Aphrodite  I 

Erst  the  golden  one  I  now  the  silver  one  I 

True  thou'rt  still  decked  with  the  charms  of  thy  girdle, 

Yet  I  secretly  tremble  at  thought  of  thy  beauty, 

And  would  I  enjoy  thy  bountiful  charms, 

Like  heroes  before  me,  of  fear  I  should  die ; 

To  me  thou  appearest  the  goddess  of  corpses, 

Venus  Libitina  I 

No  longer  with  love  is  tow'rd  thee  looking, 

Yonder,  the  terrible  Ares ; 

And  sadly  is  looking  Phoebus  Apollo, 

The  stripling.     His  lyre  is  silent 

That  sounded  so  joyous  at  feasts  of  the  Goda» 

Still  sadder  appeareth  Hephaestus, 

And  truly,  the  lame  one !  no  longer 

Fills  he  the  office  of  Hebe, 

And  busily  pours,  in  the  Gods'  congregation. 

The  nectar  delicious — And  long  is  extinguish'd 

The  inextinguishable  laughter  of  deities. 

O  ye  Gods,  I  never  could  love  you, 

For  ever  distasteful  IVe  found  the  Grecians, 

And  e'en  the  Eomans  I  greatly  hate. 

Yet  holy  compassion  and  shuddering  pity 

Stream  through  my  heart. 

When  I  now  behold  you  on  high, 

Godheads  deserted, 

Dead  and  night-wandering  shadows. 

Misty  and  weak,  scared  by  the  very  wind—       ^         . 

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J 


260  hkine's  poems. 

And  when  I  bethink  me  how  airy  and  Cowardly 

The  godheads  are,  who  overcame  you, 

The  new,  noW-ruling,  mournfal  godheads, 

The  mischievous  ones  in  the  sheepskin  of  meeknec 

Then  over  me  steals  a  glorious  resentment. 

And  fain  would  I  break  the  new-bom  temples. 

And  fight  on  your  side,  ye  ancient  deities, 

For  you,  and  your  good  ambrosial  rights. 

And  before  your  lofty  altars, 

The  once-more-restored,  the  sacrifice-steaming. 

Fain  would  I  kneel  down  and  pray. 

And,  praying,  raise  towVd  you  my  arms. — 

For  evermore,  ye  ancient  deities,  S 

Have  ye  been  wont,  in  the  combats  of  mortals. 

To  join  yourselves  to  the  side  of  the  victor. 

And  therefore  is  man  more  high-minded  than  ye. 

And  in  combats  of  deities  deem  I  it  right 

To  take  the  part  of  the  vanquished  deities. 

«  #  «  « 

Thus  did  I  speak,  and  visibly  redden'd 
Yon  pale  cloudy  figures  on  lugh,  * 

And  on  me  they  gazed  like  dying  ones. 
Sorrow-illumined,  and  suddenly  vanished. 
The  moon,  too,  hid  herself 
Behind  the  clouds  that  darkly  came  over  her ; 
High  up  roared  the  sea, 
And  then  triumphantly  stood  in  the  heavens 
The  stars  all-eternal.  ^ 

7.  QUESTIONS. 

BY  the  sea,  by  the  desert  night-cover'd  sea  j 

Standeth  a  youth. 
His  breast  ftdl  of  sadness,  his  head  full  of  doubtings,  | 

&.nd  with  gloomy  lips  he  asks  of  the  billows : 

*'  O  answer  me  life's  hidden  riddle,  i 

"  The  riddle  primeval  and  painful, 

•'  Over  which  many  a  head  has  been  poring, 

"  Heads  in  hieroglyphical  nightcaps, 

"  Heads  in  turbans  and  swarthy  bonnets, 

*'  Heads  in  perukes,  and  a  thousand  other 

'*  Poor  and  perspiring  heads  of  us  mortaLs^r-       t 

tizedbTuoogle  ! 


PIOTUBES  OF   TRAVEL.  261 

*•  Tell  me,  what  signifies  man  ? 

«<  From  whence  doth  he  come  ?  And  where  doth  he  go  ? 

*'  Who  dwelleth  amongst  the  golden  stars  yonder  ?'* 

The  billows  are  murm'ring  their  murmur  eternal, 
The  wind  is  blowing,  the  clouds  are  flying. 
The  stars  are  twinkling,  all-listless  and  cold, 
And  a  fool  is  awaiting  an  answer. 

8.  THE  PHCENIX.  [ward, 

THEBE  comes  a  bird  who  hath  flown  from  the  west- 
He  flies  toward  the  east, 
Tow'rd  the  eastern  garden-home. 
Where  the  spices  so  fragrant  are  growing. 
And  palms  are  waving  and  wells  are  cooling — 
And,  flying,  the  wondrous  bird  thus  singeth 
She  lores  him,  she  loves  him ! 
His  image  she  bears  in  her  little  bosom. 
And  beaffs  it  sweetly  and  secretly  hidden, 
Nor  knows  it  herself  I 
But  in  her  vision,  before  her  he  stands, 
She  prays,  and  she  weeps,  and  she  kisses  his  hands, 
And  calls  on  his  name. 
And  calling  awakes  she  and  lieth  all-startled. 
And  rubbeth  her  beauteous  eyes  in  amazement — 
She  loves  him !  she  loves  him  I 

9.  ECHO.  Peck 

'/^  AINST  the  mast  reclining,  and  high  on  the  lofty 
vT  Stood  I  and  heard  I  the  song  of  the  bird. 
Like  black-green  steeds,  with  silvery  manes, 
The  white  and  curling  billows  were  springing ; 
Like  flocks  of  swans  were  sailing  past  us, 
With  glittering  sails,  the  men  of  Heligoland, 
The  nomads  bold  of  the  Baltic. 
Over  my  head,  in  the  azure  eteme, 
Snowy  clouds  were  fluttering  on, 
While  sparkled  the  sun  everlasting. 
The  rose  of  the  heavens,  the  fiery-blooming  one^ 
Who  joyfully  mirror'd  himself  in  the  ocean ; 
And  heaven  and  ocean  and  with  them  my  heart 
In  echo  resounded  i 
She  loves  him !  She  loyes  him  I 

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262  Heine's  poems. 

10.  SEA-SICKNESS. 

THE  dark-grey  clouds  of  the  afternoon 
Deeper  are  sinking  fast  over  the  sea, 
Which  darkly  seemeth  to  rise  to  meet  them. 
And  between  them  the  ship  drives  on. 

Sea-sick  sit  I  unmoved  by  the  mast, 
And  make  observations  respecting  myself, 
Primeval,  ash-grey  observations. 
Which  Father  Lot  of  old  did  make 
When  he  had  drunk  too  much  of  the  grape. 
And  afterwards  found  himself  amiss. 
At  times  I  bethink  me  of  olden  stories  : 
How  cross-mark'd  pilgrims  of  olden  days 
In  stormy  journeys  the  comforting  image 
Eeligiously  kiss'd  of  the  Holy  Virgin  ; 
How  knights,  when  sick  in  such  sea-misery. 
The  darling  glove  of  their  worshipped  mistress 
Pressed  to  their  lips  and  then  were  comforted— 
But  I  am  sitting,  and  chew  with  vexation 
An  ancient  herring,  the  comforter  salty 
After  hard  drinking  or  indigestion  I 

All  this  time  the  ship  is  fighting 

With  the  furious,  heaving  flood ; 

Now  like  a  rearing  battle-steed  stands  it 

On  its  hinder  part,  so  that  the  rudder  cracks ; 

Now  it  plunges  headforward  down  again 

In  the  howlmg  abyss  of  the  waters ; 

Again,  as  though  carelessly  love-faint, 

Thinks  it  to  lay  itself  down 

On  the  black  breast  of  the  billow  gigantic, 

Who  mightily  onward  roars, 

And  sudden,  a  desolate  ocean-waterfall. 

In  snowy  curlings  plunges  down  headlong, 

And  covers  me  over  with  foam. 

All  this  swaying  and  hov'ring  and  tossing 

Is  quite  unendurable ! 

In  vain  doth  my  eye  keep  watch  and  seek  for 

The  German  coast.    But,  alas,  nought  but  water  t 

Evermore  water,  fast-moving  water  I 

As  the  winter-wanderer  at  evening 
Itongs  for  a  comforting  warm  cup  of  t^ 

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PIGTUBES  OF  TRAVEL*  263 

So  now  doth  long  my  heart  for  thee. 

My  German  Fatherland  I 

For  ever  may  thy  sweet  soil  be  cover'd 

With  whims  and  hussars  and  horrible  verses^ 

And  lukewarm  slender  treatises ; 

For  ever  may  thy  stately  zebras' 

Feed  upon  roses  instead  of  on  thistles ; 

For  ever  may  thy  noble  baboons 

In  idle  adornment  trick  themselves  out, 

And  think  themselves  better  than  all  the  other 

Lowminded  heavy  and  lumbering  cattle  ; 

For  ever  may  thy  assemblage  of  snails 

Look  on  themselves  as  immortal, 

Because  they  creep  so  slowly  along, 

And  may  they  daily  collect  men's  opinions 

Whether  the  cheesemite  belongs  to  the  cheese  ? 

And  hold  for  a  long  time  grave  consultations 

How  the  Egyptian  sheep  to  improve. 

So  that  their  wool  may  be  better  in  quaKty, 

And  the  shepherd  may  shear  them  like  all  other  sheep^ 

Without  a  distinction — 

For  evermore  may  folly  and  wrong 

Cover  thee,  Germany,  utterly! 

Still  am  I  yearning  for  thee, 

For  thou  art  terra  firma  at  least ! 

11.  IN  HABBOUB. 

HAPPY  the  man  who  arrives  safe  in  harbour, 
And  behind  him  hath  left  the  ocean  and  tempeste, 
And  now  so  warmly  and  quietly  sits, 
In  the  townhall-ceUar'of  Bremen  I 
See  how  the  world  is  truly  and  lovingly 
In  the  bumper  fully  depicted. 
And  how  the  heaving  microcosm 
Sunnily  flows  to  the  thirsty  heart  t 
All  I  discern  in  the  glass, 
Olden  and  new  traditions  of  nations, 
Turks  and  Greeks,  and  Hegel  and  Ghms,* 
Citron-forests  and  watch-parades, 
Berlin  and  Schilda  and  Tunis  and  Hamburg, 

*  Edwafd  Gang,  a  distinguished  €tennan  professor,  and  imoil 
of  Hegel*  who66  works  he  edited.    He  died  in  1839. 


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264  Heine's  foebiBw 

But  most  of  all  the  form  of  my  lored  one, 

That  angel-head  on  the  Rhenish  wine  b  gold  ground. 

O,  how  fair,  how  fair  art  thou,  loved  one  I 

Thou  art  a  very  rose. 

Not  like  the  rose  of  fair  Schiras, 

The  nightingale's  bride,  of  whom  Hafis  once  sang ; 

Not  like  the  r(.se  of  Sharon, 

The  sacred  and  red  one,  the  prophet-honour'd  one ; 

But  thou'rt  like  the  rose  in  the  cellar  at  Bremen  [* 

That  is  the  rose  of  all  roses^ 

The  older  she  grows,  the  Mrer  she  blossoms, 

And  her  heavenly  firagranoe  hath  ^^den'd  my  bosom, 

Hath  served  to  inspire  me,  served  to  enchant  me. 

And  did  the  head  of  the  cellar  of  Bremen 

Not  hold  me  fast,  yes  fast  by  my  hair, 

1  surely  had  tumbled ! 

The  worthy  man !  we  sat  together, 

And  drank  like  brethren, 

Wo  spoke  of  lofky  mvsterious  things, 

We  sigh'd  and  sank  m  the  arms  of  each  other, 

And  he  did  convert  me  to  love's  religion, 

I  drank  to  the  health  of  my  bitterest  ^lemies, 

And  every  wretched  poet  I  pardoned 

As  I  myself  for  pardon  would  hope ; 

I  wept  with  devotion,  and  lastly 

The  doors  of  the  place  were  onto  me  open*d 

Where  the  twelve  apostles,  the  sacred  tuns, 

Silently  preach,  though  understood  plainly 

By  every  nation. 

True  men  indeed ! 

In  wooden  coats,  from  without  all-invisible^ 

Inwardly  are  they  more  radiant  and  fairer 

Than  all  the  haughty  priests  of  the  temple, 

And  Herod's  satellites  cringing  and  courtiers; 

All  glitt'ring  in  gold  and  olothM  in  purple; 

Ever  my  wont  is  to  say 

Not  amongst  the  mere  common  people, 

*  One  section  of  the  famoxia  Bremen  Cellar  is  called  the  Roso, 
and  is  said  to  contain  hock  of  between  two  and  three  centuries 
r>ld.  Another  part  is  called  the  Apostles'  Cellar,  and  has  in  it 
twelve  vata^  known  aa  the  Twelve  Apoe^s,  also  fall  ol  T<irv  oUi 
wine.  '' 


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PICTURES  OF   TRAVEL.  265 

No,  in  the  best  and  politest  society, 
Constantly  lived  the  monaich  of  heaven. 

Hallelujah !  How  sweetly  wave  round  me 

The  p^bi-trees  of  Bethel  I 

How  £ra.grant  the  myrrh  is  of  Hebron  1 

How  Jordan  is  roariag,  and  reeling  with  rapture, 

While  my  immortal  soul  also  is  reeling. 

And  I  reel  with  it,  and  whilst  thus  reeling, 

I'm  brought  up  the  stairs  and  into  the  daylight 

By  the  worthy  head  of  the  cellar  of  Bremen. 

Thou  worthy  head  of  the  cellar  of  Bremen  I 
See  where  sit  on  the  roofs  of  the  houses 
The  angels,  all  well-drunken  and  singing ; 
The  glowing  sun  high  up  in  the  heavens 
Is  nought  but  the  red  and  drunken  nose 
Which  the  World-Spirit  sticks  out. 
And  round  the  World-Spirit*s  red  nose 
Whirleth  the  whole  of  lie  drunken  world. 

12.  EPILOGUE. 

AS  on  the  plain  shoot  up  the  wheatstalks 
So  do  the  thoughts  in  the  spirit  of  man 
Grow  up  and  waver ; 
But  the  gentle  thoughts  of  the  poet 
Are  as  the  red  and  blue-colour' d  flowers 
Merrily  blooming  between  them. 

Red  and  blue-colour'd  flowers  I 

1^'he  surly  reaper  rejects  you  as  useless, 

T7ooden  flails  all-scomfully  thresh  you, 

Even  the  needy  traveller. 

Whom  your  sight  rejoices  and  quickens, 

Shaketh  his  h^. 

And  calleth  you  pretty  weeds ; 

But  the  rustic  virgin. 

The  twiner  of  garlands. 

Doth  honour  and  pluck  you, 

And  with  yon  decketh  her  beauteous  locks, 

And  thus  adom'd,  makes  haste  to  the  dance. 

Where  pipes  and  fiddles  sweetly  are  sounding, 

Or  to  the  silent  beech-tree,  [sound 

Where  the  voice  of  the  loved  one  still  sweeter  doth 

Than  pipes  or  than  fiddles. 

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266  Heine's  foehs. 

MONOLOGUE. 
(Prom  Book  **  Le  Grand.") 

IN  olden  legends,  golden  castles  stood  [danced, 

Whcfe  harps  were  sounding,  beauteons  maidens 
And  sproce  attendants  flash'd,  and  jessamine 
And  pose  and  myrtle  shed  their  fragrance  roraid — 
And  yet  one  single  word  of  disenchantment 
Made  all  this  splendour  in  a  moment  vanish, 
And  nought  remain*d  behind  but  olden  ruins 
And  crofting  birds  of  night  and  drear  morass. 
So  have  I,  too,  with  but  one  single  word. 
All  Nature's  blooming  glories  disenchanted. 
There  lies  she  now,  as  Ufeless,  cold,  and  pale 
As  some  bedizened  regal  corpse  might  be. 
Whose  cheekbones  have  been  coloured  red  by  art^ 
And  in  whose  hand  a  sceptre  hath  been  placed. 
His  lips  however  withered  look  and  yellow, 
For  they  forgot  to  dye  them  red  as  well ; 
And  mice  are  springing  o'er  his  regal  nose^ 
And  ridieule  the  pond'roos  golden  sceptre. 


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267 


ATTA  TROLL, 

A  SUMMER-NIGHrS  DBEAM. 

CAPUT  L 

ffiMM'D  dose  in  by  gloomy  moimiaiiui 
Proudly  o'er  each  other  rising, 
Lnll'd  to  sleep  by  wildly-dashing 
Cataracts,  like  some  fair  vision, 

Tn  the  valley  lies  the  charming 
Cauterets.     Its  snow-white  houses 
All  have  balconies ;  upon  them 
Stand  £Edr  ladies,  laughing  loudly. 

Laughing  loudly,  downward  look  they 
On  the  chequer'd  noisy  market, 
Where  there  dance  a  male  and  female 
Bear,  to  sound  of  bagpipe-music. 

Atta  Troll  and  his  dear  wife  'tis 
(Her  they  call  the  swarthy  Mumma), 
Who  are  dancing,  and  with  wonder 
The  Biscayans  are  rejoicing. 

Stately,  and  with  solemn  grandeur. 
Dances  noble  Atta  Troll ; 
Yet  his  shaggy  partner's  wanting 
Both  in  dignity  and  manners. 

Yes,  I  have  a  shrewd  suspicion 
That  she  is  too  much  accustomed 
To  the  vulgar  shameless  dances 
At  the  Grand'-Chaumiere  at  Paris. 

E'en  the  excellent  bear-leader. 
Who  with  chain  conducts  the  couple 
Seems  the  immorality 
Of  her  dance  to  notice  plainly. 

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268  Heine's  poehb. 

And  lie  oft  bestows  upon  her 
With  his  whip  fast-falling  lashes, 
And  the  swarthy  Mumma  howls  theii» 
And  awakes  the  mountain  echoes. 

This  bear-leader  six  Madonnas 
Wears  upon  his  pointed  hat, 
To  protect  his  head  from  bullets 
Or  from  lice  perchance  it  may  be. 

O'er  his  shoulder  there  is  hanging, 
Many-hued,  an  altar  coyering, 
Doing  office  as  a  mantle  ; 
Enife  and  pistol  lurk  beneath  it. 

He  had  been  a  monk  when  younger, 
Then  became  a  robber-captain  ; 
Then,  to  join  the  two  vocations, 
Took  the  service  of  Don  Carlos. 

When  Don  Carlos  had  to  scamper 
With  the  knights  of  his  round  table, 
And  his  paladins  were  driven 
To  pursue  some  honest  calling, 

(Thus  Schnapphahnski  turn'd  an  author 
Then  our  knight  became  bear-leader, 
And  across  the  country  travell'd 
Leading  Atta  Troll  and  Mumma. 

And  in  sight  of  aU  the  people, 
In  the  market,  they  must  dance  now ; 
Atta  Troll  must  in  the  market 
Of  this  city  dance  in  fetters  I 

Atta  Troll,  who  once  was  dwelling 
Like  a  haughty  desert-monarch 
On  the  airy  mountain,  dances 
In  a  valley  to  the  rabble ! 

And  for  filthy  lucre  merely 
He  must  dance,  who  formerly 
In  the  majesty  of  terror 
Felt  himself  so  high  exalted  ! 

When  his  younger  days  recals  he, 
His  lost  lordship  of  the  forest, 
Then  growl  fortii  despairing  noises 
From  the  soul  of  Atta  Troll. 


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ATTA  TROLL.  269 

Gloomy  looks  ho,  like  a  swarthy 
Moorif^  prince  of  Freiligratli  ;* 
As  the  latter  drums  but  badly, 
Bo  with  rage  he  badly  dances. 

But  instead  of  pity,  wakes  he 
Only  laughter.     Even  Juliet 
From  the  balcony  laughs  downward 
At  his  leaps  of  desperation. — 

Juliet  has  not  in  her  bosom 
Any  feelings ;  French  by  nation. 
Outwardly  she  lives ;  her  outside 
Is  deHghtfal  and  enchanting. 

Her  sweet  looks  compose  a  blissful 
Net  of  rays,  within  whose  meshes 
Is  our  heart  fSsist  held  in  prison. 
Like  a  fish,  and  gently  struggles. 

CAPUT  IL 

THAT  a  swarthy  Freiligrathian 
Moorish  prince  with  anxious  longing 
On  the  big  drum's  skin  should  rattle, 
Till  with  violence  'tis  broken, 

Is  a  very  drum-afifecting 
And  a  drumskin-breaking  matter — 
But  just  fancy  the  confusion 
When  a  bear  has  burst  his  fetters  1 

Both  the  music  and  the  laughter 
Straight  are  hush*d  ;  with  screams  of  terror 
Bush  the  people  from  the  market, 
Pale  as  death  turn  all  the  ladies. 

Tes,  from  out  his  slavish  fetters 
Atta  Troll  has  freed  himself 
Suddenly,  and  springing  wildly. 
Through  the  narrow  streets  he  hastens — 

gSach  one  civilly  makes  way), 
p  the  rocks  he  nimbly  clambers, 
Then  looks  down,  as  if  in  scorn, — then 
Vanishes  within  the  mountains. 

•  Soc  FroUigi-ath*8  Poema. 

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270  Heine's  poems. 

On  the  empty  market  stand  now 
Swarthy  Momma,  and  bear-leader 
All  alone.     In  angry  fury 
On  the  ground  his  hat  he  flingeth, 
Trampling  on  it, — ^the  Madonnas 
Trampling  also,  tears  the  covering 
From  his  ugly  naked  body, 
Bwears  at  such  ingratitude. 
Such  black  bear's  ingratitude  t 
For  he  constantly  had  treated 
Atta  Troll  in  friendly  fashion, 
And  instructed  him  in  dancing. 
All  he  had  to  him  was  owing, 
B*en  his  very  life.    In  vain  ihej 
0£Eer'd  him  a  himdred  dollars 
For  the  skin  of  Atta  Trolll 
Then  upon  the  poor  black  Mumma, 
Who,  a  form  of  silent  sorrow, 
On  her  hinder  paws  imploring, 
Stood  before  the  much  enraged  one, 
Fell  the  much  enraged  one's  fury 
With  redoubled  strength.     He  beats  he?, 
Calls  her  even  Queen  Christina, 
Madame  Munoz  and  Putana. — 
All  this  happened  in  a  beauteous 
Sultry  summer  affcemoon, 
And  the  night  which  then  succeeded 
To  that  day  was  quite  superb. 
Almost  half  that  night  consumed  I 
On  the  house's  balcony ; 
Juliet  was  beside  me  standing, 
Gktzing  on  the  stars  above  us. 
Sighing  said  she  :  "  Ah,  in  Paris 
"  Fairest  are  the  stars  of  all, 
"  When  they  on  a  winter  evening 
*'  In  the  street  mud  are  reflected  1" 
CAPUT  III. 

SUMMEE-NIGHT'S dream!  All-fantastio, 
Aimless  is  my  song.    Yes,  aimless 
As  our  love  and  as  our  living. 
As  Creator  and  creation  I 

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ATTA  TSOIJa,  271 

His  own  will  alone  obeying^ 
Cralloping  along  or  flying, 
Bevels  in  the  realms  of  fable 
My  belovM  Pegasus. 
He's  no  serviceable,  virtuous 
Carthorse  of  the  citizens, 
Nor  a  battle-steed  of  party, 
With  pathetic  neighs  and  stamping  I 
Golden-mounted  are  the  hoofs  all 
Of  my  white  and  winged  charger, 
Cords  of  pearls  the  guiding  reins  are. 
And  at  will  I  let  him  wander. 
Bear  me  whereso'er  thou  wouldest  1 
Over  steep  and  merry  hill-paths, 
Where  cascades  with  mournful  shrieking 
Warn  'gainst  madness's  abysses  I 
Bear  me  on  through  silent  valleys, 
Where  the  solemn  oaks  are  standing. 
While  primeval  sweet  traditions 
From  &eir  knotted  roots  have  birth  I 
Let  me  drink  there,  while  I  moisten 
My  dim  eyes, — ah,  now  I  languish 
For  the  sparkling  wondrous  water 
That  imparts  both  sight  and  knowledge  1 
All  my  blindness  goes !  my  gaze 
Pierces  to  the  deepest  rock-cleft. 
To  the  cave  of  Atta  Troll, 
And  I  understand  his  language ! 
Strange  'tis  how  familiar  to  me 
This  bear-language  now  appeareth  1 
In  my  dear  home  have  I  never 
Heard  those  sounds  in  earlier  days? 
CAPUT  IV. 

RONCEVAL,  thou  noble  valley  I 
Whensoe'er  I  hear  thy  name. 
That  blue  flower  so  long  departed 
O'er  my  bosom  sheds  its  fragrance ! 
Then  the  glitt'ring  dream-world  rises 
Which  for  thousand  years  had  fiaded, 
And  the  mighty  spirit-eyes 
Gaze  upon  me,  till  I'm  awe-struck  1 

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272  heine'8  poeus. 

Battling  sounds  awake.    There  strnggk 
Baracen  and  Frankish  knight ; 
As  though  bleeding  and  despairing 
Bing  Orlando's  bugle-notes 

In  the  vale  of  Eonceval, 
Hard  beside  Orlando's  gap — 
Christen'd  thus,  because  tiie  hero, 
Seeking  how  to  force  a  passage, 

With  his  trusty  sword  Duranda 
Struck  with  such  death-dealing  fury 
On  the  wall  of  rock,  that  plainly 
To  this  day  are  seen  its  traces — 

There  within  a  gloomy  hollow. 
Close  surrounded  by  a  thicket 
Of  wild  fir-trees,  safely  hidden. 
Lies  the  caye  of  Atta  Troll. 

In  the  bosom  of  his  famly 
Bests  he  after  all  the  hardships 
Of  his  flight  and  the  distresses 
Of  his  public  show  and  travels. 

Sweet  the  meeting !  all  his  young  ones 
Found  he  in  that  happy  cavern 
Where  with  Mumma  he  begot  them, — 
Four  his  sons,  and  daughters  two. 

Well-lick'd  maidens  were  the  latter. 
Fair  their  hair,  like  parsons'  daughters 
Brown  the  youths,  the  youngest  only 
With  the  single  ear  is  blacL 

Now  this  youngest  was  the  darling 
Of  his  mother,  who  when  playing 
Happen'd  once  to  bite  his  ear  o^ 
And  for  very  love  she  ate  it. 

He's  a  very  genial  stripling. 
At  gymnastics  very  clever. 
And  he  turns  a  somersault 
Like  the  posture-master  Massmann. 

Sprig  of  autochthonic  humour. 
He  his  mother-tongue  loves  only. 
And  has  never  learnt  the  jargon 
Of  the  Grecian  and  the  Boman. 

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ATTA  TBOLL.  273 

Fresh  and  free  and  good  and  merry. 
Soap  he  holds  in  detestation, 
(Luxury  of  modem  washing,) 
Like  the  posture-master  Massmann. 

But  our  young  friend  is  most  genial 
Where  upon  ibe  tree  he  clambers, 
Which  along  the  steepest  rocknside 
From  the  deep  abyss  upriseth, 

And  extendeth  to  the  summit, 
When  the  family  at  night-time 
Glather  all  around  their  father, 
Toying  ia  the  evening  coolness. 

Then  the  old  one  loves  to  tell  them 
What  he  in  the  world  has  witnessed ; 
How  he  many  men  and  cities 
Had  beheld,  and  greatly  suffered. 

Like  Laertes'  noble  offspring, 
But  in  one  thing  still  unlike  him, — 
Namely,  that  his  wife  went  with  him, 
His  dear  black  Penelope. 

Atta  Troll  then  also  tells  them 
Of  the  wondrous  approbation 
That  he,  by  his  skill  in  dancing, 
Had  acquired  in  ev'ry  quarter. 

He  assured  them  young  and  old 
Had  exultingly  admired  him, 
When  he  danced  upon  the  market 
To  the  sweet  notes  of  the  bagpipe. 

Li  particular  the  ladies, 
Those  dear  connoisseurs  of  all  things. 
Had  with  vehemence  applauded. 
And  had  ogled  him  with  favour. 

O  the  vanity  of  Artists  I 
Our  old  dancing  bear  with  simpers 
Calls  to  mind  the  time  when  late  he 
To  the  public  show'd  his  talent. 

Overcome  by  self-laudation, 
He  would  fain  by  act  exhibit 
That  he's  no  mere  boaster  only, 
Ba,  A  really  first-rate  dancer. 

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274  HEINS*g  POEMS. 

From  the  ground  then  sudden  springs  he, 
On  his  hinder  paws  upstanding, 
And,  as  formerly,  he  dances 
The  gavotte,  his  favourite  dance. 

Mute,  with  muzzles  gaping  open, 
The  young  bears  look  on  with  wonder. 
While  their  father  in  the  moonlight 
Capers  here  and  there  thus  strangely. 

CAPUT  V. 

IN  the  cavern,  by  his  young  ones, 
Sick  at  heart,  upon  his  back  lies 
Atta  Troll,  while  thoughtful  sucks  he 
At  his  paws,  and  sucks,  and  growls : 

"Mumma,  Mumma,  swarthy  jewel, 
*'  Whom  I  out  of  life's  wide  ocean 
**  Once  did  fish,  in  life's  wide  ocean 
"  Once  again  I  now  have  lost  thee  1 

**  Shall  I  ne'er  again  behold  thee, 
"  Or  beyond  the  grave  p'rhaps  only, 
"  Where,  set  free  from  earthly  trammels, 
"  Thy  dear  soul  is  glorified  ? 

"  Would  that  I,  alas  I  could  once  more 
•*  Lick  thy  well-beloved  muzzle, 
"  My  dear  Mumma,  which  so  sweetly 
*'  Stroked  me  over,  as  with  honey  1 

**  Would  that  I  again  could  snuffle 
"  That  sweet  smell,  thy  own  peculiar, 
"  O  my  dear  and  swarthy  Mumma, 
"  Charming  as  the  scent  of  roses ! 

"  But,  alas  !  my  Mumma's  pining 
"  In  the  fetters  of  those  rascals, 
*'  Who,  the  name  of  men  adopting, 
**  Deem  themselves  creation's  masters. 

*'  Death  and  hell !     These  men  unworthy 
"  Aristocracy's  arch-emblems, 
"  Look  down  on  the  an'mal  kingdom 
**  Proudly  and  disdainfully, 

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ATTA    /ROLL.  275 

•*  Take  away  our  wiyes  and  children, 
•*  Fetter  us,  ill-treat  us,  even 
''  Kill  us,  for  the  sake  of  selling 
<<  Our  poor  hide  and  our  poor  carcass ! 

"  And  they  think  themselves  permitted 
*  Wicked  deeds  like  this  to  practise 
"  'Gainst  us  bears  especially, 
*'  And  the  rights  of  man  they  call  it ! 

"  Bights  of  man  indeed !  Fine  rights  these  • 
*'  Tell  me  who  bestow'd  them  on  you  ? 
"  Nature  certainly  ne'er  did  so, 
"  For  she's  not  xmnatural ! 

"  Bights  of  man  indeed  I    Who  gave  you 
*'  This  great  privilege,  I  wonder  ? 
"  Beason  certainly  ne'er  did  so, 
•'  For  she's  not  imreasonable  1 

"  Men,  pray  are  ye  any  better 
**  Than  we  others,  just  for  eating 
"  All  your  dinners  boil'd  or  roasted  ? 
*'  In  a  raw  state  we  eat  ours, 

*'  Tet  is  the  result  the  same 
"  To  us  both. — No,  food  can  never 
*'  Make  one  noble ;  he  is  noble 
"  Who  both  nobly  feels  and  acteth, 

"  Men,  pray  are  ye  any  better 
"  Just  because  the  arts  and  science 
**  With  success  ye  follow  ?     We  now 
"  Never  give  ourselves  the  trouble. 

"  Are  there  not  such  things  as  learned 
"  Dogs,  and  horses  too,  who  reckon 
**  Just  like  coimciUors  of  Commerce  ? 
•*  Do  not  hares  the  drum  play  finely  ? 

"  Are  not  many  beavers  adepts 
"  In  the  art  of  hydrostatics  ? 
**  Were  not  clysters  first  invented 
By  the  cleverness  of  storks  ? 

Write  not  asses  criticisms  ? 
"  Are  not  apes  all  good  comedians  ? 
**  Is  there  any  greater  luimio 
**  Than  Batavia,  long-tail'd  monkey  2 

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276  HEINE  g  POEMS. 

**  Are  not  nightingales  good  singers  t 
•*  And  is  Preiligrath  no  poet, 
'*  Who  can  sing  of  lions  better 
**  Than  his  oountr  jman  the  Camel  ? 

*'  I  myself  the  art  of  dancing 
'*  Have  advanced  as  much  as  Baumer 
"  That  of  writing.     Writes  he  better 
"  Than  I  dance, — yes,  I  the  bear? 

"  Men,  why  are  ye  any  better 
"  Than  we  others?    Upright  hold  ye, 
"  It  is  true,  your  heads,  but  in  them 
"  Low-bom  thoughts  are  ever  creeping. 

•*  Men,  pray  are  ye  any  better 

*'  Than  are  we,  because  your  skin  is 

*'  Smooth  and  glist'ning  ?    This  advantage 

*'  Ye  but  share  with  every  serpent. 

*'  Human  race,  two  leggM  serpents  ! 
**  Well  I  see  the  reason  why  ye 
"  Breeches  wear ;  with  foreign  wool  ye 
'*  Hide  your  serpent-nakedness  ! 

•*  Children,  guard  yourselves  against  thoso 
**  Hairless  and  misshapen  creatures ! 
*'  My  dear  daughters,  never  marry 
**  Any  monster  that  wears  breeches  !" 

More  than  this  111  not  report  now, 
How  the  bear  in  his  wild  mania 
For  equality,  kept  reasoning 
All  about  the  hiuuan  race. 

For,  to  say  the  truth,  I  also 
Am  a  man,  and  never  will  I 
Tell  again  such  foolish  libels. 
Which  are,  after  all,  offensive. 

Tes,  I  am  a  man,  and  better 
Than  the  other  sucking  creatures, 
And  the  interests  of  the  race 
Ne'er  will  I  renounce  promoting. 

In  the  fight  with  other  creatures 
Faithfully  I'll  ever  struggle 
For  humanity, — ^the  holy 
Bights  of  man  that  he  is  bom  to. 

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▲TTA  TROLL.  277 

CAPUT  VL 
"^TiT  perchance  *tis  beneficial 
X      For  us  men,  who  form  the  higher 
Kind  of  livestock,  to  discoyer 
How  they  reason  down  below  us. 
Yes,  below  us,  in  the  gloomy 
Mournful  spheres  of  fellowship, 
In  the  beasts*  inferior  strata, 
Brood  resentment,  misery,  pride. 
That  which  natural  hist'ry  oyer, 
Equally  with  common  custom. 
Has  for  centuries  admitted 
Is  denied  with  impious  muzzle. 
That  &lse  doctrine  by  the  aged 
In  the  young  ones'  ears  is  grumbled 
Which  assails  both  cultivation 
And  humanity  on  earth. 
«  Children  1"  Atta  Troll  thus  growl'd. 
As  he  hither  roU'd  and  thither 
On  his  carpet- wanting  couch  : 
"  Unto  us  belongs  the  Future  1 
'*  If  each  bear  but  thought  as  I  do, 
*'  If  all  beasts  but  thought  so  too, 
"  With  united  forces  would  we 
^  Take  up  arms  against  the  tyrants. 
**  Then  the  bear  would  form  alliance 
*'  With  the  horse,  the  elephant 
"  Twine  his  trunk  in  loving  fashion 
**  Bound  the  valiant  ox's  horn. 
"  Bear  and  wolf  of  every  colour, 
"  Goat  and  monkey,  e'en  the  hare 
"  For  a  time  would  work  in  common, 
**  And  our  triumph  would  be  certain. 
'^  Union,  union  is  the'  essential 
**  Bequisite  ;  alone,  we're  conquer'd 
'*  Easily,  but  join'd  together 
"  We  would  overreach  the  tyrants. 
•*  Union  1  union !  and  we'll  triumph, 
"  And  Monopoly's  vile  sway 
"  Be  o'erthrown»  and  we'll  establish 
•*  A  juat  kingdom  for  us  beasts.  ^         . 

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278  Heine's  poemb. 

"  Full  equality  for  all,  then, 
"  Of  God's  creatures,  irrespective 
*'  Of  their  feith,  or  skin,  or  odour, 
*'  Be  its  fundamental  maxim  I 

"  Strict  equality  I     Each  donkey 
"  Be  entitled  to  high  office  ; 
**  On  the  other  hand,  the  lion 
*<  Carry  to  the  mill  the  sack. 

*'  As  respects  the  dog,  indeed  he 

"  Is  a  very  servile  rascal, 

'^  Since  for  centuries  has  man 

*'  Like  a  dog  ne'er  ceased  to  treat  hinu 

'*  Yet  in  our  free  state  well  give  him 
"  Once  again  his  olden  rights, 
'^  His  prescriptive  birthright,  and  he 
"  Soon  again  will  be  ennobled. 

**  Yes,  the  Jews  shall  then  enjoy  too 
"  All  the  rights  of  citizens, 
"  And  by  law  be  made  the  equals 
**  Of  all  other  sucking  creatures. 

"  Only  dancing  in  the  market 
"  For  the  Jew  shall  not  be  lawful ; 
"  This  amendment  I  insist  on 
''  In  the  interest  of  my  art. 

"  For  a  sense  of  style,  of  rigid 
"  Plastic  art  in  motion's  wanting 
"  To  that  race,  who  really  ruin 
"  What  there  is  of  public  taste." 

CAPUT  vn. 

GLOOMY,  in  his  gloomy  cavern. 
Squats,  in  his  belov'd  home-circle, 
Atta  Troll,  the  misanthrope, 
And  he  shows  his  teeth,  and  growls  thus : 

"  Men,  the  pert  and  vulgar  fellows ! 
"  Smile  away  1     From  all  your  smiling 
**  And  from  your  offensive  yoke  too 
**  Shall  the  coming  day  release  us  L 

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ATT  A  TBOLL.  279 

•*  I  am  always  most  offended 
"  By  that  sour-sweet  kind  of  quiv'ring 
**  Eomid  tho  mouth, — these  smiles  of  man 
*'  Find  I  really  past  all  hearing! 

*'  When  I  in  his  -pelMd  visage 

**  See  display'd  that  fatal  quiv*ring, 

*'  All  my  entrails  in  my  hody 

**  Turn  right  round  with  indignation. 

^  More  impertinently  even 
**  Than  by  words,  a  man  lays  open 
**  By  his  smile  the  deepest  hidden 
*'  Insolence  of  his  vile  spirit. 

"  They  are  always  smiling]     Even 

*'  When  by  decency  is  needed 

**  Eeal  solemnity  of  feature, — 

"  E*en  in  lovers  most  solemn  moment ! 

**  They  are  always  smiling !     Even 
**  When  they're  dancing.     In  this  mannei 
*'  They  degrade  this  noble  science, 
**  Which  should  be  a  kind  of  worship. 

"  Yes,  the  dance  throughout  all  ages 

'*  Was  a  pious  act  of  faith  ; 

"  Solemnly  around  the  altar 

"  Tum*d  the  priests  in  mystic  circle* 

**  Thus  in  olden  time  King  David     • 
"  Danced  before  the  ark  of  cov'nant; 
*'  Dancing  was  an  act  of  worship, 
"  Was  a  prayer  upon  the  legs  I 

*'  I  have  ever  understood  thus 
**  Dancing,  when  upon  the  market 
"  To  the  people  I  was  dancing, 
**  Who  with  their  applause  repaid  me. 

**  This  applause,  I  must  confess  it, 
"  Often  made  me  feel  quite  happy ; 
"  For  extorting  admiration 
"  From  one's  foes  is  very  sweet ! 

'^  But  in  their  enthusiasm 
"  Still  they  smile.     The  art  of  dancing 
'*  Powerless  is  to  make  them  better, 
^  And  they  frivolous  remain/' 

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280  HSmE's  POEMS. 


M 


CAPUT  vm. 

ANT  a  yery  virtuous  burgher 


Smells  but  badly,  whilst  the  seryants 
Of  a  king  with  ambergris 
Or  else  lavender  are  scented. 

Virgin  spirits  may  be  met  with 
Which  of  green  soap  bear  the  odour. 
Whilst  the  criminal  with  ros&-oil 
May  have  wash'd  himself  demurely. 

Do  not  therefore  tarn  your  nose  up. 
Gentle  reader,  if  the  cave  of 
Atta  Troll  may  not  remind  you 
Of  Arabia's  sweetest  spices. 

Tarry  in  that  reeking  eirde, 
llid  those  miserable  stenches, 
Where  to  his  yoimg  son  the  hero 
As  from  out  a  doud  thus  epeekB : 

^^  Child,  my  child,  thou  youngest  ofi&pring 
"  Of  my  loins,  now  place  thy  one  ear 
^  dose  beside  thy  lEiiher's  mnzzle, 
^  And  suck  in  my  solemn  words! 

*<  Guard  against  man's  ways  of  thinking, 
"  They  destroy  both  soul  and  body ; 
^  'Mongst  all  men  there's  no  such  thing  as 
"  Any  ordinary  man. 

**  E'en  the  Germans^  once  so  noble, 
"  E'en  the  very  sons  of  Tuisoo, 
*'  Our  own  primitive  relations, 
^'  They  too  have  degenerated. 

^  They've  become  now  fidthless,  godless^ 
'*  Even  preaching  atheism — 
*'  Child,  my  child,  be  on  thy  guard, 
''  'G^nst  both  Feuerbach  and  Bauer  * 

**  Never  be  an  Atheist, 

♦•  Monster  void  of  all  respect  for 

"  The  Creator— a  Creator 

'•  Twas  who  made  this  universe ! 

^  Well-knovn  Gena^  wntenu 

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ATTA  TBOLL.  281 

*^  High  above  ns,  sun  and  moon 
*^  And  the  stars  too  (both  the  tail-less 
"  And  all  those  with  tails  provided) 
*'  Are  reflections  of  His  power. 

"  Down  below  us,  land  and  sea 
*'  Are  the  echo  of  His  glory, 
^'  And  each  living  creature  praises 
"  Evermore  His  excellencies. 

^'  E'en  the  smallest  silver-louse  that 
"  In  the  aged  pilgrim's  beard 
"  In  life's  pilgrimage  is  sharer, 
"  Sings  the  great  Eternal's  praises  I 

"  In  yon  starry  bright  pavilion, 
**  On  the  golden  seat  of  power, 
**  World-directing  and  majestic, 
"  Sits  a  mighty  polar  bear. 

"  Free  from  spot  and  snow-white  glitt'ring 

'^  Is  his  skin ;  his  head  is  cover'd 

*'  With  a  crown  of  diamonds, 

'^  Which  illumines  all  the  heavens. 

*'  In  his  face  is  harmony, 

"  And  the  silent  deeds  of  thinking ; 

**  If  he  signs  but  with  his  sceptre, 

**  All  the  spheres  resound  with  singing. 

'^  At  his  feet  bear-saints  are  sitting 
**  Piously,  who  meekly  suffer'd 
"  While  on  earth,  and  in  their  paws  they 
"  Hold  the  palms  of  martyrdom. 

^'  Offctimes  one  amongst  them  rises, 

"  Then  another, — by  the  Spirit 

"  Seeming  mov'd,  and  straightway  dance  they 

**  Their  most  solemn  sacred  dance — 

*^  Sacred  dance,  where  mercy's  radiance 
*'  Benders  talent  quite  superfluous, 
**  And  the  soul  for  very  rapture 
^^  From  the  skin  attempts  to  leap ! 

<*  O  shall  I,  unworthy  Troll, 
"  E'er  partake  this  great  salvation  ? 
^  And  from  earth's  debasing  sorrows 
**  To  the  realms  of  blins  soar  upwards  ? 

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2S2  Heine's  poems. 

**  0  shall  I,  all-drunk  with  heaven, 
**  In  the  stars'  pavilion  yonder, 
**  With  the  palm  and  with  the  glory, 
*'  Dance  before  the  Master's  throne  ?" 

CAPUT  IX. 

LIKE  the  tongue  as  red  as  scarlet, 
Which  a  swarthy  Freiligrathifui 
Moorish  prince  with  scornful  fury 
From,  his  sullen  mouth  protruded. 

So  the  moon  from  out  the  gloomy 
Clouds  of  heaven  advanced.     Afar  off 
Cataracts  are  roaring,  sleepless 
And  morosely  through  the  night.  - 

Atta  TroU  upon  the  summit 

Of  his  fav'rite  rock  stands  lonely, 

Lonely,  and  to  the  abyss 

Downward  howls  he  in  the  nightwind : 

"  Yes,  I  am  a  bear,  I  am  so, — 

•*  Him  ye  christen  shaggy  bear, 

^*  Growler,  Isegrim,  and  Bruin, 

"  And  heav'n  knows  how  many  others 

"  Yes,  I  am  a  bear,  I  am  so, 

"  The  uncouth  and  boorish  creature, 

**  I'm  the  awkward  dromedary 

"  Of  your  scorn  and  cruel  laughter. 

**  I'm  the  butt  of  all  your  wit, 
"  I'm  the  bugbear,  with  whose  terrors 
*'  Ye  at  night  your  children  frighten, 
"  Hiunan  children,  when  they're  naughty. 

"  I*m  the  joke  of  all  your  idle 
**  Nurs'ry  stories,  well  I  know  it, 
"  And  I  now  proclaim  it  loudly 
"  To  man's  paltry  world  below. 

"  Hear  it,  hear  ;  a  bear  am  I, 
**  My  descent  I'm  not  ashamed  of, 
"  But  am  proud  of  it,  as  though  I 
**  Sprang  from  Moses  Mendelssohn  !'* 


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ATTA  TBOLL.  233 

CAPUT  X. 

TWO  dark  fignres,  wild  and  surly, 
And  upon  their  all-fours  gliding, 
Force  their  way  across  the  gloomy 
Grove  of  firs  at  midnight's  hour. 
This  is  Atta  Troll,  the  father, 
And  his  son,  young  master  one-ear. 
Where  the  wood  grows  somewhat  lighter 
By  the  stone  of  blood  they  halted. 
"  This  old  stone  "— growFd  Atta  Troll,— 
"  Is  the  altar  where  the  Druids 
^'  In  the  days  of  superstition 
'^  Human  sacrifices  offer 'd. 
"  0  their  cruelty  accursed  I 
'*  All  the  hair  upon  my  back 
"  Bristles  when  I  think  upon  it ; 
*'  Blood  was  pour'd  out  to  God's  honour  t 
"  Now  these  men  are  more  enlighten'd, 
**  And  no  longer  kill  each  other 
"  Merely  in  excessive  zeal 
"  For  the  interests  of  heaven. 
"  'Tis  no  longer  pious  fancies, 
^*  Madness,  nor  enthusiasm, 
"  But  mere  vanity  and  self-love 
"  Makes  them  now  commit  their  murders. 
**  On  the  good  things  of  the  earth 
"  Eagerly  they're  ever  seizing ; 
"  'Tis  an  endless  round  of  fighting, 
"  For  himself  each  person  stealeth  I 
"  Yes !  the  heritage  of  all 
"  Is  the  individual's  booty  ; 
"  Of  the  rights,  then,  of  possession 
"  Speaks  he,  thinking  of  his  own  I 
"  Of  his  own  \  Possession's  rights  too  I 
**  0,  the  cruel  theft,  the  lying ! 
*'  None  but  man  could  have  invented 
"  Such  commingled  fraud  and  madness* 
**  Private  property  was  never 
*'  Made  by  Nature ;  pocketless, 
"  With  no  pockets  in  our  skins,  we 
«*  Ev'ry  one  the  world  first  entered. 

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284  Heine's  poems. 

Not  a  single  one  amongst  ns 
At  his  birth  had  such  a  pocket 
*  In  his  body's  outer  skin, 
"  Where  he  might  conceal  his  robberies. 
*'  Man  alone,  that  smooth-skinn'd  being, 
"  Who  with  foreign  wool  so  nicely 
*'  Clothes  himself,  had  e'er  the  sharpness 
"  To  provide  himself  with  pockets. 
"  Pockets  I  They're  as  much  'gainst  nature 
**  As  is  private  property, 
"  As  possession's  rights  themselves  are — 
"  Men  in  fact  are  but  pickpockets  I 
"  Fiercely  hate  I  them  I  My  hatred 
**  Unto  thee,  my  son,  bequeath  I ; 
"  Here  upon  tlus  altar  shalt  thou 
"  Swear  to  man  imdying  hatred  1 
"  Be  implacably  the  death-foe 
"  Of  those  wicked  vile  oppressors 
**  To  the  very  end  of  life, — 
"  Swear  it,  swear  it  her^,  my  son  I" 
And  the  yoimgster  swore,  as  once  did 
Hannibal    The  moon,  all  yellow, 
On  the  stone  of  blood  look'd  wildly, 
And  the  pair  of  misanthropes. 
By-and-by  we'll  tell  the  story 
How  the  young  bear  ever  faithful 
To  his  oath  remain'd.     Our  lyre  shall 
In  another  Epic  praise  him. 
As  respects  Mend  Atta  TroU, 
We  will  leave  him  for  the  present, 
Presently  to  come  across  him. 
All  the  surer,  with  a  bullet. 
All  thy  stealthy  machinations. 
Traitor  'gainst  man's  majesty, 
Now  at  length  are  terminated, 
And  thy  hour  will  sound  to-morrow  I 
CAPUT  XI. 

LIKE  some  drowsy  bayaderes 
Look  the  moimtains,  standing  shiv'ring 
In  their  snowy  shirts  of  clouds, 
Fluttering  in  the  breeze  of  morning. 

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A.TTA  TROLL,  28.^ 

Yet  they  sood  become  enliven '(• 
By  the  sun-god  stripping  from  them 
All  the  veil  that's  hanging  o'er  them 
Lighting  up  their  naked  beauty  ! 

Early  in  the  mom  I  started 
With  Lascaro  on  our  journey 
Bound  to  hunt  the  bear.     At  noonday 
We  arrived  at  Pont  d'Espagne. 

So  they  call  the  bridge  which  leadeth 
Out  of  France  and  into  Spain, 
To  the  land  of  west -barbarians, 
Who're  a  thousand  years  behind  us, — 

Tes,  a  thousand  years  behind  us  > 

In  all  modem  civilisation ; 
My  barbarians  to  the  eastward 
But  a  hundred  years  behind  are. 

Slowly,  almost  trembling,  left  I 
France's  sacred  territory, 
BlessM  fatherland  of  freedom 
And  the  women  that  I  love ! 

On  the  middle  of  the  bridge 
A  poor  Spaniard  sai    Deep  mis'ry 
Lurk'd  behind  his  tatter'd  mantle, 
Misery  in  his  eyes  was  lurking. 

An  old  crazy  mandoline 
With  his  wither'd  fingers  pinch'd  he ; 
Shrill  the  discord  which  re-echoed 
From  the  rocks,  as  in  derision. 

Oftentimes  his  figure  bent  he 
Downward  tow'rd  the'  abyss  with  laughter, 
Tinkling  harder  then  than  ever, 
While  the  following  words  he  sang  : 

'*  In  the  middle  of  my  bosom 
**  Stands  a  little  golden  table ; 
'*  Bound  the  little  golden  table 
"  Stand  four  little  golden  chairs. 

"  On  the  golden  chairs  are  sitting 

*'  Little  ladies,  golden  arrows 

**  In  their  hair, — at  cards  they're  playing, 

"  But  'tis  only  Clara  wins. 

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280  Heine's  poems. 

"  As  she  wins,  she  laughs  with  slyness ; 

**  Ah !  within  my  bosom,  Clara, 

**  Thoult  be  ev'ry  time  a  winner, 

"  For  thou  boldest  nought  but  trumps." 

Wand'ring  onward,  to  myself  I 

Spoke  :  *'  'Tis  singular  that  madness 

**  Sits  and  sings  upon  yon  bridge, 

"  That  from  fVance  to  Spain  leads  oVer. 

'*  Is  this  madman  but  the  emblem 

"  Of  the  interchange  'mongst  nations 

*'  Of  their  thoughts  ?  or  his  own  country's 

*'  Wild  and  crazy  title-page  ?" 

We  arrived  not  until  eyening 

At  the  wretched  small  posada, 

Where  an  olla-podrida 

In  a  diriy  dish  was  smoking. 

There  I  swallow'd  some  garhanzoSy 

Heavy,  large  as  musket-bullets, 

Indigestible  to  Grermans, 

T  hough  to  dumplings  they're  accustom'd 

^it  companion  to  the  cooking 

Was  the  bed.     With  insects  pepper'd 

It  appeared.     The  bugs,  alas  I  are 

Far  ^e  greatest  foes  of  man. 

Fiercer  than  the  wrath  of  thousand 

Elephants,  I  find  the  hatred 

Cf  one  tiny  little  bug, 

When  across  my  bed  it  crawleth. 

One  must  let  them  bite  in  quiet, — 

This  is  bad  enough, — still  more  'tis 

If  one  crushes  them.     The  stink  then 

Keeps  one  aU  night  long  in  torment. 

Yes,  the  fiercest  earthly  trouble 

Is  the  fight  with  noxious  vermin, 

Who  a  stench  employ  as  weapons,— 

Is  a  duel  with  a  bug ! 

CAPUT  XII. 

HOW  they  rave,  the  race  of  poets. 
E'en  the  tame  ones,  singing  ever 
And  exclaiming :  "  Nature's  surely 
**  The  Creator's  mighty  temple —  "*  ^. 

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ATTA  TROLL.  287 

•*  Is  a  temple  all  whoso  glories 
"  To  our  Maker's  fame  bear  witpess, 
^'Snn  and  moon  and  stars  all  hanging 
*'  In  its  cupola  as  lamps." 

Well  and  good,  my  worthy  peoplel 
Yet  confess  that  in  this  temple 
Are  the  stairs  uncomfortable, 
Bad  and  inconvenient  stairs! 

All  this  up-and-down-stairs  going. 
Mountain-climbing  and  this  jumping 
Over  rocks  is  very  tiring 
To  the  legs  as  well  as  spirit. 

Close  beside  me  walk*d  Lascaro, 
Pale  and  lanky,  like  a  taper  ; 
Never  spoke  he,  never  laugh'd  he, 
He,  the  dead  son  of  the  sorc'ress. 

Tes,  'tis  said  that  he's  a  dead  man, 
Dead  long  since,  but  yet  his  mother 
Old  Uraca*s  magic  science 
Kept  him  living  in  appearance. — 

That  accursM  temple-staircase  I 
It  exceeds  my  comprehension 
How  my  neck  escaped  from  breaking. 
Stumbling  o'er  a  precipice. 

How  the  cataracts  were  shrieking ! 
How  the  tempest  flogg'd  the  fir-trees 
Till  they  howl'd !     The  clouds  began  too 
Crashing  suddenly — bad  weather ! 

In  a  little  fishing  cottage 
By  the  Lac-de-Gobe  soon  found  we 
Shelter  and  some  trout  for  luncheon ; 
Most  delicious  were  the  latter. 

In  an  arm-chair  was  reclining, 
111  and  grey,  the  ferryman  ; 
On  him  his  t\^o  pretty  nieces. 
Like  a  pair  of  angels,  waited. 

Stoutish  angels,  rather  Flemish, 
Seeming  from  a  frame  descended 
Of  a  Rubens  ;  gold  their  tresses, 
Full  of  licalth  their  eyes,  and  liquid. 


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^ 


288  heike's  poems. 

Their  vermilion  csheeks  were  dimpled. 
With  a  secret  slyness  in  them ; 
Strong  their  limbs  were,  and  yoluptaoiiii^ 
Giving  pleasure  to  the  fancy. 

Dear,  affectionate  young  creatures, 
Keeping  up  a  sweet  discussion, 
As  to  which  drink  would  be  relish'd 
Most  of  all  by  their  sick  uncle. 

If  the  one  the  cup  should  bring  him 
Full  of  well-boil*d  linden  blossoms, 
Then  the  other  hastes  to  feed  him 
With  an  elder-flow'r  decoction. 

"  I'll  not  drink  of  either  of  them,** 
dried  impatiently  the  old  man ; 
"  Fetch  some  wine,  that  I  may  offer 
"  To  my  'guests  some  better  drink  1" 

Whether  it  was  wine  they  gave  me 
At  the  Lac-de-Gobe,  I  really 
Cannot  say.     Methinks  in  Brunswick 
By  the  name  of  Mum  they'd  call  it. 

Of  the  very  best  black  goat-skin 
Was  the  wine-skin,  stiiiing  foully ; 
Yet  the  old  man  drank  with  pleasure. 
And  he  seem'd  quite  well  and  joyous. 

He  recounted  the  achievements 
Of  the  smugglers  and  banditti 
Merrily  and  freely  living 
In  the  Pyrenean  forests. 

Many  old  traditions  also 
Well  he  knew ;  amongst  the  others 
Were  the  battles  of  the  giants 
With  the  bears  in  times  primevaL 

Yes,  the  bears  then  and  the  giants 
Struggled  fiercely  for  the  masf  ry 
Of  these  mountains  and  these  valleys 
"Ere  by  man  they  were  discovered. 

But  when  man  arrived,  the  giants 
Fled  away  from  out  the  coimtry 
Stupified,  for  little  brains 
Are  contain'd  in  heads  gigantic. 

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atjul  tkoix.  289 

And  'tis  said  the  silly  fellows, 
On  arriying  at  the  ocean, 
And  obsernng  how  the  heav^is 
In  its  asure  depths  were  mirror'd, 

Cleverly  supposed  the  ocean 

To  be  heaven,  and  plunged  down  in  it, 

Full  of  godlike  confidence, 

And  were  drown'd,  the  whole  together. 

As  respects  the  bears,  however, 
They  are  gradually  being 
Killed  by  man,  their  numbers  yearly 
In  the  mountain  still  decreasing. 

"  Thus  (m  earth"  ezclaim'd  the  old  man, 
"  One  gives  place  unto  another, 
**  And  when  men  are  put  an  end  to, 
"  Then  the  dwarfs  will  be  the  masters. 

"  Yes,  the  clever  little  people, 
"  Who  the  mountain's  womb  inhabit, 
**  'Mongst  the  golden  mines  of  riches 
''  Digging  and  collecting  nimbly. 

"  How  they  from  their  hiding-places 
*'  With  their  small  sly  heads  keep  peeping ! 
**  Oft  I've  seen  them  in  the  moonlight, 
**  And  then  trembled  at  the  future ; 

**  At  the  power  their  gold  will  givo  them  ; 
^'  Ah,  I  fear  lest  our  descendants 
"  Fly  for  refuge,  like  the  stupid 
"  Giants,  to  the  watery  heaven  I" 

CAPUT  xin. 

IN  the  black  and  rocky  caldron 
Eest  the  waters  deep  of  ocean  ; 
Stars,  all  pale  and  melancholy, 
Peep  from  heaven.    Night  reigns,  and  silence 

Night  and  silence.    Oars  are  moving. 
Like  a  splashing  wondrous  secret 
Floats  the  bark.     The  old  man's  nieces 
Play  the  part  of  ferrymen, 

u 


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290  Heine's  poems. 

Joyously  and  nimbly  rowing ; 
Ofttimes  glisten  in  the  darlmess 
Their  stout  naked  arms,  illumined 
By  the  stars, — their  great  blue  eyes,  too. 

By  my  side  Lascaro  sitting 

Is  as  pale  and  mute  as  usual, 

And  the  fearful  thought  shoots  through  me: 

Is  he  but  a  very  corpse  then  ? 

I  myself, — am  I  dead  also. 
And  embarking  on  my  journey 
With  my  ghostly  comrades  by  me 
To  the  chilly  realm  of  shadows  ? 

And  this  lake,  can  it  be  Styx's 
Gloomy  flood  ?     Has  Proserpina, 
In  default  of  Charon's  presence, 
Sent  her  waiting-maids  to  fetch  me? 

No !  I  am  not  yet  departed 
And  extinguish'd ;  in  my  spirit 
Is  the  living  flame  of  life  still 
Glowing,  bkzing  and  exulting. 

And  these  maidens,  gaily  pulling 
At  their  oars,  and  o'er  me  splashing 
With  the  water  dripping  from  them. 
Full  of  merriment  and  laughter, — 

These  two  fresh  and  sprightly  damsels 
.    Are  most  certainly  not  ghostly 
Chambermaids  in  hell  residing, 
Waiting-maids  of  Proserpina! 

That  1  might  be  fully  certain 
Of  their  upper-worldliness, 
And  by  practical  experience 
Ascertain  my  own  existence. 

Hastily  my  lips  applied  I 
To  their  rosy  cheeks*  soft  dimples. 
And  then  framed  this  syllogism : 
Yes,  I  kiss,  and  so  I'm  living  ! 

When  we  reach'd  the  shore,  again  I 
Eiss'd  the  pair  of  kindly  maidens ; 
In  this  coin,  and  no  other, 
Would  they  take  the  passage -money. 


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ATTA  TBOLL.  291 

CAPUT  XIV. 
^''lOLET-COLOUE'D  mountain  summits 
V     Smile  from  out  the  sunny  gold-ground ; 
To  the  slope  a  village  clingetb, 
Seeming  like  a  daring  bird's  nest. 
When  I  climb'd  up  to  it,  found  I 
That  the  old  ones  all  had  flown, 
And  that  none  were  now  remaining 
Save  the  young,  who  could  not  fly  yet ; 
Pretty  boys,  and  little  maidens. 
Almost  hidden  in  their  scarlet 
Or  white  woollen  caps,  whilst  playing 
At  a  marriage,  in  the  market. 
Still  they  play'd  regardless  of  me, 
And  I  saw  how  the  enamour 'd 
Mouse-prince  knelt  pathetically 
To  the  fair  cat-emperor's  daughter. 
Poor  young  prince  I    Alas  I  he's  married 
To  the  beauty.     She  morosely 
Wrangles,  bites  him,  and  then  eats  him; 
When  he's  dead,  the  game  is  over. 
Almost  all  the  day  I  linger'd 
With  the  children,  and  we  chatted 
Like  old  friends.     They  fain  would  ask  me 
Who  I  was,  and  what  my  business. 
"  Dear  young  friends,  my  native  country 
*  Is  call'd  Germany,"  I  told  them : 
**  Bears  are  found  there  in  abundance, 
"  And  my  business  is  bear-hunting. 
**  There  I've  torn  the  skin  from  many 
*^  Of  their  bearish  ears,  and  sometimes 
"  Foimd  myself  full  sorely  handled 
*•  By  the  paws  of  Master  Bruin. 
«  Yet  with  ill-lick'd  doltards  daily 
"  I  was  forced  to  keep  on  wrangling 
"  In  my  own  dear  home,  and  found  it 
"  Get  at  length  beyond  all  bearing. 
'*  And  accordingly  here  came  I, 
"  Some  more  noble  prey  desiring, 
**  And  I  fain  would  try  my  forces 
*<  'Gkunst  tho  mighty  Atta  TrolL 


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292  HEUoc's  poems. 

"  He's  a  noble  adversftiy, 
"  Worthy  of  me.    Ah !  I  often 
**  Have  in  Germany  been  victor, 
**  When  my  victory  ashamed  me.'* 

When  I  took  my  leave,  around  mo 
Danced  the  pretty  little  beings 
In  a  rondo,  whilst  thns  sang  tbey  : 
*'  Girofflino,  Girofflette  1" 

Full  of  charming  impudence 
Stepp'd  at  last  the  youngest  tow'rds  me,  • 
Bowing  lowly  twice,  thrice,  four  times. 
While  with  pleasing  voice  thus  sang  she : 

"  When  the  king  I  chance  to  meet  with, 
"  Then  I  make  him  two  low  curtsies ; 
"  When  the  queen  I  chance  to  meet  with^ 
''  Then  I  make  her  curtsies  three. 

''  But  whene'er  the  devil  happens 

"  With  his  horns  to  come  aca'oss  me, 

"  Then  I  curtsey  twice,  thrice,  four  times— 

"  Girofflino,  Girofflette  I" 

"  Girofflino,  Girofflette  I" 
Sang  the  chorus,  and  with  bant'ring 
Round  my  legs  kept  gaily  whirling 
With  their  circling  cUnce  and  sing-song. 

Whilst  descending  to  the  vidley 
That  sweet  echo  still  pursued  me 
Evermore,  like  birds*  soft  chirping : 
''  Girofflino,  Girofflette  I" 

CAPUT  XV. 

ROCKY  blocks,  of  size  gigantic, 
All-misshapen  and  distorted, 
Qekze  upon  me  like  fierce  monsters 
Tum'd  to  stone,  from  times  primeval.  ' 

Strange  the  sight  I    Grey  clouds  are  hov'ring 
High  above  me,  like  their  double ; 
They're  the  pallid  counterfeit 
Of  those  wild  and  stony  figuroe. 


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ATTA  TROLL.  293 

In  the  distance  roars  the  streamlet, 

Aind  the  wind  howls  through  the  fir-trees  ; 

Tis  a  noise  inexorable, 

And  as  wretched  as  despair. 

Solitude  most  terrible ! 

Troops  of  jackdaws  black  are  sitting 

On  the  batter'd  crumbling  fir-trees, 

Fluttering  with  their  lame  wings  strangely. 

Close  beside  me  goes  Lascaro, 

Pale  and  silent, — I  myself,  too, 

Looking  like  incarnate  madness, 

With  grim  death  as  my  companion. 

Wild  and  wretched  is  the  country ; 

Lies  it  'neath  a  curse  ?     Methinks  I 

On  the  roots  of  yonder  stunted 

Tree  can  marks  of  blood  discoyer. 

It  o'ershadoweth  a  cottage, 

Which  is  modestly  half-hidden 

In  the  earth ;  with  meek  entreaty 

Seems  its  thatch  to  gaze  upon  thee. 

They  who  this  poor  cot  inhabit 

Are  Gagois,*  surviving  relics 

Of  a  race  that  deep  in  darkness 

Lives  a  sad  despised  existence. 

In  the  hearts  of  the  Biscayans 

Stni  is  rooted  fast  the  loathing 

Of  Cagots,  dark  heritage 

From  dark  days  of  superstition. 

In  Bagn^res  cathedral  even 

Is  a  narrow  grated  entrance ; 

This,  the  sacristan  informed  me, 

Was  the  door  Cagots  went  in  at 

Once  to  them  all  other  ingress 

To  the  church  was  interdicted, 

And  by  stealth  they  had  to  enter 

In  Grod*s  holy  house,  like  felons. 

There,  upon  a  lowly  footstool, 

Sat  the  poor  Cagots,  and  pray'd  there 

All  alone, — as  though  infected, 

Sever'd  from  the  congregation. 

*  A  race  not  unlike  the  OtMm. 


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29 1  Heine's  poems. 

But  the  consecrated  tapers 
Of  this  century  flare  brightly, 
And  their  lustre  scares  die  e^il 
Shadows  of  the  middle  ages ! 

So  outside  remained  Lascaro, 
Whilst  I  the  Cagot's  poor  cottage 
Entered,  and  my  hand  extended 
Kindly  to  my  sufTring  brother. 

And  I  also  kiss'd  his  infant, 
Who,  close-clinging  to  the  bosom 
Of  his  wife,  suck'd  greedily, 
Looking  like  a  sickly  spider, 

CAPUT  XVL 

"TTT^HEN  thou  see'st  yon  mountain  summitg 

▼  T      From  a  distance,  they  are  gleaming 
As  though  deck*d  with  gold  and  purple, 
Proud  and  princely  in  the  sunlight. 

But  when  close  at  hand,  this  splendour 

Vanishes,  and,  as  in  other 

Earthly  loveliness  and  glory, 

'Tis  the  play  of  lights  deceived  thee. 

What  to  thee  seem'd  gold  and  purple 
Is,  alas  I  but  common  snow, 
Common  snow,  which,  pale  and  wretched, 
Lives  a  weary  life  and  lonely. 

Just  above  me  heard  I  plainly 
How  the  hapless  snow  was  crackling, 
To  the  heartless  cold  winds  telling 
All  the  tale  of  its  white  sorrows. 

"  0,  how  slowly  pass  here,"  sigh'd  it, 
**  In  the  desert  waste  the  hours  I 
"  O  these  hours  that  seem  quite  endless, 
"  Like  eternities  hard  frozen  I 

"  Hapless  snow  I     0  had  I  only, 

"  'Stead  of  on  these  moimtain  summits, 

•*  Fallen  into  yonder  valley, 

*  Yonder  vale,  where  flow'rs  are  blooming, 


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ATTA   TROLL,  295 

**  Then  should  I  have  softly  melted, 
**  And  l)ecome  a  brook,  whilst  fairest 
"  Village  maidens  in  my  waters 
**  Would  have  washed  their  smiling  facoa 

*'  Yes,  perchance  I  should  have  floated 
*'  To  the  ocean,  there  becoming 
'*  Some  fair  pearl,  and  so  be  destin*d 
"  To  adorn  a  monarch's  crown  I" 

When  I  heard  this  pretty  language, 
Said  I :  "  Darling  snow,  I*m  doubtful 
"  Whether  such  a  brilliant  future 
**  Would  have  met  thee  in  the  valley. 

'*  Comfort  take  I  But  few  amongst  you 
'*  Turn  to  pearls ;  thou  wouldst  have  fallen 
**  Probably  in  some  small  puddle, 
"  And  become  a  piece  of  dirt !" 

Whilst  I  in  this  friendly  fashion 
With  the  snow  held  conversation, 
Came  a  shot,  and  from  above  me 
Fell  to  earth  a  tawny  vulture. 

'Twas  a  joke  of  friend  Lascaro, 
Sportsman's  joke ;  and  yet  his  features 
Still  continued  fix'd  and  solemn, 
His  gun-barrel  only  smoking. 

He  in  silence  tore  a  feather 
From  the  bird's  tail,  and  then  stuck  it 
On  the  top  of  his  peak'd  felt-hat, 
And  then  hasten'd  on  as  usual. 

Wellnigh  ghostly  'twas  to  see  him, 
As  his  shadow  with  the  feather 
On  the  white  snow  of  the  mountain, 
Black  and  long,  was  onward  moving. 

CAPUT  xvn. 

LTKTC  a  street  there  runs  a  valley, 
Known  by  name  of  Spirit-Hollow ; 
Bugged  cli£&  on  either  side  oft 
Rise  to  giddy  elevation. 


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296  Heine's  poems. 

On  tke  widest,  steepest  slope  there. 
Peers  Uraca's  daring  cottage 
Like  a  watch-tow'r  o'er  the  valley ; 
Thither  follow'd  I  Lascaro. 

With  his  mother  h^d  he  counsel 
In  mjsterions  signal-language, 
As  to  how  great  Atta  Troll 
Might  be  best  allur'd  and  vanquished. 

For  we  had  explored  his  traces 
Carefully,  and  he  no  longer 
Could  escape  us.    Now  are  numbered, 
Atta  Troll,  thy  days  on  earth ! 

As  to  whether  old  tJraca 
Was  in  truth  a  mighty  witch 
Of  distinction,  as  the  people 
In  the  Pyrenees  asserted, 

I'll  not  venture  to  determine ; 
This  much  know  I,  her  exterior 
Was  suspicious,  and  suspicious 
Was  her  red  eyes'  constant  dripping. 

Evil  was  her  look,  and  squinting, 
And  the  poor  cows  ('tis  reported) 
Whom  she  look'd  on,  in  their  udders 
Had  the  milk  dried  suddenly. 

It  is  even  said  that  many 
Fatted  swine  and  strongest  oxen 
She  had  put  to  death,  by  merely 
Stroking  with  her  wither'd  hands. 

She  at  times  for  such  offences 
Was  exposed  to  accusations 
To  the  justice.     But  the  latter 
Was  a  follower  of  Voltaire, 

Just  a  modem,  shallow  worldling, 
Void  of  faith  and  penetration, 
And  the'  accusers  sceptically 
Were  dismiss'd,  wellnigh  with  insult. 

Publicly  Uraca  follow'd 

Quite  an  honest  occupati6n, 

Namely,  selling  mountainHsimples 

And  stuffd  birds  to  those  who  sought  them. 


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ATTA  TKOLL.  297 

Full  her  cottage  was  of  suchlike 
Curiosities,  and  frightful 
Was  the  smell  of  fungi  in  it, 
Cuckoo -flow'rs  and  elderberries. 

There  was  quite  a  fine  collection 
Of  the  vulture  tribe  display' d  there, 
With  their  wings  extended  fully, 
And  their  monstrous  beaks  projecting. 

Was't  the  strange  plants'  smell  that  motuited 
To  my  head  and  stupified  me  ? 
Woni'ous  feelings  stole  across  me. 
As  I  gazed  upon  those  birds. 

They're  perchance  enchanted  mortals, 
Who,  by  magic  art  o'erpower'd, 
To  the  wretched  stufTd  condition 
Of  poor  birds  have  been  converted. 

Fixedly  they  gaze  upon  me, 
Sadly,  yet  witi^  much  impatience; 
Often  they  appear  to  throw 
Tow'rd  the  witch  shy  glances  also. 

But  the  latter,  old  Uraca, 
Close  beside  her  son  Lascaro 
Cowers  in  the  chinmey  comer, 
Melting  load  and  casting  bullets, — 

Bullets  that  by  fate  are  destined 
To  destroy  poor  Atta  Troll. 
How  the  flames  with  hasty  motion 
Quiver  o'er  the  witch's  features  I 

She  incessantly  keeps  moving 
Her  thin  lips,  but  nothing  says  she ; 
Mutters  she  l^e  witches'  blessing, 
That  the  casting  be  successful  ? 

Oft  she  chuckles  and  oft  nods  she 
To  her  son,  but  he  continues 
Earnestly  his  occupation. 
And  as  tolently  as  Death. 

Swelt'ring  'neath  my  awe-stmok  feelings. 
To  the  window  went  I,  seeking 
For  fresh  air,  and  then  look'd  downward 
O'er  the  valley  far  below  me. 


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298  HEINE*S  POEMS. 

WHat  I  saw  on  that  occasion 
Tween  the  hours  of  twelve  and  one, 
I  will  fSuthf ully  and  neatly 
Toll  you  in  the  following  chapters. 

CAPUT  xvni. 

AND  it  was  the  time  of  full  moon 
I  On  St.  John  the  Baptist's  evening. 

When  the  wild  hunt's  apparition 
Rush'd  along  the  Spirit-Hollow. 

From  the  window  of  Uraca's 
Witchlike  hut  I  excrellently 
Oould  observe  the  spirit-army 
As  it  sped  along  the  valley. 

Capital  the  place  I  stood  in 
For  observing  what  was  passing ; 
I  enjoy'd  a  fdl  sight  of  tiie 
Grave-arisen  dead  men's  pastime. 

Cracking  whips,  and  shouts  and  halloing, 
Yelpmg  dogs  and  neighing  horses, 
-Notes  of  hunting-horns  and  laughter, 
r*How  they  jpyously  re-echoed  1  ^ 

()n  in  front  by  way  of  vanguard  -^ 

Ran  the  wondrous  game  they  hunted, 
Stag  and  sow,  in  herds  enormous, 
WiQi  the  pack  of  hounds  behind  them. 

Huntsmen  out  of  every  region 
And  of  every  age  were  gathered , 
Hard  by  Nimrod  of  Assyria, 
J  For  example,  rode  Charles  X — . 

High  upon  their  snowy  horses 
Oh  they  rush'd  ;  on  foot  there  foUow'd 
The  piqueurs,  the  leashes  holding, 
And  the  pages  with  the  torches. 

Many  in  the  wild  procession 
Seem'd  to  me  well-known.     The  horseman 
In  the  golden  glist'ning  armour, — 
Was  he  not  the  sreat  Ein^  Arthur  ? 


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ATTA  TBOLL.  299 

And  Sir  Ogier,  lie  of  Denmark, 
Wore  be  not  his  green  and  glancing 
Coat  of  ringed  mail,  that  gave  him 
All  the*  appearance  of  a  frog  ? 
In  the  long  train  also  saw  I 
Uany  intellectual  heroes ; 
Tnere  I  recognized  our  WoKgang, 
By  his  eyes'  exceeding  lustre. 
Being  damn'd  by  Hengstenberg, 
In  bis  grave  he  cannot  slumber, 
But  his  earthly  love  for  hunting 
With  the  heathen  throng  continues. 
By  his  mouth's  sweet  smile  I  also 
Knew  again  the  worthy  William,* 
Whom  the  Puritans  had  likewise 
Cursed  with  bitterness ;  this  sinner 
Needs  must  join  at  night  that  savage 
Army,  on  a  black  steed  mounted ; 
On  an  ass,  and  close  beside  him 
Rode  a  man, — ^and,  O  good  heavens. 
By  his  weary,  praying  gestures, 
By  his  pioiis  snow-white  nightcap, 
By  his  grief  of  soul,  I  straightway 
Knew  our  old  friend,  Francis  Horn  1 
'  Just  for  writing  commentaries 
On  the  world-child  Shakespear,  must  he 
After  death,  poor  fellow,  with  him 
Bide  amidst  ike  wild  hunt's  tmnult  I 
Ah  I  he  now  must  ride,  poor  Francis, 
Who  to  walk  was  well-nigh  frighten'd ; 
Who  ne'er  moved,  except  when  praying, 
Or  when  chatting  o'er  flie  tea-tray  I 
Would  not  all  the  aged  maidens. 
Long  accustomed  to  caress  him, 
Shudder  if  they  came  to  hear  that 
Francis  was  a  savage  huntsman ! 
When  he  breaks  into  a  gallop, 
The  great  William  with  derision 
Looks  on  his  poor  commentator 
Who  at  donkey's  pace  goes  after, 
*  Shakespear. 


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800  Heine's  poems. 

Helplessly  and  wildly  clinging 
To  the  pommel  of  his  donkey, 
Yet  in  death  as  well  as  lifetime 
Following  faithfully  his  author. 

Many  ladies  saw  I  also 

In  the  spirits'  wild  procession, 

Many  beauteous  nymphs  amongst  them 

With  their  slender,  youthful  figures. 

They  ast^dle  sat  their  horses, 
Mythologically  naked ; 
Tet  their  long  and  curling  tresses 
Fell  low  down,  like  golden  mantles. 

Garlands  on  their  heads  they  carried, 
And  with  saucy  backward-bending 
Supercilious  wanton  postures 
Leafy  wands  kept  ever  swinging. 

Hard  beside  them  saw  I  certain 
Closely-button'd  dames  on  horseback 
On  their  ladies'  saddles  sitting 
With  their  falcons  on  their  fists. 

As  in  parody  behind  them 
On  iheir  knackers,  lanky  ponies, 
Rode  a  troop  of  gay  bedizen'd 
Women,  looking  like  comedians. 

Full  of  beauty  were  their  features. 
But  perchance  a  little  bold ; 
Madly  were  they  shouting  with  their 
Cheeks  so  full  and  wanton-painted. 

How  they  joyously  re-echoed. 
Notes  of  hunting-horns  and  laughter, 
Yelping  dogs  and  neighing  horses, 
Cracking  whips  and  shouts  and  halloing 

CAPUT  XIX. 

BUT,  resembling  beauty's  trefoil, 
In  the  midst  of  the  procession 
Figures  three  I  noticed ;  ne'er  I 
Can  forget  those  lovely  women. 


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ATTA  TBQXJi.  301 

Easily  the  first  one  knew  I 
By  the  crescent  on  her  forehead ; 
Like  a  statue  pure,  ail-proudly 
Onward  rode  the  mighty  goddess. 

High  up-tum'd  appear'd  her  tunic, 
Half  her  breast  and  hip  disclosing ; 
Torchlight,  moonlight  both  were  playing 
Gkiily  round  h^r  snowy  members. 

White  as  marble  were  her  features. 
Cold  as  marble  too ;  and  fearful 
Was  the  numbness  and  the  pali^esB 
Of  that  face,  so  st^n  and  noble. 

Yet  within  her  black  eye  plainly 
Terribly  but  sweetly  sp^kled 
A  mysterious,  glowing  fire, 
Spirit-dazzling  and  consuming. 

O,  how  alter'd  was  Diana 
Who,  with  haughty  chastity. 
To  a  stag  once  tum'd  Acteon, 
And  as  prey  to  doge  abandon'd ! 

Does  she  expiate  this  crime  now 
Join'd  to  these  gallant  companions? 
Like  a  wretched  spectral  creature 
Nightly  through  the  air  she  travels. 

Late,  indeed,  but  all  the  stronger 
She  to  thoughts  of  lust  awakeim, 
And  within  her  eyes  'tis  burning. 
Like  a  very  brand  of  hell. 

All  the  lost  time  now  laments  she. 
When  mankind  were  far  more  handsome 
And  by  quantity  perchance  she 
Now  makes  up  for  quality. 

Close  beside  her  rode  a  beauty 
Whose  fair  features  w^re  not  chis^'d 
Li  such  Grecian  mould,  yet  glisten'd 
With  the  Celtic  race*s  charms. 

This  one  was  the  fay  Abunde, 
Whom  I  easily  distinguished 
By  the  sweetness  of  her  smile, 
And  her  mad  and  hearty  laughter  I 


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802  hsinb's  poems. 

Hale  and  rosy  were  her  features, 
As  though  limn'd  by  Master  Greuze ; 
Heart-shaped  was  her  mouth,  and  open. 
Showing  teeth  of  dazzling  whiteness. 

Night-dress  blue  and  fluttering  wore  she, 
That  the  wind  to  lift  attempted ; 
Even  in  my  brightest  visions 
Never  saw  I  such  fair  shoulders ! 

Scarcely  could  I  keep  from  springing 
Out  of  window  to  embrace  them ; 
HI  should  J  have  fared,  however, 
For  my  neck  should  I  have  broken. 

She,  alas  1  would  but  have  titter'd 
If  before  her  feet,  all-bleeding, 
In  the  deep  abyss  I  tumbled, — 
Ah  I  a  laugh  like  this  well  know  1 1 

And  the  third  of  those  fair  women, 
Who  so  deeply  stirr'd  thy  bosom, — 
Was  she  but  a  female  devil 
Like  the  other  two  flrst  mention'd  ? 

Whether  devil  she  or  angel, 
Know  I  not ;  in  case  of  women 
One  knows  never  where  the  angel 
Ceases,  and  the  deuce  commences. 

On  her  glowing  sickly  features 
Lay  an  oriented  charm. 
And  her  costly  robes  reminded 
Of  Schehezerade's  sweet  stories. 

Soft  her  Ups,  just  like  pomegranates, 
And  her  nose  a  bending  lily, 
And  her  members  cool  and  slender 
As  the  palms  in  the  oasis. 

On  a  snowy  palfrey  sat  she, 
Whose  gold  bridle  by  two  negroes 
Was  conducted,  who  on  foot 
By  the  princess'  side  were  walking. 

And  in  truth  she  was  a  princess. 
Was  the  queen  of  far  Judaea, 
Was  the  lovely  wife  of  Herod, 
Who  the  Baptist's  hdad  demanded. 


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ATTA  TROLL.  303 

For  tills  deed  of  blood  she  also 
Was  accurs'd,  and  as  a  spectre 
With  the  wild  hunt  must  keep  riding, 
Even  to  the  day  of  judgment. 

In  her  Hands  she  evermore 
Bears  the  charger  with  the  Baptist's 
Head  upon  it,  which  she  kisses, — 
Yes,  the  head  she  kisses  wildly. 

For  she  once  loved  John  the  Baptist ; 
In  the  Bible  'tis  not  written. 
Yet  in  popular  tradition 
Lives  Herodias'  bloody  love. 

Otherwise  there's  no  explaining 

That  strange  fancy  of  the  lady, — 

Would  a  woman  ever  ask  for 

That  man's  head  for  whom  she  cared  not  ? 

She  was  somewhat  angry,  may  be. 
With  him, — ^had  him,  too,  beheaded ; 
But  when  she  upon  the  charger 
Saw  the  much-loved  head  lie  lifeless. 

Sore  she  wept,  and  lost  her  senses. 
And  she  died  of  love's  delirium. 
(Love's  delirium  I    Pleonasm ! 
Love  must  always  be  delirium !) 

Every  night  arising,  bears  she 
As  I've  said,  the  bloody  head 
In  her  hand  as  she  goes  hunting. 
Yet  with  foolish  woman's  fancy 

She  at  times  the  head  hurls  from  her 
Through  the  air,  with  childish  laughter. 
And  then  catches  it  again 
Very  nimbly,  like  a  plaything. 

And  as  she  was  riding  by  me, 
On  me  look'd  she,  and  she  nodded 
So  coquettishly  and  fondly, 
That  my  inmost  heart  was  shaken. 

Three  times  up  and  downward  moving 
The  procession  pass'd,  and  three  times 
Did  the  lovely  apparition 
Greet  me,  as  she  rode  before  me. 


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804  HEINB'6  POE2I8. 

When  tlie  train  at  last  bad  fSaded, 
And  the  tumult  was  extinguish'd, 
Still  that  loving  salutation 
Glow'd  within  my  inmost  brain. 

And  throughout  the  livelong  night 
I  my  wesaj  limbs  kept  tossing 
On  the  straw  (for  feather  beds 
Were  not  in  Uraca's  cottage), 

And  methought :  What  meaning  was  there 
In  that  strange,  mysterious  nodding  ^ 
Wherefore  didst  thou  gaze  upon  me 
With  such  tenderness,  Herodias  ? 

CAPUT  XX. 

'rjlWAS  the  sunrise.     Golden  arrows 
A    Shot  against  the  white  mist  fiercely. 
Which  tum*d  red,  as  though  sore  wounded, 
And  in  light  and  glory  melted. 

Finally  the  victory's  won, 
And  the  day,  the  triumphator. 
Stood,  in  full  and  beaming  splendour, 
On  the  summit  of  the  mountain. 

All  the  birds  in  noisy  chorus 
Twitter'd  in  their  secret  nests, 
And  a  smell  of  herbs  arose  too. 
Like  a  concert  of  sweet  odours. 

At  the  earliest  dawn  of  morning 
To  the  valley  we  descended, 
And  whilst  friend  Lascaro  follow^! 
On  the  traces  of  the  bear, 

I  the  time  to  kill  attempted 
With  my  thoughts,  and  yet  this  thinking 
Made  me  at  the  last  quite  weary, 
And  a  little  mournful  even. 

Weary,  then,  and  mournful  sank  I 
On  the  soft  moss-bank  beside  me. 
Under  yonder  mighty  ash-tree, 
Where  the  little  streamlet  flow'd, 


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ATTA  TBOLL.  305 

Which,  with  its  mysterious  plashing 
So  mysteriously  befool'd  me, 
That  all  thoughts  and  power  of  thinking 
From  my  spirit  pass'd  away. 

And  a  raging  yearning  seized  me 
For  a  dream,  for  death,  for  madness. 
For  that  woman-rider,  whom  I 
In  the  spirit-march  had  seen. 

O  ye  lovely  nightly  faces, 
Scared  away  by  beams  of  morning, 
Tell  me,  whither  have  ye  fleeted  ? 
Tell  me,  where  ye  dwell  at  daytime  ^ 

Under  olden  temples'  ruins, 

Far  away  in  the  Eomagna 

(So  'tis  said)  Diana  refuge 

Seeks  by  day  from  Christ's  dominion. 

Only  in  the  midnight  darkness 
From  her  hiding  place  she  ventures, 
And  rejoices  in  the  chase 
With  her  heathenish  companions. 

And  the  beauteous  fay  Abunde 
Of  the  Nazarenes  is  fearful, 
And  throughout  the  day  she  lingers 
Safe  within  her  Avalun. 

This  fair  island  lies  deep-hidden 
Far  off,  in  the  silent  ocean 
Of  romance,  that  none  can  reach  save 
On  the  fabled  horse's  pinions. 

Never  there  casts  care  its  anchor, 
Never  there  appears  a  steamer, 
Full  of  wonder-seeking  blockheads. 
With  tobacco-pipes  in  mouth. 

Never  reaches  there  the  languid 
Sound  of  bells,  so  dull  and  tedious, — 
That  incessant  bim-bom  clatter 
Which  the  fairies  so  detest. 

There,  in  never-troubled  pleasure, 
And  in  youth  eternal  blooming. 
Still  resides  the  joyous  lady, 
Our  blond  dame,  tiie  &y  Abunde. 

X 

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806  HEINE'S  POEMS. 

Laughingly  her  walks  there  takes  she 
Under  lofly  heliotropes. 
With  her  talking  train  beside  her. 
World-departed  Paladins, 

Well,  and  thou,  Herodias,  prythee 
Say  where  art  thou  ?    Ah,  I  know  it, 
Thou  art  dead,  and  liest  buried 
By  the  town  Jerusalem ! 

Stiffly  sleeps  by  day  thy  body. 
In  its  marble  coffin  prison'd  ; 
Yet  the  cracking  whips  and  halloing 
Waken  thee  at  midnight's  hour, 

And  the  wild  array  thou  followest 
With  Diana  and  Abunde, 
With  thy  merry  hunting  comrades, 
Who  hold  cross  and  pain  detested. 

O  what  sweet  society  ! 
Could  I  hunt  with  you  by  night-time 
Through  the  forests !     By  thy  side 
Always  would  I  ride,  Herodias  I 

For  *tis  thee  I  love  the  dearest ! 
More  than  yonder  Grecian  goddess, 
More  than  yonder  Noiihem  fairy, 
Love  I  thee,  thou  Jewess  dead ! 

Yes,  I  love  thee !    Well  I  know  it 
By  the  trembling  of  my  spirit ; 
Love  thou  me,  and  be  my  darling. 
Sweet  Herodias,  beauteous  woman 

I'm  the  yery  knight  thou  wantest  I 
Little  truly  it  concerns  me 
That  thou'rt  dead  and  damn'd  already, 
For  I'm  free  from  prejudices. 

My  own  happiness  'tis  only 
That  concerns  me,  and  at  times  I 
Feel  inclined  to  doubt  if  truly 
To  the  living  I  belong ! 

Take  me  as  thy  knight,  I  pray  theo^ 
As  thy  Cavalier  servente, 
And  thy  mantle  will  I  carry 
and  e'en  all  thy  whims  put  up  with. 


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ATTA  TROLL.  307 

Every  night  I'll  ride  beside  thee. 
With  the  army  wild  careeriug ; 
«  Merrily  we'll  talk  and  laugh  then 

At  my  frenzied  conversation. 

Thus  the  time  I'll  shorten  for  thee 
In  the  night ;  but  yet  by  day-time 
All  our  joy  will  fly,  and  weeping 
On  that  grave  I'll  take  my  seat. 

Yes,  I'll  sit  by  day-time  weeping 
On  the  regal  vault's  sad  ruins, 
On  the  grave  of  thee,  my  loved  one. 
By  the  town  Jerusalem. 

Aged  Jews,  who  chance  to  pass  me, 
Then  will  surely  think  I'm  sorrowing 
For  the  temple's  desolation, 
And  the  town  Jerusalem. 

CAPUT  XXL 

ARGONAUTS  without  a  ship, 
Who  on  foot  the  mountain  visit, 
And  instead  of  golden  fleeces 
Aim  at  nothing  but  a  bear's  skin, — 

We're,  alas  !  poor  devils  only, 
Heroes  of  a  modem  fashion, 
And  no  classic  poet  ever 
Will  in  song  immortalize  us. 

Yet  we  notwithstanding  sufPer'd 
Serious  hardships  1  O  what  rain 
Fell  upon  us  on  the  summit, 
Where  no  tree  or  hackney-coach  was ! 

Fierce  the  storm,  its  bonds  were  broken, 

And  in  buckets  it  descended ; 

Jason  surely  was  at  Colchis 

Never  drench'd  in  such  a  show'r-bath ! 

"  An  timbrella !  Gladly  would  I 
"  Give  you  six-and-thirty  kings* 
"  For  the  loan  of  one  lunbreUa  1" 
Cried  I, — and  the  water  dripp'd  still. 

*  Alluding  to  the  large  number  of  petty  sfattes  into  whir^ 
Gcnnany  is  divided. 


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808  HEnofS  POEMS. 

Fagg'd  to  deatli,  and  ont  of  temper. 
We  retmn'd,  like  half-diowii'd  puppies 
Late  at  night,  as  best  we  could. 
To  the  witch's  lofiy  cottage. 

There  beside  the  glowing  fire-place 
Sat  Uraca,  busy  combing 
Her  great  &t  and  ugly  png-dog ; 
Quickly  she  dismissed  the  latter. 

To  attend  to  ns  instead, 
And  my  bed  she  soon  got  ready. 
Loosening  first  my  et^pardillas. 
That  uncomfortable  foot-gear — 

Help'd  me  to  nndress,  my  stockings 
Puliing  off;  I  fomid  them  sticking 
To  my  legs,  as  close  and  fidthful 
As  the  friendship  of  a  blockhead. 

"  Quick  !  a  dressing-gown  I  I*d  give  you 
"  Six-and-thirty  kings  for  only 
"  One  dry  dressing-gown  !"  exclaim'd  I, 
As  my  wet  shirt  stcam'd  upon  me. 

Freezing  and  with  chattering  teeth,  I 
Stood  awhile  upon  the  hearth  ; 
By  the  fire  then  driven  senseless 
On  the  straw  at  length  I  sank. 

But  I  slept  not.     Blinking  look'd  I 
On  the  witch,  who  by  the  chimney 
Sat,  and  held  the  head  and  shoulders 
Of  her  son  upon  her  lap, 

Helping  to  undress  him.     Near  her 
Stood  upright  her  ugly  pug-dog, 
And  he  in  his  front  paw  managed 
Cleverly  to  hold  a  pot. 

From  the  pot  Uraca  took  some 
Keddish  fat,  and  with  it  rubb'd  the 
Kibs  and  bosom  of  her  son, 
Kubbing  hastily,  with  trembling. 

And  while  rubbing  him  and  salving, 
She  a  cradle-song  was  humming 
Through  her  nose,  whilst  strangely  crackled 
On  the  hearth  the  ruddy  flames. 


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ATTA  TBOLL.  309 

Like  a  corpse,  all  yellow,  bony, 
On  liis  mother's  lap  the  son  lay , 
Sorrowfal  as  death,  wide  open 
Stared  his  hollow,  pallid  eyes. 

Is  he  tmly  bnt  a  dead  man 
Who  each  night  by  love  maternal 
Hath  a  life  enchanted  giv*n  him 
By  the  aid  of  strongest  witch-salve? 

Wondrous  the  halfnsleep  of  fever, 
Where  the  leaden  limbs  feel  weary 
As  though  fetter'd,  and  the  senses 
0*er-eicited,  wide  awake  I 

How  the  herb-smell  in  the  chamber 
Troubled  me  I    With  painful  effort 
Thought  I  where  I  had  already 
Smelt  the  same,  but  vain  my  tiioughts  were. 

How  the  wind  a-down  the  chimney 
Grave  me  pain  I     Like  sighs  it  sounded 
Of  dejected  dried-up  spirits, — 
Like  the  sound  of  well-known  voices. 

Most  of  all  was  1  tormented 

By  the  stufiTd  birds,  which  were  standing 

On  a  shelf  above  my  head, 

Near  the  place  where  I  was  lying. 

They  their  wings  were  slowly  flapping 
And  with  awfdl  motion,  bending 
Downward  tow'rd  me,  forward  pushing 
Their  long  beaks,  like  human  noses. 

Ah !  where  have  I  seen  already 
Noses  such  as  these  ?    At  Hamburg, 
Or  at  Frankfort,  in  the  Jews*  street? 
Sad  the  glimmering  recollection ! 

I  at  last  was  overpower'd 
Quite  by  sleep,  and  in  the  place  of 
Wakeful,  terrible  phantasmas, 
Came  a  healthful,  steady  dream. 

And  I  dreamt  that  this  poor  cottage 
Suddenly  became  a  ball-room 
Which  by  columns  was  supported. 
And  by  candelabra  lighted. 

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310  Heine's  poems. 

Some  iDyisible  musioians 
Play'd  from  out  Eobert-le-Diable 
That  fine  crazy  dance  of  nuns ; 
All  alone  1  waJk'd  about  there. 

But  at  length  the  doors  were  opened, 
Open'd  wide  and  then  advanced 
With  a  step  both  slow  and  stately 
Guests  of  wonderful  appearance. 

They  were  solely  bears  and  spirits ! 
Walking  bolt  upright,  each  bear 
Led  a  spirit  as  his  partner, 
In  a  snow-white  grave-cloth  hidden. 

In  this  manner  pair*d,  began  they 
Waltzing  up  and  down  with  vigour 
In  the  halL     The  sight  was  curious, 
Laughable,  but  also  fearful ! 

For  the  awkward  bears  soon  found  it 
Difficult  to  keep  in  step 
With  the  white  and  airy  figures, 
Who  whirl'd  round  with  easy  motion. 

But  those  poor  unhappy  creatures 
Were  inexorably  driven. 
And  their  snorting  overpower'd 
E*en  the'  orchestral  double  bass. 

Oftentimes  one  couple  jostled 
'Gainst  another,  and  the  bear 
Gave  the  spirit  that  had  push*d  him 
Some  hard  kicks  on  his  hind  quarters. 

Often  in  the  dance's  bustle 
Would  a  bear  tear  off  the  shroud 
From  the  head  of  his  companion, 
And  a  death's  head  was  disclosed  thei^. 

But  at  length  with  joyous  uproar 
Crash'd  the  trumpets  and  the  cymbals, 
And  the  kettle-drums  loud  thunder' d. 
And  there  came  the  gaUopade. 

To  the  end  of  this  I  dreamt  not, — 
For  a  stupid  clumsy  bear 
Trod  upon  my  corns,  and  made  me 
Cry  aloud,  and  so  awoke  me. 


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ATTA  TROLL.  311 


CAPUT  XXIL 


PHCEBUS  in  his  sunny  droschka 
Lash'd  his  flaming  horses  onwards, 
And  had  half  his  course  already 
Through  the  spacious  heavens  completed 

Whilst  I  still  in  slumber  lay, 
And  of  bears  and  spirits,  strangely 
Intertwining  with  each  other 
In  quaint  arabesque,  was  dreaming. 

Midday  'twas  ere  I  awaken'd, 
And  I  found  myself  alone ; 
Both  my  hostess  and  Lascaro 
For  the  chase  had  started  early. 

In  the  hut  the  pug-dog  only 
Still  remain'd.     Beside  the  hearth  he 
Stood  upright  before  the  kettle, 
While  his  paws  a  spoon  were  holding. 

Admirably  had  they  taught  him 
Whensoever  the  broth  boil'd  over 
Hastily  to  stir  it  round, 
And  to  skim  away  the  bubbles. 

But  am  I  myself  bewitch'd  ? 
Or  still  blazes  there  the  fever 
In  my  head  ?     I  scarce  can  credit 
My  own  ears — the  pug-dog's  talking  1 

Yes,  he's  talking,  and  his  accent 
Gentle  is  and  Swabian ;  dreaming. 
As  though  buried  in  deep  thought, 
Speaks  he  in  the  foil' wing  fashion : 

"  Poor  unhappy  Swabian  poet ! 
"  In  a  foreign  land  I  sadly 
*'  Languish,  as  a  dog  enclmnted, 
**  And  a  witch's  kettle  watch  I 

**  What  a  shameful  sin  is  witchcraft  I 
**  O  how  sad,  how  deeply  tragic 
"  Is  my  fate, — with  human  feelings 
"  Underneath  a  dog'd  exterior ! 


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B12  HEnns's  poems. 

'  Would  that  I  at  home  had  tarriec 
**  With  my  trusty  school  companions ! 
**  They're  at  any  rate  no  wizards, — 
*'  Ne'er  bewitch'd  a  single  being ! 

"  Would  that  I  at  home  had  tarried 
*'  With  Charles  Mayer,  with  the  fragrant 
"  Wallflow'rs  of  my  native  country, 
'*  With  its  pudding-broth  delicious  I 

"  I'm  half  dead  now  with  nostalgia — 
*'  Would  that  I  could  see  the  smoke 
"  Bising  from  the  chimneys  where  they 
"  Vermicelli  cook  at  Stukkert !" 

When  I  heard  this,  deep  emotion 
Came  across  me  ;  quicMy  sprang  I 
From  the  couch,  approach'd  the  fireplace. 
And  address'd  him  with  compassion  : 

"  Noble  bard,  say  how  it  happens 

t*  That  thou'rt  in  this  witch's  cottage  ? 

"  Tell  me  wherefore  have  they  changed  thee 

"  Cruelly  into  a  pug-dog  ?" 

But  with  joy  exclaim'd  the  other : 
"  Then  thou'rt  really  not  a  Frenchman, 
"  But  a  German,  understanding 
"  All  my  silent  monologue  ? 

^'  Ah,  dear  countryman !  how  sad  that 
*'  Councllor-of-legation  KoUe, 
*'  When  we  o'er  our  pipes  and  glasses 
"  Held  discussions  in  the  beershop, 

"  Always  harp'd  upon  the  thesis 
"  That  by  travelling  alone  we 
"  Could  obtain  that  polish,  which  he 
"  Had  from  foreign  lands  imported ! 

"  So,  that  I  might  wipe  away  all 
"  That  raw  crust  which  stuck  upon  me^ 
"  And  like  KoUe  might  acquire 
"  Elegant  and  polish'd  manners, 

"  From  ray  country  I  departed, 

'^  And  while  thus  the  grand  tour  making, 

•*  Came  I  to  the  Pyrenees, 

'*  To  the  cottage  of  Uraca. 


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ATTA  TBOLL.  813 

"  I  an  introduction  brought  her 
"  From  Justinus  Kemer*,  never 
"  Thinking  that  this  so-called  friend 
''  Was  in  wicked  league  with  witches. 

**  Kindly  welcomed  me  Uraca, 
"  Yet,  to  my  alarm,  her  friendship 
"  Kept  on  growing,  till  converted 
"  At  the  last  to  sensual  passion. 

**  Yes,  immodesty  still  flickered 

"  Wildly  in  the  withered  bosom 

"  Of  this  wretched,  worthless  woman, 

"  And  she  now  must  needs  seduce  me  I 

**  Yet  implored  I :  *  Ah,  excuse  me, 
"  '  Worthy  madam !  I'm  no  frivlous 
** '  Groethe's  pupil,  but  belong 
"  *  To  the  poet-school  of  Swabia. 

** '  Modesty's  the  muse  we  worship, 
"  *  And  the  drawers  she  wears  are  made  of 
"  '  Thickest  leather — Ah,  good  madam, 
"  *  Do  not  violate  my  virtue ! 

'*  *  Other  poets  boast  of  genius, 
""  '  Others  fancy,  others  passion, 
"  *  But  the  pride  of  Swabian  poets 
'**  '  Is  especially  their  virtue. 

"  '  That's  the  only  wealth  we  boast  of  I 
"  '  Do  not  rob  me  of  the  modest 
"  '  And  religious  simple  garment 
"  '  Which  my  nakedness  doth  cover  I 

"  Thus  I  spoke,  and  yet  the  woman 

'*  Smiled  ironically ;  smiling 

"  She  a  switch  of  mistletoe 

"  Took,  and  then  my  head  touch'd  with  it. 

**  Thereupon  I  felt  a  chilly 

''  Strange  sensation,  like  a  goose-skin 

"  Being  o'er  my  members  drawn  ; 

"  Yet  in  truth  a  goose-skin  'twas  not — 

*  A  well-known  poet  and  phydoiAn,  bom  in  1786,  and 
rounder  of  the  so^edlled  Modern  Swabiaii  School  of  Poetrv. 


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314  HEINE'S  POEMS. 

**  On  the  contrary,  a  dog-skin 
"  Was  it  rather  ;  since  that  fearful 
"  Moment  have  I  been  converted 
"  As  thou  see'st  me,  to  a  pug-dog !" 

Poor  young  fellow !     Through  his  sobbing 
Not  a  word  more  could  he  utter  ; 
And  he  wept  with  so  much  fervour, 
That  in  tears  wellnigh  dissolved  he. 

"  Listen  now,"  I  said  with  pity : 
**  Can  I  possibly  relievo  you 
*'  Of  your  dog-skin,  and  restore  you 
"  To  humanity  and  verses  ?" 

But  the  other  raised  his  paws  up 
In  the  air  disconsolately 
And  despairingly  ;  at  length  he 
Spake  with  sighing  and  with  groaning : 

"  Till  the  Judgment  Day,  alas  !    I 
*'  In  this  dog-skin  must  be  prison'd, 
"  If  I'm  freed  not  from  enchantment 
'*  By  a  virgin's  self-devotion. 

'*  Yes,  a  pure  unsullied  virgin, 
"  Who  ne'er  touch'd  a  human  being, 
*'  And  the  fgllowing  condition 
"  Truly  keeps,  alone  can  free  me 

**  This  unsullied  virgin  must, 
"  In  the  night  of  Saint  Sylvester, 
'*  Eead  Gustavus  Pfizer's*  poems, 
"  And  not  go  to  sleep  one  moment  I 

*'  If  she  keeps  awake  while  reading, 
'*  And  her  modest  eye  ne'er  closes, — 
*'  Then  shall  I  be  disenchanted, 
"  Be  a  man, — yes,  be  undogg'd !" 

"  In  that  case,  good  friend,"  replied  I, 
"  I  at  any  rate  can  never 
"  Undertake  to  disenchant  you,  ^ 
**  For  I'm  no  unsullied  virgin ; 

*  A  voluminous  writer,  bom  at  Stuttgardt  in  1807.  He  at- 
lacki  d  Heine's  School  of  Poetry,  and  waa  repaid  by  Heine  in  the 
same  coin. 


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ATTA  TBOLL.  31f 

'^  And  still  less  should  I  be  ablo 
**  To  fulfil  the  task  of  reading 
"  All  Gustavus  Pfizer's  poems, 
"  And  not  fall  asleep  instanter  !" 

CAPUT  xxin. 

FBOM  the  witch's  entertainment 
To  the  valley  we  descended, 
And  our  footsteps  to  the  region 
Of  the  Positive  retum'd. 

Hence,  ye  spirits  I  Nightly  spectres  1 
Airy  figures !  Feverish  visions ! 
We  find  rational  employment 
Once  again  with  Atta  Troll. 

In  the  cavern,  by  his  young  ones, 
Lies  the  ol'd  bear,  soundly  sleeping, 
With  the  snore  of  conscious  virtue. 
And  at  length  he  wakes  with  gaping. 

Near  him  squats  young  Master  One-ear, 
And  his  head  he's  gently  scratching. 
Like  a  bard  whose  rhyme  is  wanting. 
And  upon  his  paws  he's  scanning. 

Likewise  by  their  father's  side 
On  their  backs  are  dreaming  lying 
Innocent  four-footed  lilies, 
Atta  Troll's  beloved  daughters. 

Say,  what  tender  thoughts  are  pining 
In  the  softly  blooming  spirits 
Of  these  snowy  young  bear- virgins  ? 
Moist  with  tears  their  eyes  are  glist'ning. 

Most  of  all  appears  the  youngest 
Deeply  moved.     Within  her  bosom 
She  a  blissful  twinge  is  feeling, 
And  to  Cupid's  might  succumbs  she. 

Yes,  that  little  god's  sharp  arrow 
Through  her  thick  skin  penetrated 
When  she  saw  Him — O,  good  heavens 
Him  she  loves,  a  living  man  is  ! 


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316  Heine's  poehb. 

Is  a  man,  yclept  Sdmapphahnski  ;'-^ 
Whilst  before  his  foes  retreating 
He  arriyed  by  chance  one  morning 
At  the  mountain  in  his  flight. 

Woes  of  heroes  touch  all  women. 
And  within  our  hero's  features 
Were  depicted  want  of  money, 
Pale  distress  and  gloomy  sorrow. 

All  his  military  chest, 
Two-and-twenty  silver  groschen. 
Which  he  had  when  Spain  he  entered. 
Was  the  prey  of  Espartero. 

E'en  his  watch  was  not  preserved  him. 
But  remain'd  at  Pampeluna 
In  a  pawn-shop.     'Twas  an  heirloom, 
Costly  and  of  genuine  silver. 

And  with  long  legs  swiffcly  ran  he, 
But  unconsciously  whilst  running 
Won  he  something  that's  far  better 
Than  the  best  of  fights, — a  heart ! 

Yes,  she  loves  him,  him,  the  archfoe ! 
O  thou  most  unhappy  bearess  I 
If  thy  father  knew  the  secret. 
He  would  growl  in  frightful  fashion. 

As  the  aged  Odoardo* 
Stabb'd  Emilia  Galotti 
In  his  pride  of  citizenship, 
So  would  also  Atta  Troll 

Sooner  have  destroy'd  his  daughter. 
Yes,  with  his  own  paws  destroy'd  her 
Than  permitted  her  to  tumble 
In  the  arms  of  any  monarch 

Yet  he  at  this  very  moment 

Is  of  tender  disposition, 

With  no  wish  to  crush  a  rosebud 

Ere  the  hurricane  has  stripp'd  it.t 

*  See  Lessing's  "  Emilia  Galotti." 

t  See  the  concluding  words  of  the  last  scene  but  one  of  the 
above  play. 


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ATTA   TBOLL.  317 

Tenderly  lies  Atta  Troll 

In  the  cavern,  by  his  young  ones. 

0*er  him  creep,  like  death's  forebodings, 

Mournful  yearnings  for  the  future. 

"  Children,"  sigh*d  he,  as  his  great  eyes 
Suddenly  'gan  dripping,  "  children, 
"  All  my  earthly  pilgrimage 
"  Is  accomplish'd,  we  must  part  now. 

"  For  to-day  at  noon  whilst  sleeping 
"  Came  a  vision  full  of  meaning, 
*'  And  my  soul  enjoy 'd  the  blissful 
'*  Foretaste  of  an  early  death. 

"  Now,  I'm  far  from  superstitious, 
"  I'm  no  giddy  bear, — yet  are  there 
**  Certain  things  'twixt  earth  and  heiiven 
"  Unaccountable  to  thinkers. 

"  Over  world  and  fate  whilst  poring, 
''  Fell  I  fast  asleep,  with  yawning, 
"  And  I  dreamt  that  I  was  lying 
"  Underneath  a  mighty  tree. 

*'  From  the  branches  of  this  tree  there 
**  Trickled  down  some  whitish  honey, 
'*  Gliding  in  my  open  muzzle, 
"  And  I  felt  a  sweet  enjoyment. 

'*  As  I  blissfully  peer'd  upwards, 

"  Saw  I  on  the  very  tree-top 

"  Seven  tiny  little  bears 

"  Sliding  up  and  down  the  branches. 

**  Tender,  pretty  little  creatures, 

"  With  a  skin  of  rose-red  colour, 

"  While,  like  silk,  from  their  dear  shoulders 

*^  Hung  a  something,  like  two  pinions. 

"  Yes,  those  rose-red  little  bears 

"  Were  adom*d  with  silken  pinions, 

**  And  with  sweet  celestial  voices, 

"  Sounding  like  a  flute's  notes,  sang  they  I 

**  As  they  sang,  my  skin  tum'd  ice-cold, 
"  And  from  out  my  skin  there  mounted, 
*'  Like  a  soaring  flame,  my  spirit, 
'*  Badiantly  to  heaven  ascending." — 


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818  Heine's  POEMa 

Thus  dpake  Atta  Troll  in  quiviiing 
Tender  grunting  tones ;  a  moment 
Paused  he,  full  of  melancholy — 
But  his  ears  with  sudden  impulse 

Prick'd  he  up,  and  strangely  shook  they, 
Whilst  from  off  his  coucn  upsprang  he, 
Trembling,  bellowing  with  rapture : 
"  Do  ye  hear  that  sound,  my  children  ? 

"  Is  it  not  the  darling  accents 

*'  Of  your  mother  ?     O,  well  know  I, 

"  'Tis  the  roaring  of  my  Mumma  ! 

**  Mumma !  Yes,  my  swarthy  Mumma !" 

Atta  Troll,  these  Words  pronouncing, 
Hastened,  like  a  crazy  being, 
From  the  cavern  to  destruction  ! 
Ah,  he  rush'd  to  meet  his  doom ! 

CAPUT  XXI 

IN  the  vale  of  Eonceval 
On  the  very  spot  where  whilome 
Charlemagne's  unhappy  nephew 
To  the  foe  his  life  surrender'd. 

There,  too,  fell  poor  Atta  Troll, 
And  he  fell  by  cunning,  like  him 
Whom  the  base  equestrian  Judas, 
Ganelon  of  Mainz,  betrayed. 

Ah  I  that  noblest  bear's-emotion, 
Namely  his  uxorious  feelings. 
Was  a  snare  which  old  XJraoa 
Cunningly  avail' d  herself  of.        * 

She  the  growl  of  swarthy  Mumma 
Copied  with  such  great  perfection, 
That  poor  Atta  Troll  was  tempted 
Out  of  his  secure  bear's-cavem. 

On  the  wings  of  yearning  ran  he 
Through  the  vale, — oft  stood  he,  gently 
Snuffing  at  a  rock  in  silence, 
Thinking  Mumma  was  concealed  there. 


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ATTA    mOLL.  819 

Ah!  conceal'd  there  was  Lascaro 
With  his  musket,  and  he  shot  him 
Through  the  middle  of  his  heart,  whence 
Gush'd  a  ruddy  stream  of  blood. 

Once  or  twice  his  head  he  waggled, 
But  at  last  with  heavy  groaning 
Fell  he  down,  and  wildly  gasp'd  he, 
And  his  latest  sigh  was — "  Mumma  ** 

Thus  the  noble  hero  fell ; 
Thus  he  died.     And  yet  immortal 
Will  he  in  the  poet's  numbers 
After  death  arise  in  glory. 

Yes,  he'll  rise  again  in  numbers, 
And  his  glory,  grown  colossal,. 
On  four-footed  solemn  trochees 
O'er  the  face  of  earth  stride  proudly. 

And  his  tomb  Bavaria's  monarch 
Will  erect  in  the  Walhalla, 
Writing  on  it  this  inscription, 
In  true  lapidary  style  : 

"  Atta  Troll ;  a  bear  of  impulse ; 
"  Devotee  ;  a  loving  husband  ; 
'*  Full  of  sans-culottic  notions, 
"  Thanks  to  the  prevailing  fashion. 

"  Wretched  dancer ;  strong  opinions 

"  Bearing  in  his  shaggy  bosom ; 

"  Often  stinking  very  badly ; 

"  Talentless ;  a  character  1"  < 

CAPUT  XXV. 

THEEE-and-thirty  aged  women, 
Wearing  on  their  heads  the  scarlet 
Old  Biscayan  caps  we  read  of, 
Stood  around  the  village  entrance. 

One,  like  Deborah,  amongst  them 
Beat  the  tambourine,  and  danced  too^ 
And  she  sang  a  song  of  triumph 
O'er  Lascaro,  the  bear-slayer. 


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/ 
/ 
/ 


320  Heine's  poems. 

Four  strong  men  upon  their  shoulders 
Bore  the  vanquish'd  bear  in  triumph  ; 
Upright  sat  he  on  the  seat, 
L&e  a  sickly  bathing  patient. 

And  behind,  as  if  related 

To  the  dead  bear,  went  Lascaro 

With  Uraca  ;  right  and  left  she 

Bow'd  her  thanks,  though  much  embarrass'd 

And  the  Mayor's  Assistant  gave  them 
Quite  a  speech  before  the  town  hall, 
When  the  grand  procession  got  there. 
And  he  spoke  on  many  subjects, — 

As,  for  instance,  on  the  increase 
Of  the  navy,  on  the  press, 
On  the  weighty  beetroot  question, 
On  the  curse  of  party  spirit. 

After  folly  illustrating 

Louis  Philippe's  special  merits, 

He  proceeded  to  the  bear. 

And  Lascaro's  great  achievement. 

**  Thou,  Lascaro !"  cried  the  speaker, 
As  with  his  tricolour'd  sash  he 
Wiped  the  sweat  from  off  his  forehead, 
"  Thou,  Lascaro  I  Thou,  Lascaro ! 

"  Thou  who  bravely  hast  deliver'd 
"  France  and  Spain  from  Atta  Troll, 
"  Thou'rt  the  hero  of  both  countries. 
*'  Pyrenean  Lafayette !" 

When  Lascaro  in  this  manner 
Heard  officially  his  praises, 
In  his  beard  with  pleasure  laugh'd  he, 
And  quite  blush' d  with  satisfaction, 

And  in  very  broken  accents. 
One  word  o'er  another  stumbling. 
Gave  he  utt'rance  to  his  thanks 
For  this  most  exceeding  honour  I 

Every  one  with  deep  amazement 
Gazed  upon  this  sight  miwontedy 
And  the  aged  women  mutter'd 
Li  alarm,  beneath  their  breath  : 


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▲TTA  TBOLL.  321 

*^  Why,  Lascaro  htMS  ibeen  laughing  1 
"  Why,  Lascaro  has  been  blushing  1 
**  Why,  Lascaro  has  been  speaking! 
'*  He,  the  dead  son  of  the  witch  I" — 

Atta  Troll  that  very  day  was 
Fla/d,  and  then  they  sold  by  anction 
His  poor  skin.     A  furrier  bought  it 
For  one  hundred  francs,  hard  money. 

He  most  beautifully  trimm'd  it 
With  a  lovely  scarlet  border, 
And  then  sold  it  for  just  double 
What  it  cost  him  in  the  first  plaea 

Juliet  then  became  its  owner 
At  third  hand,  and  in  her  bedroom 
Lies  it  now  in  Paris,  serving 
As  a  rug  beside  her  bed. 

O,  with  naked  feet  how  often 
Have  I  stood  at  night  upon  this 
Earthly  brown  coat  of  my  hero, 
On  the  skin  of  Atta  Troll  I 

And  overcome  by  sad  reflections, 
Schiller's  words  I  then  remember'd : 
*^  What  in  song  shall  be  immortal 
"  Must  in  actual  life  first  die  1"* 

CAPUT  XXVI. 

"ITTELL,  and  Mumma  ?    Ah,  poor  Mummt 

▼  T    Is  a  woman  I  Frailty 
Is  her  name !  Alas !  all  women 
Are  as  firail  as  any  porcelain. 

When  by  fiEite's  hand  she  was  parted 
From  her  glorious  noblo  husband, 
She  by  no  means  died  of  sorrow. 
Nor  succumbed  to  her  affliction. 

On  the  contrary,  she  gaily 
Went  on  living,  went  on  dancing 
As  before,  witii  ardour  wooing 
For  the  public's  daily  plaudits. 

♦  See  the  end  of  Schiller's  "  Goda  of  Greece.* 

Y 


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522  Heine's  poems. 

Finally  she  found  a  solid 
Situation,  and  provision 
For  the  whole  of  life,  at  Paris 
In  the  famed  Jaardin  des  Plante$. 

When  I  chanced  the  other  Sunday 
With  my  Juliet  to  go  thither 
And  expounded  Nature  to  her. 
Of  the  plants  and  beasts  conversing. 

Showing  the  giraffes  and  cedars 
Of  Mount  Lebanon,  the  mighty 
Dromedary,  the  gold  pheasants, 
And  the  zebra, — as  we  chatted 

It  so  happened  that  at  length  we 
Stood  before  the  pit's  close  railing 
Where  the  bears  are  all  collected,  — 
Gracious  heavens,  what  saw  we  there ! 

An  enormous  desert-bear 
From  Siberia,  white  and  hairy. 
With  a  lady-bear  was  playing 
A  too-tender  game  of  love  there. 

And  the  latter  was  our  Mumma  I 
Was  the  wife  of  Atta  Troll ! 
Well  I  knew  her  by  the  tender 
Humid  glances  of  her  eye. 

Yes,  'twas  she  I  the  South 's  black  au,ughtf>r  \ 
She  it  was, — yes,  Madame  Mumma 
With  a  Kussian  is  now  living. 
With  a  Northern  wild  barbarian  ! 

With  a  simp'ring  face  a  negro 
Who  approach'd  us,  thus  addressed  mc  : 
*'  Is  there  any  sight  more  pleasing 
"  Than  to  see  two  lovers  happy  ?" 

I  replied  :  "  Pray  tell  me  whom.  Sir, 
'*  I've  the  honour  of  addressing  ?" 
But  the  other  cried  with  wonder : 
"  Don't  you  really  recollect  me  ? 

"  Why,  the  Moorish  prince  am  I 
**  Who  in  Freiligrath  was  drumming ; 
**  Things  in  Germany  went  badly, 
^  I  was  far  too  isolated. 


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ATTA   TROLL.  323 

"  Here,  however,  where  as  keeper 
'*  I  am  station'd,  where  I'm  living 
*'  'Mongst  the  lions,  plants,  and  tigers 
*'  Of  mj  home  within  the  tropics, 

"  Here  I  find  it  much  more  pleasant 
'*  Than  your  German  feiirs  attending, 
"  Where  I  day  by  day  was  drumming 
*'  And  was  fed  so  very  badly. 

"  I  quite  recently  was  married 
**  To  a  fair  cook  from  Alsatia ; 
"  When  within  her  arms  reposing 
"  Feel  I  then  at  home  completely. 

"  Her  dear  feet  remind  me  closely 

**  Of  our  darling  elephants  ; 

"  When  she  speaks  in  French,  her  language 

"  My  black  mother -tongue  resembles. 

''  Oft  she  scolds  me,  and  I  think  then 
**  Of  the  rattling  of  that  drum 
**  Which  had  skulls  around  it  hanging ; 
^'  Snake  and  lion  fled  before  it. 

*'  Yet  with  feeling  in  the  moonlight 
'*  Weeps  she,  like  a  crocodile 
"  Peeping  from  the  tepid  river 
'*  To  enjoy  a  little  coolness. 

"And  she  gives  me  charming  tit-bits, 
*'  And  I  thnve  upon  them,  eating 
"  Once  again,  as  on  the  Niger, 
**  With  old  African  enjoyment 

"  I  am  getting  fat ;  my  belly's 

**  Grown  quite  round,  and  from  my  shirt  it 

"  Is  projecting,  like  a  black  moon 

**  From  tho  snow-white  clouds  advancing." 

CAPUT  XXVII. 

CTo  Augustus  Yamhagen  Yon  Ense.) 

"T]trS^^^  ^  heaven.  Master  Louis, 
T  T    "  Did  you  pick  up  aU  this  crazy 
**  Nonsense  ?" — these  the  very  words  were 
Which  the  Cardinal  d'Este  made  use  of. 


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824  HEINE'S  POEMS. 

When  Le  read  the  well-known  poem 
Of  Orlando's  frantic  doings. 
Which  politely  Ariosto 
To  his  Eminence  inscribed. 

Yes,  mj  good  old  friend  Yamhagen, 
Yes,  I  round  thy  lips  see  plainly 
HoVring  those  exact  expressions, 
By  the  same  sly  smile  attended. 

Often  dost  thou  laugh  whilst  reading, 
Yet  at  intervals  thy  forehead 
Solemnly  is  wrinkled  over, 
And  these  thongihts  then  steal  across  thee  i 

"  Sounds  it  not  like  those  young  visions 
"  That  I  dreamt  once  with  Ghamisso, 
^'  And  Brentano  and  Fouque, 
^'  In  the  blue  and  mocmlight  evenings  ?* 

'^  Is  it  not  the  dear  notes  riding 
"  From  the  long-lost  fcwrest  chapel  ? 
"  Sound  the  well-known  cap  and  bells  not 
"  Eoguishly  at  intervals  ? 

"  In  the  nightingale's  sweet  chorus 
"  Breaks  the  bear's  deep  double-bass, 
**  Dull  and  growling,  interchanging 
"  In  its  turn  with  spirit-vBhispers ! 

**  Nonsense,  which  pretends  to  wisdom ! 
"  Wisdom,  which  has  tum'd  quite  crazy ! 
"  Dying  sighs,  which  suddenly 
"  Into  laughter  are  converted! " — 

Yes,  my  friend,  tho  sounds  indeed  'tis 
From  the  long  departed  dream-time ; 
Save  that  modem  quavers  often 
'Midst  the  olden  keynotes  jingle. 

Signs  of  trembling  thou'lt  discover 
Here  and  there,  despite  the  boasting ; 
I  commend  this  little  poem 
To  thy  well-proved  gentleness  I 

♦  This  refers  to  the  time  of  Heine's  residence  in  Berlin,  whcsn 
lie  was  intimate  with  these  and  other  well-known  personages 
See  Sketch  of  his  Life,  ante. 


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ATTJL  TROLL.  325 

Ab !  perchance  it  is  the  last  free 
Forest-song  of  the  Romantic ; 
In  the  daytime's  wild  confusion 
Will  it  sadly  die  Awoy. 

Other  times  and  other  birds  tool 
Other  birds  and  other  music ! 
What  a  crackling,  like  the  geese's 
Who  preserved  tibe  Oapitol  I 

What  a  twitt'ring !     'Tis  the  sparrows^ 
While  their  daws  hold  farthing  mshlightB; 
Tet  they're  strutting  like  Jove's  eagle 
With  the  mighty  ^miderboltl 

What  a  cooing !    Tnrtiedoves  'tk ; 
Sick  of  love,  they  now  are  hating, 
And  h^Qceforwiurd,  'stead  of  yena% 
Draw  the  chariot  of  Bellona  I 

What  a  humming,  WGrld-convnkiogl 
'Tis  in  feust  the  big  cock-chafers 
Of  the  springtime  of  the  people, 
Smitten  with  a  sadden  frenzy ! 

Other  times  and  other  birds  tool 
Other  birds  and  other  music  i 
They  perchance  could  give  me  pleasoM 
Hftd  I  only  other  eut  \ 


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826 

\ 

GERMANY/  ^ 

A  WINTER  TALE. 


CAPUT  I. 

IN  the  mournful  month  of  November  *twas, 
The  winter  days  had  returned, 
The  wind  from  the  trees  the  foliage  tore, 
When  I  towards  Grermany  joumied. 

And  when  at  length  to  the  frontier  I  came 

I  felt  a  mightier  throbbing 
Within  my  breast,  tears  fill'd  my  eyes, 

And  I  wellnigh  broke  into  sobbing. 

And  when  I  the  German  language  heard, 
Strange  feelings  each  other  succeeding, 

I  felt  precisely  as  though  my  heart 
Eight  pleasantly  were  bleeding. 

A  little  maiden  sang  to  the  harp  ; 

Real  feeling  her  song  was  conveying, 
Though  false  was  her  voice,  and  yet  I  felt 

Deep  moved  at  hearing  her  playing. 

She  sang  of  love,  and  she  sang  of  love's  woes. 

Of  sacrifices,  and  meeting 
Again  on  high,  in  yon  better  world 

Where  vanish  our  sorrows  so  fleeting. 

She  sang  of  this  earthly  valley  of  tears, 
Of  joys  which  so  soon  have  vanished. 

Of  yonder,  where  revels  the  glorified  soul 
In  eternal  bliss,  grief  being  banish'd. 

The  song  of  renunciation  she  sang, 

The  heavenly  eiapopeia. 
Wherewith  the  people,  the  booby  throng, 

Are  hush'd  when  they  soothing  require. 

*  The  slightly  irregular  metre  of  this  fine  poem  is  a  close  ccpy 
of  the  original. 


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GERMANY.  327 

1  know  the  tune,  and  I  know  the  text, 

I  know  the  people  who  wrote  it ;         » 
I  know  that  in  secret  they  drink  but  wine,  * 
'     And  in  public  a  wickedness  vote  it. 

A  song,  friends,  that's  new,  and  a  better  one,  too, 
Shall  be  now  for  your  benefit  given  1 

Our  object  is,  that  here  on  earth 

We  may  mount  to  the  realms  of  heaven. 

On  earth  we  fain  would  happy  be. 

Nor  starve  for  the  sake  of  the  stronger ; 

The  idle  stomach  shall  gorge  itself 

With  the  fruit  of  hard  labour  no  longer. 

Bread  grows  on  the  earth  for  every  one, 

Enough,  and  e'en  in  redundance, 
And  roses  and  myrtles,  beauty  and  joy, 

And  sugarplums  too  in  abimdance. 

Yes,  sugarplums  for  every  one. 

As  soon  as  the  plums  are  provided ; 

To  angels  and  sparrows  we're  quite  content 
That  heaven  should  be  confided. 

If  after  death  our  pinions  should  grow, 

We'll  pay  you  a  visit  auspicious 
In  regions  above,  and  with  you  we'll  eat 

Sweet  tarts  and  cakes  deUcious. 

A  song  that's  new,  and  a  better  one,  too, 
Eesounds  like  fiddle  and  flute  now  ; 

The  Miserere's  at  last  at  an  end. 
The  funeral  bells  are  mute  now. 

The  maiden  Europe  has  been  betroth'd 
To  the  handsome  Genius  Freedom ; 

They  clasp  and  kiss  each  other  with  warmth, 
As  their  newborn  passions  lead  'em. 

The  priestly  blessing  may  absent  be, 
But  the  wedding  is  still  a  wedding ; 

So  here's  long  life  to  the  bridegroom  and  bride, 
And  the  future  iruit  of  their  bedding  I 

An  epithalamium  is  my  song, 

My  latest  and  best  creation ; 
Within  my  soul  are  shooting  the  stars 

That  proclaim  its  inauguration. 


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328  Heine's  poems. 

Those  Rtars  inspired  blaze  wildly  on 
In  torrents  of  flame,  and  with  wonder 

I  feel  myself  full  of  unearthly  strength, 
I  could  rend  e*en  oaks  asunder  I 

Since  I  on  Germany *s  ground  have  trod, 

I'm  pervaded  by  magical  juices ; 
The  giant  has  touched  his  mother  once  more, 

And  the  contact  new  vigour  produces. 

CAPUT  II. 

WHILST  heavenly  joys  were  warblod  thus 
And  sung  by  the  little  maiden, 
The  Prussian  douaniers  searched  my  trunk, 
As  soon  as  the  coach  was  imladen. 

They  poked  their  noses  in  every  thing, 
Eadi  handkerchief,  shirt,  and  stoc^g  ; 

They  sought  for  jewels,  prohibited  books, 
Aiid  lace,  with  a  rudeness  quite  shocking. 

Ye  fools,  so  closely  to  search  my  trunk  I 

Ye  will  find  in  it  really  nothing ; 
My  contraband  goods  I  carry  about 

In  my  head,  not  hid  in  my  clothing. 

Point  lace  is  there,  thaVs  finer  far 

Than  Brussels  or  Mechlin  laces ; 
If  once  I  mipack  my  point,  'twill  prick 

And  cruelly  scratch  your  faces. 

In  my  head  I  carry  my  jewelry  all, 

The  Future's  crown-diamonds  spliimdid, 

The  new  god's  temple-ornaments  rich, 
The  god  as  yet  not  comprehended. 

And  many  books  also  you'd  see  in  my  head, 

If  the  top  were  only  off  it  I 
My  head  is  a  twittering  bird's  nest,  full 

Of  books  that  they  gladly  would  forfeit 

Believe  me  that  matters  are  no  worse  off 

In  the  library  e'en  of  the  devil ; 
E'en  Hoffinann  of  Fallersleben*  ne'er  wrote 

Any  works  that  were  half  so  eviL 

♦  A  popular  German  poet,  bom  in  1798,  who  was  deprived  <A 
his  professorahip  in  the  University  of  Breslan,  in  1S42,  for  pub- 
lishing a  volume  entitled  "*  Unpolitical  Songs.'* 


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GERM1K7.  329 

A  passenger  who  stood  by  my  side 
Bemark'd  that  we  now  had  before  ns 

The  famous  Prussian  Zollyerein, 
The  customhouses'  yast  chorus. 

**  The  ZoUverein" — thus  he  observed, — 

**  Will  found  our  nationality, 
"  And  join  our  scattered  fatherland 

"  In  bonds  of  cordiality. 

"  'Twill  give  us  external  unity, — 
"  That  kind  that's  material  and  real  ; 

'^  The  censorship  gives  us  the  other  kind, 
''  That's  ghostly  and  ideaL 

^'  It  gives  us  internal  unity, 

**  In  thought  as  well  as  in  feelings ; 

**  A  united  Germany  need  we  to  rule 
^*  Our  outward  and  inward  dealings.*' 

CAPUT  m. 

IN  the  old  cathedral  at  Aix-la-ChapeUe 
Lie  btirifjd  great  Charlemagne's  ashes ; 
(Not  the  living  Charles  Mayer  in  Swabia  bom. 
Who  the  w^ter  of  so  much  trash  is  I) 

As  the  smalle&pt  of  poets  I'd  sooner  live 

At  StukkerA,  by  Neckar's  fair  river. 
Than  be  buriAd  as  Emp'ror  at  Aix-la-Chapelle, 

And,  so  be/  extinguish'd  for  ever. 

In  the  atre/Bts  of  Aix-la-Ohapelle  the  dogs 
Are  ^nwii'd,  and  humbly  implore  us : 
^.  strto/ger,  prythee  give  us  a  kick, 
V  ^Ja  to  life  for  a  time  thus  restore  us.** 

br'd  along  in  this  tedious  place 
L  hour,  with  great  perseverance, 
Ai  1^  that  ike  Prussian  soldiery 

tiot  the  least  changed  in  appearance. 

Th      /liigh  red  collar  still  they  wear, 

Vith  the  same  grey  mantle  below  i< — 
(7     Phe  Bed  betokens  the  blood  of  the  Frencb, 
Dg  Edmer  the  youthful  poet). 

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330  HEINE  S  K)EMS. 

They  are  still  the  wooden  pedantic  race, 

In  every  motion  displaying 
The  same  right  angle,  and  every  face 

A  frigid  conceit  still  betraying. 

They  walk  about  stiffly,  as  though  upon  stilts, 
Stuck  up  as  straight  as  a  needle, 

Appearing  as  if  they  had  swallow'd  the  stick 
Once  used  as  the  best  means  to  wheedle. 

Yes,  ne'er  has  entirely  vanished  the  rod, 
They  carry  it  now  inside  them  ; 

Familiar  Du  will  recall  the  old  Er 

Wherein  they  were  wont  to  pride  them. 

The  long  mustachio  nothing  more 
Than  the  pigtail  of  old  discloses 

The  tail  that  formerly  hung  behin#L 
Is  hanging  right  under  their  noses. 

I  was  not  displeased  with  the  new  costume 
Of  the  cavalry,  I  must  confess  it ; 

And  chiefly  the  headpiece,  the  helmet  in  faci 
With  the  steel  point  above  it,  to  dress  ij 

It  seem^  so  knightly,  and  takes  one  ^ack' 
To  the  sweet  romance  of  past  agesy 

To  the  Countess  Johanna  of  Montfj^acon, 
Tieck,  Uhland,  Fouqu^,  and  sucli  sages 

The  middle  ages  it  calls  to  mind. 
With  their  squires  and  noble  infe! 

Who  in  their  bosoms  fidelity  bore. 
And  escutcheons  upon  their  poster: 

Crusades  and  tourneys  it  brings  back 
And  love,  and  respect  at  a  distance, 

And  times  of  faith,  ere  printing  was  kno^ 
When  newspapers  had  no  existence. 

Yes,  yes,  I  admire  the  helmet,  it  shows 

An  intellect  truly  enchanting  ! 
Right  royal  indeed  the  invention  was. 

The  poiJit  is  really  not  wanting ! 
If  a  storm  should  arise,  a  peak  like  this 

(The  thought  is  terribly  fright'ning) 
On  your  romantic  head  might  attract 

The  heavens*  most  modem  lightning  I 


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GBBMANY.  £^31 

At  Aix-la-Chapelle,  on  the  posthouse  arms, 

I  saw  the  bird  detested 
Yet  once  again.     With  poisonous  glare 

His  eyes  upon  me  rested. 

Detestable  bird  I  If  e'er  thou  should*st  fall 
In  my  hands,  thou  creature  perfidious, 

I  would  tear  thy  feathers  from  off  thy  back, 
And  hack  off  thy  talons  so  hideous ! 

And  then  I  would  stick  thee  high  up  on  a  polo 

In  the  air,  thou  wicked  freebooter, 
And  then  to  the  joyful  shooting  match 

Invite  each  Ehenish  sharpshooter. 

As  for  him  who  succeeds  in  shooting  thee  down, 
The  crown  and  sceptre  shall  proudly 

Howard  the  worthy ;  the  trumpets  we'll  blow, 
"  Long  life  to  the  king,"  shouting  loudly.* 

CAPUT  IV. 

'riiwAS  late  at  night  when  I  reach'd  Cologne, 
X     The  Ehine  was  past  me  rushing. 
The  air  of  Germany  on  mo  breath'd, 
And  I  felt  its  influence  giishing 

Upon  my  appetite.     I  ate 

Some  omelets,  together  with  bacon ; 
And  as  they  were  salt,  some  Ehenish  wine 

Was  by  me  also  taken. 

The  Ehenish  wine  gleams  like  very  gold, 
When  quaff 'd  from  out  a  green  rummer ; 

If  thou  dnnk'st  a  few  pints  in  excess,  'twill  give 
Thy  nose  the  colour  of  summer. 

So  sweet  a  tickling  attacks  the  nose, 

One's  sensations  grow  fonder  and  fonder ; 

It  drove  me  out  in  the  darkening  night. 
Through  the  echoing  streets  to  wander. 

The  houses  of  stone  upon  me  gazed. 
As  if  wishing  to  tell  me  the  mysteries 

And  legends  of  times  that  have  long  gone  by, — 
The  town  of  Cologne's  old  histories. 

*  The  last  four  verses  were  erased  by  the  censors  from  fht 
original  edition. 


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332  HSINE^S  POEMS. 

Yes,  here  it  was  tibat  the  clergy  of  yore 

Dragg'd  on  their  pions  existence ; 
Here  ruled  the  dark  men,  whose  story's  preserved 

By  XJlrich  yon  Hutten'B*  assistance. 

'Twas  here  that  the  nans  and  monks  once  danced 

In  mediflsval  gyrations, 
Here  GcAogae's  own  Menzel,  Hoogstraaten  f  by  name, 

Wrote  his  bitter  dennnciabions. 

'Twas  here  that  the  flames  of  the  faneral  pile 

Both  books  and  men  once  swallow'd ; 
The  bells  rang  merrily  all  the  while, 

And  Kyrie  Eleison  fbllow'd. 

Stupidity  here  and  spitefulness 

Like  dogs  in  the  street  coquetted ; 
In  religious  hatred  the  brood  still  exists, 

Though  greatly  to  be  regretted, 

But  see,  where  the  moonlight  yonder  gleams, 

A  form  of  a  ;mon8trous  sort  is  I 
As  black  as  the  devil  it  rears  its  head, — 

Cologne  Cathedral  in  short  'tis. 

'Twas  meant  a  bastile  of  the  spirit  to  be, 
And  the  cunning  papists  be&ou^t  them : 

''In  this  prison  gigantio  shall  pine  away 

''  Grerman  inteUects,  when  we  have  cau^it  them." 

Then  Luther  appeared,  and  soon  by  his  month 

A  thundering  **  Halt  !*'  was  spoken. 
Since  then  the  Cathedral  no  progress  has  made 

In  building,  the  charm  being  broken. 

It  never  was  finished,  and  this  is  as  well, 

For  its  very  non-termination 
A  monument  makes  it  of  German  strength 

And  Protestant  reformation. 

Ye  Cathedral-Society's  members  vain, 

With  powerless  hands  have  ye  risen 
To  continue  the  work  that  so  long  has  been  stopp'd. 

And  complete  the  ancient  prison. 

*  A  famous  theologian,  poet,  and  orator,  and  one  of  Luther  i 
•hief  followers.    He  died  in  1523. 
t  A  Dominican  fnar,  who  was  one  of  Luther's  first  antagonisti. 


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GERMANY.  333 

0  foolish  delusion  I  In  vain  will  ye  shako 

The  money-boxes  so  bootless, 
And  beg  of  tiie  Jews  and  heretics  too, — 

Your  labour  i&  idle  and  fruitless. 

In  vain  wiU  Liszt  on  behalf  af  the  fund 

Make  concerts  all  the  fashion, 
And  all  in  vain  will  a  talented  king 

Declaim  with  impetuous  passion. 

Cologne  Cathedral  will  finished  be  ne'er, 

Although  the  Swabian  Solons 
Have  sent  a  shipload  full  of  stones 

To  help  it,  nolens  volens. 

'Twill  ne'er  be  completed,  despite  all  the  ci'ies 
Of  the  ravens  and  owls  without  number, 

Who,  full  of  antiquarian  lore. 
In  high  church-steeples  slumber. 

Indeed,  the  time  will  by-and-by  come. 

When  instead  of  completing  it  rightly. 
The  inner  space  as  a  stable  will  serve 

For  horses, — a  change  but  unsightly. 

''  And  if  the  cathedral  a  stable  becomes, 
*'  Pray  tell  us  how  they  will  then  tackle 

"  The  three  holy  kings  who  rest  there  now, 
*»  Within  the  tabernacle  ?" 

Thus  ask  they.     But  why  should  we,  in  these  days, 

Stand  up  as  their  supporters  ? 
The  three  holy  kings  from  the  Eastern  land 

Must  fipd  some  other  quarters. 

Take  my  advice,  and  place  them  all 

In  those  three  iron  cages 
That  high  upon  St.  Lambert's  tower 

At  Miinster  have  hung  for  ages. 

If  one  of  the  three  should  missing  be, 

Select  in  his  stead  some  other ; 
Replace  the  king  of  the  Eastern  land 

By  some  regal  Western  brother.* 

♦  The  first  edition  ended  with  this  Terse,  which  was  dtrack 
OTXt  by  the  censors,  and  replaced  by  the  five  following  verses. 


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331  Heine's  poemb. 

The  king  of  the  tailors*  sat  therein 

With  his  two  advisers  by  him ; 
But  we  will  employ  the  cages  now 

For  monarchs  who  greatly  outTie  him. 

On  the  right  Balthasar  shall  have  his  place, 

On  the  left  shall  be  Melchior's  station, 
In  the  midst  shall  be  Gaspar.     I  know  not  what 

When  aHye,  was  their  right  situation. 

The  Holy  Alliance  from  out  of  the  East, 

Now  canonised  so  duly, 
Perchance  has  not  always  its  mission  fulfilled 

Quite  properly  and  truly. 

Balthasar  perchance  and  Mclchior  too 

Were  men  of  but  weak  resolution. 
Who  promised,  when  sorely  press'd  from  without, 

Their  kingdom  a  constitution. 

And  afterwards  broke  their  word. — Perchance 
King  Gaspar,  who  reign'd  o'er  the  Moormen, 

Bewarded.  with  black  ingratitude 

His  foolish  fond  subjects,  the  poor  men ! 

CAPUT  V. 

AND  when  I  came  to  the  bridge  o'er  the  Bhine. 
Where  the  bastion  its  comer  advances, 
There  saw  I  Father  Ehine  flowing  on 
In  the  silent  moonbeam's  glances. 

"  All  hail  to  thee,  good  Father  Khine, 

"  Now  that  I*m  home  returning ! 
"  Full  often  have  I  on  thee  thought, 

"  With  longing  and  deep  yearning." 

Thus  spake  I,  and  heard  in  the  waters  deep 

A  voice  at  once  strange  and  moaning, 
Like  the  wheezing  cough  of  an  aged  man, 

With  grumbling  and  feeble  groaning : 

"  Thou'rt  welcome,  and  as  thou  rememberest  mo, 

"  I  see  thee,  good  youth,  again  gladly ; 
'*  'Tis  thirteen  long  years  since  I  saw  thee  last, 

"  My  affairs  have  meanwhile  gone  badly. 

*  The  remaiiiB  of  John  of  Leyden  and  his  two  chief  accoiO' 
plices  were  exposed  in  these  cages,  which  still  remain  in  theii 
old  position. 


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GEBMAKT.  335 

**  At  Biborich  many  a  stone  I've  gnlp'd  down, 

"  My  digestion  in  consequence  worse  is ; 
"  Yet  heavier  fiBU*  on  my  stomach,  alas, 

"  Lie  Nicholas  Becker's*  verses ! 
'•  My  praises  he  chants,  as  though  I  were  now 

"  The  purest  and  best-behaved  maiden, 
"  Who  never  allow'd  any  mortal  to  steal 

*'  The  crown  with  her  purity  laden. 
**  Whenever  I  hear  the  stupid  song, 

"  I  could  tear  my  beard  in  a  passion, 
**  And  feel  inclined  to  drown  myseK 

"  In  myself,  in  a  curious  fashion  I 
"  That  I  am  a  virgin  pure  no  more 

"  The  French  know  better  than  any ; 
"  For  they  with  my  waters  have  mingled  oft 

"  Their  floods  of  victory  many. 
^^  The  stupid  song  and  the  stupid  man  I 

^^  Indeed  he  has  treated  me  badly  ; 
**  To  a  certain  extent  he  has  compromised  me 

''  In  matters  political  sadly. 
"  For  if  the  French  should  ever  come  back, 

"  I  must  blush  at  their  reappearance, 
"  Though  IVe  pray'd  with  tears  for  their  retui'n 

"  To  heaven  with  perseverance. 
"  I  always  have  loved  full  well  the  French, 

"  So  tiny  yet  full  of  sinew  ; 
"  Still  wear  they  white  breeches  as  formerly  ? 

''  Does  their  singing  and  springing  continue  ? 
*'  Bight  glad  should  I  be  to  see  them  again, 

*'  And  yet  I'm  afraid  to  be  twitted 
*'  On  accoimt  of  the  words  of  that  cursod  song, 

*'  And  the  sneers  of  its  author  half-witted ! 
**  That  Alfred  de  Musset  f,  that  lad  upon  town, 

*•  Perchance  will  come  as  their  drummer, 

*  A  youthful  poet,  who  excited  great  enthusiasm  in  Germnny 
by  a  poem,  written  in  1840  (wlien  a  war  with  France  on  ttie 
Eiastem  question  seemed  not  unlikely),  beginuing, — 
**  They  shall  not  have  the  German  Rhine." 
t  The  well-known  French  poet,  who  replied  to  the  above  poo:n 
of  Becker's,  by  another  commencing, — 

**We  have  Iiad  vour  German  Rhino.** 


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336  HEUTS'S  POEMS. 

''  And  mardk  at  their  head,  and  his  wietched  wit 
**  Play  off  on  me  all  through  the  summer.** 

Poor  Father  Ehine  thus  made  his  complaints, 

xind  discontentedly  spluttered. — 
Li  order  to  raise  his  silking  heart, 

These  comforting  words  I  utter'd : 

"  0  do  not  dread,  good  Fathw  Bhine, 

^'  llie  laugh  of  a  Frenchman,  which  is 
"  Worth  little,  for  he  is  no  longer  the  same, 

**  And  they  also  have  altered  their  breeches. 

"  Their  breeches  are  red,  and  no  longer  are  white, 

"  They  also  have  alter'd  the  button ; 
"  No  longer  they  sing  and  no  longer  they  spring, 

*'  But  hang  their  heads  like  dead  mutton. 

"  They  now  are  philosophers  all,  and  quote 
"  Hegel,  Fichte,  Eant,  over  their  victuals ; 

'*  Tobaoco  they  smoke,  and  beer  they  drink, 
"  And  many  play  also  at  skittles. 

^*  They're  all,  like  us  Germans,  becoming  mere  snobs, 

"  But  carry  it  even  farther  ; 
•-  No  longer  they  follow  in  Voltaire's  steps, 

**  But  believe  in  Hengstenberg  *  rather. 

*'  As  for  Alfred  de  Musset,  indeed  it  is  true 
**  That  he  still  to  abuse  gives  a  handle ; 

"  But  be  not  afraid,  and  we'll  soon  chain  down 
"  His  tongue  so  devoted  to  scandaL 

"  And  if  he  should  play  off  his  wretched  wit, 

«'  Well  punish  him  most  severely, 
"  Proclaiming  aloud  the  adventures  he  meets  ^ 

"  With  the  women  he  loves  most  dearly. 

'•  Then  be  contented,  good  Father  Ehine, 

**  Bad  songs  treat  only  with  laughter ; 
"  A  better  song  ere  long  thou  shalt  hear, — 

**  Farewell,  we  shall  meet  hereafter." 

*  A  noted  theologian,  bom  fai  18U2,  and  one  of  the  leaders  ol 
tike  orthodox  party  hi  Pmada. 


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GXBMAKT.  837 

CAPUT  VI. 

ON  Pagaumi  used  always  to  wait 
A  Spiritus  Familiaris, 
Ofttimes  as  a  dog,  ofttimes  in  the  shape 

Of  the  late  lamented  George  Harris. 
Napoleon,  before  each  important  event, 

Saw  a  man  in  red,  as  they  mention, 
And  Socrates  he  had  his  Dsemon  too, 

No  fieuicifal  mere  invention. 
E'en  I,  when  I  sat  at  my  table  to  write, 

When  the  darkness  of  night  had  entwined  me, 
Have  sometimes  seen  a  muffled  form, 

Mysteriously  standing  behind  me. 
Hid  under  his  mantle,  a  Something  he  held, 

And  when  the  light  happened  to  catch  it, 
It  strangely  gleam'd,  and  methought  'twas  an  aze» 

An  executioner's  hatchet. 
His  stature  appear'd  to  be  under  the  mean, 

His  eyes  like  very  stars  glisten'd ; 
He  never  disturb'd  me  as  I  wrote, 

But  quietly  stood  there,  and  listened. 
For  many  a  year  I  had  ceased  to  see 

This  very  singular  fellow, 
But  found  him  here  suddenly  at  Cologne, 

In  the  moonlight  silent  and  mellow. 
I  saunter'd  thoughtfully  through  the  streets, 

And  saw  him  behind  me  stalking. 
Just  like  my  shadow,  and  when  I  stood  still , 

He  also  left  off  walking. 
He  stood,  as  if  he  were  waiting  for  me. 

And  when  I  onward  hurried. 
He  follow'd  again,  and  thus  I  reach'd 

The  Cathedral  yard,  quite  flurried. 
I  could  not  bear  it,  so  tum'd  sharp  round. 

And  said :  *^  I  insist  on  an  answer : 
•*  Why  follow  me  thus  in  the  silent  night, 

*'  And  lead  me  this  wandering  dance.  Sir  ? 
^  I  come  across  thee  just  at  the  time 

'*  When  world-wide  feelings  are  dashing 
"  AcroBS  my  breast,  and  through  my  brain 

*'  The  spirit-lightnmgs  are  flashing. 

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338  HEINE^S  POElfS. 

"  Thou  gazest  upon  me  so  fixedly — 
**  Now  answer  me,  what  is  there  hidden 

'*  Beneath  thy  mantle  that  secretly  gleams  ? 
**  Thy  business  say,  when  thou'rt  bidden.'* 

The  other  replied  in  a  somewhat  dry  tone, 

If  not  a  little  phlegmatic : 
'*  I  pray  thee,  exorcise  me  not, 

^*  And  be  not  quite  so  emphatic ! 

^*  No  ghost  am  I  from  the  days  gone  by, 

**  No  grave-arisen  spectre ; 
**  I  have  no  affection  for  rhetoric, 

'^  I'm  no  philosophic  projector. 

**  I  am  of  a  practical  nature  in  fact, 

**  And  of  silent  resolution  ; 
*'  But  know,  that  -whatever  thy  spirit  conceives, 

**  I  put  into  execution. 

'•  And  even  when  years  have  pass'd  away, 

"  I  rest  not,  nor  suffer  distraction, 
"  Till  I've  changed  to  reality  all  thy  thoughts ; 

<'  Thine's  the  thinking,  and  mine  is  the  action. 

**  The  judge  art  thou,  and  the  jailer  am  I, 

**  And,  like  a  servant  obedient, 
**  The  judgments  execute  pleasing  to  thee, 

"  Whether  right  or  inexpedient. 

"  Before  the  Consul  they  carried  an  axe 
'*  In  Eome  of  old,  let  me  remind  thee 

**  And  thou  hast  also  thy  lictor,  but  he 
**  Now  carries  the  axe  behind  thee. 

**  Thy  lictor  am  I,  and  foUow  behind, 

'*  And  carry  in  all  its  splendour 
"  The  polish'd  executioner's  axe — 

"  I'm  the  deed  which  thy  thoughts  engender.'' 

CAPUT  VII. 

IHOMEWAKD  went,  and  as  soundly  I  slept 
As  if  by  the  angels  tended ; 
In  German  beds  one  cosily  rests, 
For  they  are  all  featherbeds  splendid. 


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GERMANY.  839 

How  often  I've  yeam'd  for  the  sweet  repose 

Of  my  own  native  country's  pillows, 
While  I  lay  on  hard  mattresses,  sleepless  all  night, 

In  my  exile  far  over  the  billows  I 

One  sleeps  so  well,  and  one  dreams  so  well 

In  our  featherbeds  delicious ; 
The  German  spirit  here  feels  itself  free 

From  all  earth's  fetters  pernicious. 

It  feels  itself  free,  and  upward  soars 
To  the  highest  regions  Elysian ; 

0  German  Spirit,  how  proud  is  the  flight 
Thou  takest  in  nightly  vision  I 

The  gods  turn  pale,  when  thou  drawest  nigh ; 

When  soaring  tow'rds  heaven's  dominions, 
Thou  hast  snuff 'd  out  the  light  of  many  a  star, 

With  the  strokes  of  thine  eager  piniona 

The  land  belongs  to  the  Eussians  and  French, 

In  the  Britid^  the  ocean  is  vested. 
But  we  in  dream's  airy  regions  possess 

The  mastery  uncontested. 

The  art  of  ruling  practise  we  here, 

And  here  we  are  never  dissever'd, 
While  other  nations  on  earth's  flat  face 

To  develop  themselves  have  endeavour'd. — 

And  as  I  slumber'd,  methought  in  my  dream 

I  was  once  more  sauntering  slowly 
In  the  moonlight  dear  through  the  echoing  streets 

Of  Cologne's  ancient  city  so  holy. 

Behind  me  once  again  my  black 
And  mask'd  attendant  speeded; 

1  felt  so  weary,  my  knees  wellnigh  broke, 
Yet  on,  still  on,  we  proceeded. 

We  onward  went.    My  heart  in  my  breast 

Gaped  open,  and  parted  in  sunder. 
And  the  red  drops  glided  out  of  the  wound 

In  my  heart, — a  sight  of  wonder. 

I  oftentimes  dipp'd  my  finger  therein. 

And  often  the  femcy  came  o'er  me 
To  streak  with  the  blood,  as  I  onward  pass'd, 

Eadi  doorpost  lying  befnre  me. 


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840  heinb's  wsmb. 

And  every  time  that  I  marVd  a  hoiue 

In  this  very  peculiar  fiekshion, 
A.  funeral  bell  was  heard  in  a  tone 

Of  mournful  and  soft  compassion. 

But  now  in  the  heavens  the  moon  grew  paJle, 
And  darkness  came  over  me  thicklji 

And  over  her  face,  like  horses  black, 
The  stormy  clouds  sped  quickly. 

And  still  behind  me  onward  went 

My  dark  companion  ever, 
His  hidden  axe  grasping, — on,  still  on, 

And  pausing  and  resting  never. 

We  went  and  went,  till  we  reach'd  at  length 

The  Cathedral  precincts'  centre ; 
The  doors  of  the  church  wide  open  stood. 

And  straightway  did  we  enter. 

Within  its  capacious  expanse  but  death 

And  night  and  silence  hover'd, 
Wliile  here  and  there  a  glimmering  lamp 

The  darkness  plainly  discovered. 

I  wander'd  long  the  pillars  among, 

And  heard  the  footsteps  only 
Of  my  attendant,  who  followed  me  still 

E'en  here  in  ihe  silence  lonely. 

At  length  we  came  to  a  certain  place. 
With  gold  and  jewels  quite  glorious. 

And  illumed  by  the  tapers'  sparkling  light, — 
'Twas  the  tliee  kings'  chapel  notorious. 

But  the  three  holy  kings,  who  were  wont  to  lie 
Quite  still,  and  in  order  befitting — 

0  sight  of  wonder  I — \Yere  now  upright 
Ijpon  their  sarcophagi  sitting. 

Three  skeletons,  deck'd  in  fantastic  array, 
With  crowns  on  their  skulls  dry  and  yellow, 

And  each  one  held  in  his  bony  haiid 
A  sceptre,  beside  his  fellow. 

Like  dancing  puppets  they  moved  about 
Their  bones  which  so  long  had  perish'd ; 

They  smelt  of  mould,  and  they  also  smelt 
Of  incense  fragrant  and  chorish'd. 


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GERMANY.  341 

One  'mongst  the  number  soon  moved  his  montb, 

And  utter'd  a  lengthy  oration. 
Explaining  the  reasons  why  he  claim'd 

My  respectful  salutation. 

The  first,  because  he^  was  a  corpse, 

Because  a  monarch,  the  second  ; 
Because  a  saint,  the  third, — but  the  whole 

Of  little  account  I  reckoned. 

I  gave  him  an  answer  in  laughing  mood : 

"  In  vain  is  all  thy  endeavour  1 
"  I  see  that  thou'rt  still  in  eVry  respect 

*^  As  strange  and  old-fashion'd  as  ever ! 

**  Away  I  away !    In  the  deep  grave  alone 

"  Your  lengths  ye  ought  to  measure ! 
"  Eeal  life  will  shortly  confiscate 

^'  This  chapel's  mighty  treasure. 

"  Hereafter  the  merry  cavalry 

"  Shall  make  the  Cathedral  their  dwelling ; 
"  If  ye  will  not  go  gently,  then  force  shall  be  used. 

"  With  clubs  your  exit  compelling  I" 

When  thus  I  had  spoken,  I  turn'd  me  round, 
And  saw  where  was  glimmering  brightly 

My  silent  attendant's  terrible  axe, 
And  he  read  my  meaning  rightly. 

So  he  quickly  approach'd,  and  with  the  axe 

Bemorsel^sly  he  shatter'd^ 
Those  skeletons  poor  of  bigotry, 

And  into  atoms  scatter'd. 

The  echoing  blows  from  the  vaulted  roof 

Bang  wildly,  in  countless  numbers ; 
While  streams  of  blood  pour'd  out  from  my  breast, 

And  I  awoke  from  my  slumbers. 

CAPUT  VIIL 

FBOM  Cologne  to  Hagen  it  costs  to  post 
Five  Prussian  dollars,  six  groschen ; 
The  diligence  chanced  to  be  fuU,  so  I  came 
In  a  chaise,  though  rough  was  the  motion. 


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342  HEINBS  POBMS. 

Twos  a  lale  autnmn  mommg,  both  damp  and  grey 

The  coach  in  the  mud  groan*d  sadly ; 
Yet  despite  the  bad  weather,  despite  the  bad  road, 

Sweet  thoughts  pervaded  me  ghtdly. 

Tis  my  own  native  air,  and  the  glow  on  my  cheek 

Could  bear  no  other  construction ; 
The  very  dirt  in  the  highway  itself 

Is  my  fatherland's  production ! 
The  horses  wagg'd  their  tails  like  old  friends, 

As  they  went  along  in  a  canter ; 
Their  very  dung  appeared  to  me  fair 

As  the  apples  of  Atalanta ! 
We  pass'd  through  Miihlheim.     The  people  are  dull 

And  busy,  the  town  fax  from  dirty ; 
I  last  was  there  in  the  merry  month 

Of  May,  in  the  year  one  and  thirty. 
All  things  then  stood  in  blooming  attire. 

And  the  sunlight  sweetly  was  blinking ; 
The  birds  were  singing  their  yearning  song, 

While  the  men  were  hoping  and  thinking. 
Thus  thought  they :  "  The  lanky  order  of  knights 

"  Will  depart  from  amongst  us  shortly ; 
"  Their  farewell  draught  they  shall  drink  firom  long 
flasks 

"  Of  iron,  in  fashion  not  courtly  I 
*'  And  freedom  shall  come  with  sport  and  with  dance, 

"  With  the  banner,  the  white-blue-red  one ; 
*•  Perchance  she  will  fetch  from  out  of  the  grave 

"  E'en  Bonaparte,  even  the  dead  one  I" 
Alas  !  the  knights  remain  as  before ; 

More  than  one  of  those  fools  so  derided 
Who  enter*d  the  country  as  thin  as  a  lath 

Are  now  with  fat  bellies  provided. 
The  pallid  canaille,  who  used  to  look 

The  pictures  of  faith,  hope,  charity. 
Have  got  red  noses  by  tippling  our  wine 

Witib  the  utmost  regularity. 
And  Freedom  has  sprain'd  her  foot,  and  has  lofvt 

For  springing  and  raving  all  power ; 
In  Paris  itself  the  tricolour  flag 

Looks  mournfully  down  from  each  tower. 


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GEBMAKt.  843 

Tho  Emperor  tmly  arose  again, 

Yet  the  English,  fearing  a  riot, 
Converted  him  into  a  peaceable  man. 

And  he  let  them  inter  him  in  quiet. 

-Yes,  I  myself  his  funeral  saw, 

The  golden  carriage  so  splendid, 
And  victory's  golden  goddesses, 

Who  the  golden  co£&n  attended. 

Along  the  fiEunous  Champs  Elysees, 

Through  the  Arc  de  Triomphe  stately. 
Across  the  mist  and  over  the  snow 

The  procession  wended  sedately. 

The  music  was  painful  and  out  of  tune, 

And  frozen  was  every  musician ; 
The  eagles  perch*d  over  the  standards  looked  down 

Upon  me  in  woeful  condition. 

In  ghostly  fashion  the  men  all  appeared, 

AU  lost  in  old  recollections, — 
The  wondrous  imperial  dream  revived. 

Awakening  olden  affections. 

I  wept  on  that  day.     Tears  rose  in  my  eyes. 

And  down  my  cheeks  fast  fleeted, 
When  I  heard  die  long-vanish'd  loving  shout 

Of  "  Vive  TEmpereur  1"  repeated. 

CAPUT  IX. 

I  LEFT  Cologne  on  my  onward  road 
At  a  quarter  to  eight  precisely ; 
We  got  to  Hagen  at  three  o'clock. 
And  there  had  our  dinners  nicely. 

The  table  was  oover'd.     Here  found  I  all 

The  old-fashion'd  German  dishes ; 
All  hail,  thou  savoury  sour-krout,  hail, 

The  reward  of  my  utmost  wishes ! 

Stuff'd  chestnuts  all  in  green  cabbages  dress'd ! 

My  food  when  I  was  a  baby  I 
All  hail,  ye  native  stockfish,  ye  swim 

In  the  butter  as  nicely  an  may  ^  I 


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344  HEINE^  POBU& 

One's  native  country  to  each  fond  heart 

Grows  ever  dearer  and  dearer — 
Its  eggs  and  bloaters,  when  nicely  brown'd. 

Come  home  to  one's  feelings  still  nearer.  I 

How  the  sausages. sang  in  the  spluttering  fat . 

The  fieldfares,  those  very  delicious  ji 

And  roasted  angels  with  apple  sauce,  I 

All  warbled  a  welcome  propitious.  f 

"  Thou'rt  welcome,  countryman,"  warbled  they,  | 

"  Full  long  hast  thou  been  delaying  I  \ 

"  Full  long  hast  thou  with  foreign  birds 
<<  In  foreign  lands  been  straying !" 

Upon  the  table  stood  also  a  goose, 

A  silent,  kindhearted  being ; 
Perchance  she  loved  me  in  younger  days. 

When  our  tastes  were  nearer  agreeing. 

Full  of  meaning  she  eyed  me,  cordial  but  sad, 

And  fond,  like  the  rest  of  her  gender ; 
She  surely  possess'd  an  excellent  soul. 

But  her  flesh  was  by  no  means  tender. 

A  boar's  head  they  also  brought  in  the  room, 

On  a  pewter  dish,  for  me  to  guzzle ; 
The  h(yre8  with  us  are  always  deck'd  out 

With  laurel  leaves  round  their  muzzle. 

CAPUT  X. 

ON  leaving  Hagen  the  night  came  on, 
And  I  felt  a  chilly  sensation 
Inside.     At  the  inn  at  Unna  I  first 
Eecover'd  my  animation. 

A  pretty  maiden  found  I  there. 

Who  pour'd  out  my  punch  discreetly ; 
Like  yeUow  silk  were  her  comely  locks, 

Her  eyes  like  the  moonlight  gleam'd  sweetly 

Her  lisping  Westphalian  accents  I  heard 

With  joy,  as  she  utter'd  them  clearly ; 
The  punch  with  sweet  recollections  smoked, 

I  thought  of  my  brethren  loved  dearly ; 


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OKBXANY.  345 

The  dear  Westphalians,  with  whom  I  oft  drank 

At  Grottingen,  while  we  were  able, 
Till  we  sank  in  emotion  on  each  other's  necks, 

And  also  sank  under  the  table. 

That  loveable,  worthy,  Westphalian  race ! 

I  ever  have  loved  it  extremely ; 
A  nation  so  firm,  so  faithful,  so  true. 

Ne'er  given  to  boasting  unseemly. 

How  proudly  they  stand,  with  their  lion-like  hearts. 

In  the  noble  science  of  fencing ! 
Their  quarts  and  their  tierces,  so  honestly  meant, 

With  vigorous  arm  dispensing. 

Eight  well  they  fight,  and  right  well  they  drink  ; 

When  they  give  thee  their  hand  so  gentle 
To  strike  up  a  friendship,  they  needs  must  weep, 

Like  oaks  tum'd  sentimental. 

May  heaven  watch  over  thee,  worthy  race, 

On  thy  seed  shower  down  benefactions, 
Preserve  thee  from  war  and  empty  renown, 

From  heroes  and  heroes'  actions ! 

May  it  evermore  grant  to  thy  excellent  sons 

An  easy  examination, 
And  give  thy  daughters  marriages  good, — 

So  Amen  to  my  invocation ! 

CAPUT  XI. 

BEHOLD  the  wood  of  Teutoburg, 
Described  in  Tacitus'  pages ; 
Behold  the  classical  marsh,  wherein 
Stuck  Yams,  in  past  ages. 

)(ere  vanquish'd  him  the  Cheruscian  prince. 

The  noble  giant,  named  Hermann ;  * 
X%  was  in  this  mire  that  triumph'd  first 

Our  nationality  German. 

Had  Hermann  with  his  light-hair'd  hordes 

Not  triumph'd  here  over  the  foeman. 
Then  German  freedom  had  come  to  an  end* 

We  had  each  been  tum'd  to  a  Eoman  * 

*  Called  Arminius  by  the  Roniant. 

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346  Heine's  poems. 

Nought  but  Boman  language  and  manners  had  now 

Our  native  country  ruled  over, 
In  Munich  lived  Vestals,  the  Swabians  e'en 

As  Quirites  have  flourished  in  clover ! 

An  haruspex  had  Hengstenberg  surely  been, 

And  groped  about  in  the  bowels  i 

Of  oxen ;  Neander  *  an  Augur,  and  based  { 

On  flights  of  birds  his  avowals. 

Biroh-Pfeifer  f  had  tippled  her  turpentine, 

Like  the  Boman  ladies  admired. 
(Tis  said  that  they,  by  its  frequent  use, 

A  pleasing  odour  acquired). 

Friend  Baumer  J  had  been  no  German  scamp. 

But  a  regular  Boman  Scampatius, 
And  Freiligrath  written  without  using  rhyme. 

Like  worthy  Flaccus  Horatius. 

The  clumsy  beggar.  Father  Jahn,  § 

Had  then  been  called  Clumsianus ; 
Me  Hercule !    Massmann  ||  would  Latin  have  talk'd. 

As  Marcus  Tullius  Massmanus ! 

The  friends  of  truth,  instead  of  with  curs 

Li  the  papers,  would  in  the  arena 
Have  had  to  wage  a  mortal  flght 

With  the  lion,  jackal,  hyena. 

One  single  Nero  we  now  should  have  had, 

'Stead  of  three  dozen  pieces  of  knavery ; 
Our  veins  should  we  have  open'd,  and  so 

Defied  the  bailiffs  of  slavery. 

Thank  heaven  I     The  Bomans  were  driven  away, 

A  glorious  triumph  was  Hermann's  ; 
Both  Varus  and  all  his  legions  succumb'd. 

And  we  remain'd  still  Germans  I 

*  The  &mou8  historian  and  professor  of  theology  at  Iterlin. 
He  died  in  1850. 

t  A  well-known  actress  and  voluminous  dramatic  author,  bom 
iu  1800. 

X  The  historian. 

§  A  professor  of  gymnastics. 

II  A  hngoist  and  professor  of  languages  and  gymnastics  jointly.     |l 
In  the  latter  science  he  was  a  pupil  of  Jalm.  ^y 


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aERlCANY.  347 

Wc  Germans  remain,  and  German  we  speak, 

As  we  before  times  have  spoken ; 
An  ass  is  an  ass,  not  asinus. 

The  Swabian  line  is  unbroken. 

Friend  Eaumer  remained  a  German  scamp 

In  onr  northern  German  climate ; 
And  Freiligrath  no  Horace  became, 

But  in  verse  is  accustomed  to  rhyme  it. 

Thank  heaven  that  Massmann  no  Latin  e'er  writes, 
Birch-Pfeifer  writes  nothing  but  dramas. 

And  drinks  no  nasty  turpentine 
Like  those  lovely  Eoman  charmers. 

0  Hermann,  for  this  we're  indebted  to  thee  I 
So  at  Dettmoldt  *  thy  friends  and  extollers 

A  monument  proud  of  late  have  designed. 
And  towards  it  I  gave  a  few  dollars. 

CAPUT  XII. 

THEOUGH  the  wood  in  the  dark  the  postchaise 
bump'd  on. 
When  a  crash  took  place,  sudden  and  frightful — 
A  wheel  came  off,  and  we  came  to  a  stand. 
An  occurrence  by  no  means  delightful. 

The  postilion  dismounted,  and  made  all  haste 
To  the  village  for  help,  and  I  found  me 

At  midnight  alone  in  the  darksome  wood, 
While  a  howling  I  heard  all  around  me. 

The  wolves  it  was,  who  wildly  howPd 

With  half-starved  voices  all  wiry ; 
Like  lights  in  the  darkness  brighUy  gleam'd 

Their  eyes  so  fierce  and  fiery. 

Of  my  arrival  certainly  knew 

The  beasts,  and  to  honour  me,  proudly 

They  lighted  up  the  forest  thus, 
Aiid  sang  in  chorus  loudly. 

1  soon  observed  'twas  a  real  serenade, 
Design'd  for  my  glorification. 

So  threw  myself  in  an  attitude  fit, 
And  spoke  with  extreme  animation : 

*  A  mouument  has  been  recently  erected  in  Dettmoldt  to 
wraroemorate  the  yiotoiy  of  Armimua  over  Yams. 


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348  Heine's  poems. 

"  Brother  wolves !  it  gives  me  great  pleasure  to-daj 

"  To  tarry  awhile  'midst  your  growling, 
"  Where  so  many  noble  spirits  have  met, 

**  Around  me  lovingly  howling. 
*'  ]\Iy  feelings  just  at  the  moment  I  speak 

"  Are  truly  beyond  all  measure ; 
"  This  present  hour  I  ne'er  shall  forget, 

"  So  fraught  with  exceeding  pleasure. 
**  T  thank  you  for  the  confidence  thus 

"  Evinced  beyond  denial, 
"  And  which  by  the  clearest  proofs  ye  have  shown 

"  In  every  period  of  trial.  ^ 

"Brother  wolves!    ye  ne'er  doubted  that  true  I  re- 

"  Ye  set  all  the  rogues  at  defiance,  [main'd, 

"  Who  falsely  asserted  that  I  had  of  late, 

"  Struck  up  with  the  dogs  an  alliance, 
"  And  tum'd  an  apostate,  and  e'en  in  the  fold 

**  As  a  Councillor  soon  they  would  show  me — 
"  To  answer  such  base  assertions  as  these 

**  I  feel  to  be  really  below  me. 
"  The  sheepskin  that  I  for  a  time  had  on 

"  As  a  piece  of  warm  clothing  merely, 
"  Believe  me,  will  never  make  me  love 

**  The  sheep's  race  an  atom  more  dearly. 
"  No  sheep  am  I,  and  no  dog  am  I, 

"  No  Councillor,  or  such  like  ; 
**  A  wolf  am  I,  and  my  heart  and  teeth 

"  A  wolfs  are  very  much  like. 
"  A  wolf  am  I,  and  with  the  wolves 

"  I  ever  will  be  a  yelper ; 
'*  Yes,  reckon  upon  me,  and  help  yoursehes, 

"  And  God  will  be  your  helper!" 
This  was  the  speech  deliver'd  by  me, 

Without  the  least  preparation  ; 
In  the  Allgemeine  Zeitung,  I'm  told. 

It  appear'd,  though  with  much  mutilation. 
CAPUT  XIII. 

THE  sun  arose  near  Paderbom. 
With  a  look  by  no  means  bright'ning 
In  fact  he  leads  but  a  sorry  life. 
This  wretched  earth  enlight'ning. 


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GBBMANY.  349 

As  soon  as  ho  has  lifted  oatQ  side, 

And  hastens  with  beams  all  sparkling 
To  lighten  the  other,  already  the  first 

Is  getting  gloomy  and  darkling. 
Poor  Sisyphus'  stone  keeps  rolling  down, 

The  Danaids*  bucket  never 
Gets  filVd,  and  to  lighten  this  earthly  ball 

In  vain  is  the  sun's  endeavour. 
And  when  the  mist  of  morning  dispersed, 

I  saw  by  the  wayside  projecting 
In  the  early  glow,  His  figure,  who  died 

On  the  cross  a  death  so  affecting, 
I'm  filled  with  dejection  every  time 

That  I  see  Thee,  my  poor  Belation, 
Whose  mission  was  to  r^eem  the  world. 

And  be  mankind's  salvation. 
A  sorry  trick  they  play'd  Thee  indeed, 

The  lords  of  the  Council  stately ; 
O  why  didst  Thou  speak  of  Church  and  State 

In  a  manner  to  wound  them  greatly? 
To  Thy  misfortime  the  printing  art 

To  mortals  had  then  not  been  given, 
Or  else  a  book  had  been  written  by  Thee 

On  the  subjects  relating  to  heaven. 
The  Censor  would  then  have  erased  whate'er 

Satirical  seem'd  in  its  diction, 
And  so  the  loving  censorship 

Have  saved  Thee  from  crucifixion. 
Ah  I  if  for  Thy  sermon  on  the  mount 

Another  text  Thou  hadst  taken  ! 
Sufficient  genius  and  talent  were  Thine, 

And  the  pious  Thou  need'st  not  have  shaken. 
Money-changers  and  bankers   Thou  drov'st  with  the 

From  the  temple,  in  just  indignation —         [scourge 
Unhappy  Enthusiast  I     Now  on  the  cro9s 

Thou  dost  suffer  a  sad  expiation. 
CAPUT  XIV. 

THE  wind  was  humid,  and  bari^en  the  land, 
The  chaise  floundered  on  in  the  mire, 
Yet  a  singing  and  ringmg  were  filling  my  uars  : 
''  O  Sun,  thou  accusing  fireT* 


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350  HEINB's  POBBfB. 

The  burden  is  this  of  the  olden  song 

That  my  nurse  so  often  was'  singing — 
**  0  Sun,  iiion  accusing  fire  !*'  was  then 

Like  the  note  of  the  forest  horn  ringing. 

This  song  of  a  murderer  tells  the  tale, 

Who  lived  a  life  joyous  and  splendid ; 
Hung  up  in  the  forest  at  last  he  was  found. 

From  a  grey  old  willow  suspended. 

The  murderer's  sentence  of  death  was  nail'd 

On  the  willow's  stem,  written  entire ; 
The  Vohm-gericht's  avengers'  work  'twas — 

O  Sun,  thou  accusing  ^ ! 

The  Sun  was  accuser, — 'twas  he  who  condemn'd 

The  murderer  foul,  in  his  ire. 
Ottilia  had  cried,  as  she  gave  up  the  ghost : 

"  0  Sun,  thou  accusing  fire  I" 

When  the  song  I  recall,  the  remembrance  too 

Of  my  dear  old  nurse  never  ceases 
I  see  once  more  her  swarthy  face, 

With  all  its  wrinkles  and  creases. 

In  the  district  of  Miinster  she  was  bom. 

And  knew,  in  all  their  glory, 
Many  popular  songs  and  wondrous  tales, 

And  many  a  wild  ghost-story. 

How  my  heart  used  to  beat  when  the  old  nurse  told  how 
The  king's  daughter,  in  days  now  olden, 

Sat  all  alone  on  the  desert  heath. 

While  glisten'd  her  tresses  so  golden. 

Her  business  was  to  tend  the  geese 

As  a  goosegirl,  and  when  at  nightfall 
She  drove  the  geese  home  again  through  the  gate. 

Her  tears  would  in  piteous  plight  fcdl. 

For  nail'd  up  on  high,  above  the  gate. 

She  saw  a  horse's  head  o'er  her ; 
The  head  it  was  of  the  dear  old  horse 

Who  to  foreign  countries  bore  her. 

The  king's  poor  daughter  deeply  sigh'd : 

"  O  Falada!  hangest  thou  yonder?" 
The  horse's  head  from  above  replied  : 

**  AIbSj  that  from  home  thou  did'st  wander!" 


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^  GERMANY.  351 

The  king's  poor  daughter  deeply  sigh'd  : 

"  O  would  that  my  mother  knew  it  T* 
The  horse's  head  from  ahove  replied : 

"  Full  sorely  she  would  rue  it  I" 

With  gasping  breath  I.  used  to  attend 

When  my  nurse,  with  a  voice  soft  and  serioui^ 
Of  Barbarossa  began  to  speak, 
'     Our  Emperor  so  mysterious. 

She  assured  me  that  he  was  not  dead,  as  to  think 

By  learned  men  we  were  bidden, 
But  with  his  comrades  in  arms  still  lived 

In  a  mountain's  recesses  safe  hidden. 

Eyffhauser  is  the  mountain's  name, 

With  a  cave  in  its  depths  benighted ; 
By  lamps  its  high  and  vaulted  rooms 

In  ghostly  fa^on  are  lighted. 

The  first  of  the  halls  is  a  stable  vast. 
Where  in  glittering  harness  the  stranger 

Who  enters  may  see  many  thousand  steeds, 
Each  standing  at  his  manger. 

They  all  are  saddled,  and  bridled  all, 
Yet  amongst  these  thousands  of  creatures. 

No  single  one  neighs,  no  single  one  stamps, 
Like  statues  of  iron  their  features. 

Upon  the  straw  in  the  second  hall 

The  soldiers  are  seen  in  their  places ; 
Many  thousand  soldiers,  a  bearded  race. 

With  warlike  and  insolent  fkces. 

They  all  are  full  arm'd  from  top  to  toe, 

Yet  out  of  this  countless  number. 
Not  one  of  them  moves,  not  one  of  them  stirs. 

They  all  are  wrapp'd  in  slumber. 

In  the  third  of  the  halls  in  lofty  piles 

Swords,  spears,  and  axes  are  lying. 
And  armour  and  helmets  of  silver  and  stoel. 

With  old-&8hion'd  fire-arms  vying. 

The  cannons  are  few,  but  yet  are  enough 

To  build  up  a  trophy  olden. 
A  standard  projects  firom  out  of  the  heap. 

Its  colour  is  black-red-golden. 


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352  HEINlfB  POEMS. 

In  the  fourth  of  the  halls  the  Emperor  lives, 

For  many  a  centnry  dosing 
On  a  seat  made  of  stone  near  a  table  of  stone, 

His  head  on  his  arm  reposing. 
His  beard,  which  has  grown  right  down  to  the  gioandl 

Is  red  as  a  fiery  ocean ; 
At  times  his  eye  to  blink  may  be  seen, 

And  his  eyebrows  are  ever  in  motion. 
But  whether  he  sleeps  or  whether  he  thinks 

For  the  present  we  cannot  discover ; 
Yet  when  the  proper  honr  has  come, 

He*ll  shake  himself  all  over. 
His  trusty  banner  he  then  will  seize,  . 

And  *'  To  horse !     Quick  to  horse  I*'  shout  proudly ;      \        i 
His  cavalry  straight  will  awake  and  spring  . 

From  the  earth,  all  rattling  loudly. 
Each  man  will  forthwith  leap  on  his  horse, 

Each  stamping  his  hoofs  and  neighing ;  ^ 

They*ll  ride  abroad  in  the  clattering  world, 

While  their  trumpets  are  merrily  playing. 
Eight  well  they  ride,  and  right  well  they  fight. 

No  longer  they  slumber  supinely ; 
In  terrible  judgment  the  Emperor  sits,  | 

To  punish  the  murderers  condignly, — 
The  murderers  foul,  who  murder'd  erst 

Her  whose  beauty  such  awe  did  inspire, 
The  golden-haird  maiden,  Germania  hight, — 

O  Sun,  thou  accusing  fire  I 
Full  many  who  deem'd  themselves  safely  hid. 

And  sat  in  their  castles  cheerful. 
Shall  then  not  escape  Barbarossa's  fierce  wrath,  ^ 

And  the  cord  of  vengeance  fearfuL 
My  old  nurse's  tales,  how  sweetly  they  ring,  I 

How  dear  are  the  thoughts  they  inspire  I  ' 

My  heart  superstitiously  shouts  with  joy : 

"  O  Sun,  thou  accusing  fire  I" 

CAPUT  XV. 

A  FINE  and  prickly  rain  now  descends. 
Like  needle-tops  cold,  and  wetting ; 
The  horses  mournfully  waggle  their  tails, 
And  wade  thi'ough  the  mud  with  sweating. 


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OEBMANY.  353 

Upon  his  horn  the  postilion  blows 

The  old  tune  loved  so  dearly : 
"  Three  horsemen  are  riding  out  at  the  gate  " — 

Its  memory  crosses  me  clearly.  ^ 

I  sleepy  grew,  and  at  length  went  to  sleep, 

And  as  for  my  dream,  this  is  it : 
To  the  Emperor  Barbarossa  I 

In  the  wondrous  mount  paid  a  visit. 

On  his  stony  seat  by  the  table  of  stone 

Like  an  image  no  longer  I  saw  him, 
Nor  had  he  that  very  respectable  look 

With  which  for  the  most  part  they  draw  him. 

He  waddled  about  with  me  round  the  halls 

Discoursing  with  much  affection, 
Like  an  antiquarian  pointing  out 

The  gems  of  his  precious  collection. 

In  the  hall  of  armour  he  show'd  with  a  club 
How  the  strength  of  a  blow  to  determine, 

And  rubb'd  off  the  dust  from  a  few  of  the  swords 
With  his  own  imperial  ermine. 

He  took  in  his  hand  a  peacock's  fan, 

And  cleaned  full  many  a  dusty 
Old  piece  of  armour,  and  many  a  helm, 

And  many  a  morion  rusty. 

The  standard  he  carefully  dusted  too, 

And  said,  "  My  greatest  pride  is, 
*'  That  not  e'en  one  moth  hath  eaten  the  silk, 

"  And  not  e'en  one  insect  inside  is." 

And  when  we  came  to  the  second  hall, 

Where  asleep  on  the  ground  were  lying 
Many  thousand  arm'd  warriors,  the  old  man  said, 

Thoii*  forms  with  contentment  eyeing  : 

"  We  must  take  care,  while  here,  not  to  waken  the  men, 

**  And  make  no  noise  in  the  gallery ; 
**  A  hundred  years  have  again  passed  away, 

"  And  to-day  I  must  pay  them  their  salary.** 

And  see !  the  Emperor  softly  approach'd, 

While  he  held  in  his  hand  a  ducat, 
And  quietly  into  the  pocket  of  each 

Of  the  sleeping  soldiery  stuck  it. 

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854  xIEine's  poems. 

And  then  he  remark'd  with  a  simpering  facc^ 

When  I  observed  him  with  wonder  : 
''  I  give  them  a  ducat  apiece  as  their  pay, 

'*  At  periods  a  century  asunder." 
In  the  hall  wherein  the  horses  were  ranged, 

And  drawn  out  in  rows  long  and  silent, 
Together  the  Emperor  rubb'd  his  hands 

While  his  pleasure  seem'd  getting  quite  vilfiik 
He  counted  the  horses,  one  by  one, 

And  poked  their  ribs  approving ; 
He  counted  and  counted,  and  all  the  while 

His  lips  were  eagerly  moving. 
• '  The  proper  number  is  not  complete,*' — 

Thus  angrily  he  discourses  : 
"  Of  soldiers  and  weapons  I've  quite  enough, 

*'  But  still  am  deficient  in  horses. 
"  Horse-jockeys  I've  sent  to  every  place 

^*  In  all  the  world,  to  supply  me 
**  With  the  very  best  horses  that  they  can  find 

'*  And  now  I've  a  good  number  by  me. 
"  I  only  wait  till  the  number's  complete, 

*'  Then,  making  a  regular  clearance. 
'*  I'll  free  my  country,  my  German  folk, 

"  Who  trustingly  wait  my  appearance.'* — 
Thus  spake  the  Emperor,  while  I  cried : 

"  Old  fellow  1  seize  time  as  it  passes ; 
**  Set  to  work,  and  hast  thou  not  horses  enough, 

**  Then  fill  up  their  places  with  asses." 
Then  Barbarossa  smiling  replied : 

*'  For  the  battle  there  need  be  no  hurry ; 
**  Kome  certainly  never  was  built  in  one  day, 

"  Nothing's  gained  by  bustle  and  flurry. 
"  Who  comes  not  to-day,  to-morrow  will  come, 

*'  The  oak's  slow  growth  might  shame  us ; 
"  Chi  va  2)iano  va  sano  wisely  says 

"  The  Eoman  proverb  famous." 
CAPUT  XVI. 

THE  carriage's  jolting  woke  me  up 
From  my  dream,  yet  vainly  sought  I 
To  keep  awake,  so  I  slumber'd  again, 
And  of  Barbarossa  thought  I- 


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GEBHANT.  355 

Again  we  went  through  the  echoing  halls, 

And  talked  of  great  and  small  things  ; 
He  ask'd  me  this,  and  he  ask'd  me  that, 

And  wish'd  to  know  about  all  things. 
He  told  me  that  not  one  mortal  word 

From  the  world  above  had  descended 
For  many  a  year, — in  fact  not  since 

The  Seven-years'  war  had  ended. 
With  interest  he  for  Karschin*  ask'd, 

For  Mendelssohn  (Moses  the  glorious), 
For  Louis  the  Fifteenth's  mistress  frail. 

The  Coimtess  Du  Barry  notorious. 
"  0  Emperor,"  cried  I,  **  how  backward  thou  art  I 

"  Old  Moses  is  dead  and  forgotten, 
*'  With  his  Eebecca ;  and  Abraham  too, 

"  The  son,  is  dead  and  rotten. 
"  This  Abraham  and  Leah,  his  wife,  gave  birth 

"  To  Felixf,  who  proved  very  steady ; 
"  His  fame  through  Christendom  far  hap  spread, 

"  He's  a  Chapel-master  already. 
"  Old  Karschin  likewise  has  long  been  dead, 

"  And  Klenke,  her  daughter,  is  dead  too ; 
"  Helmine  Chezy,  the  granddaughter,  though, 

•'  Still  lives — at  least  she  is  said  to. 
"  Du  Barry  lived  merrily,  keeping  afloat, 

*'  For  Louis  the  Fifteenth  screen'd  her 
^*  As  long  as  he  lived,  but  when  she  was  old 

"  They  cruelly  guillotined  her. 

"  King  Louis  the  Fifteenth  died  in  his  bed, 

"  By  the  doctors  attended  and  seen  to ; 
/^/  "  i^t  Louis  the  Sixteenth  was  guillotined, 

**^And  Antoinette  the  Queen  too. 
"  The  Queen  the  greatest  courage  display'd, 

"  And  died  like  a  monarch,  proudly ; 
'*  But  Madame  Du  Barry,  when  guillotined, 

"  Kept  weeping  and  screaming  loudly." — 

*  A  poetess  of  some  reputation,  who  died  in  1791.  Her  grand- 
daughter,  Helmine  Chezy,  bom  in  1783,  was  also  well  known  as 
a  poetess  and  romance  writer. 

t  The  great  composer  Mendelssolm  was  grandson  to  ihe 
Anions  phSosopher  of  that  i 


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356  BEIKlfS  POEMS. 

The  Emperor  suddenly  came  to  a  stand, 
And  stared,  as  if  doubting  my  meaning. 

And  said  :  **  For  the  sake  of  hea^^en  explain 
"  What  is  meant  by  that  word  guillotining  T* 

*'  Why,  guillotining,"  I  briefly  replied, 

'•  Is  a  method  newly  constructed, 
"  By  means  of  which  people  of  every  rank 

"  From  life  to  death  are  conducted. 

"  For  this  purpose,  a  new  machine  is  employer - 
I  continued,  while  closely  he  listened ; 

"  Invented  by  Monsieur  GuiUotin, 

"  And  '  guillotine*  after  him  christen' d. 

"  You  first  are  fastened  to  a  board  ; 

**  'Tis  lower 'd ;  then  quickly  they  shove  you 
"  Between  two  posts ;  meanwhile  there  hangs 

"  A  triangular  axe  just  above  you. 

'*  They  pull  a  string,  and  downward  shoots 
*'  The  axe,  quite  lively  and  merry ; 

*'  And  so  your  head  falls  into  a  bag, 
"  And  nothing  remains  but  to  bury." 

The  Emperor  here  interrupted  my  speech : 
"  Be  silent  I     May  heaven  confuse  it, 

"  That  foul  machine !  and  God  forbid 
"  That  I  should  ever  use  it  I 

"  The  King  and  Queen  !  What  ?  To  a  boaid 
"  Both  fastened  !  What  a  position ! 

"  'Tis  contrary  to  all  respect, 
"  And  etiquette  in  addition  ! 

"  And  who  art  thou,  that  darest  to  speak 

"  So  coolly  and  so  much,  man  ? 
•*  Just  wait  a  while,  and  111  soon  clip 

"  Thy  wings,  or  I'm  a  Dutchman ! 

"  My  inmost  bile  is  deeply  stirred 

**  At  words  so  out  of  season ; 
**  Thy  very  breath  is  full  of  crime 

"  And  guilty  of  high  treason  !'* 

When  in  his  zeal  the  old  man  rail'd. 

And  treated  me  thus  cavalierly, 
Surpassing  all  bounds, — ^I  sharply  replied, 

And  told  him  my  mind  quite  clearly. 


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aRRirAirt.  357 

"  Barbarossa !"  I  cried,  "  thon'rt  just  as  absurd 

*'  As  an  old  woman's  silly  fable ; 
"  Go,  lie  down  and  sleep !  without  thy  aid 

"  To  free  ourselves  we  are  able. 

"  The  republicans  all  would  scoff  and  jeer, 

''  And  shake  their  sides  with  laughter 
"  To  see  such  a  spectre,  with  sceptre  and  crown 

*'  Act  as  leader,  while  we  went  after. 

*  Thy  standard,  too,  no  more  I  respect ; 

*'  My  love  for  the  black-red-golden 
"  Has  been  quench'd  by  the  fools  of  the  Burschemchaft, 

*•  With  their  rage  for  the  so-call'd  olden. 

'*  In  Old  Kyffhauser  'twere  better  that  thou 

**  Shouldst  pass  thy  days  morosely ; 
"  In  truth,  we've  no  need  of  an  Emperor  now, 

*'  When  I  view  the  matter  closely." 

CAPUT  XVII. 

IWKANGLED  in  dream  with  the  Emperor  thus,— 
In  dream, — I  say  it  advisedly ; 
In  waking  hours  we  never  dare  talk 
To  princes  so  undisguisedly. 

The  Germans  only  venture  to  speak 

When  asleep,  in  a  dream  ideid, 
The  thoughts  that  they  bear  in  their  faithful  hearts, 

So  German  and  yet  so  real. 

When  I  awoke,  I  was  passing  a  wood, 

And  the  sight  of  the  trees  in  such  numbers, 

And  their  naked  wooden  reality. 
Soon  scared  away  my  slumbers. 

The  oaks  with  solemnity  shook  their  heads ; 

The  twigs  ol  the  birch-trees,  in  token 
Of  warning,  nodded, — and  I  exdaim'd : 

•'  Dear  monarch,  forgive  what  IVe  spoken! 

"  Forgive,  Barbarossa,  my  headstrong  speech^ 

"  I  know  that  thou  art  &r  wiser 
•*  Than  I,  for  impatient  by  nature  I  am — 

**  Yet  hasten  thy  coming,  my  Kaiser  i 


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358  HEINE'S  POEMS. 

^'  If  guillotining  contents  thee  not,  * 
'*  Retain  the  old  plan  for  the  present : 

"  The  sword  for  the  nobleman,  keeping  the  rope 
"  For  the  townsman  and  vulgar  peasant. 

**  But  frequently  change  the  order,  and  let 

'*  The  nobles  be  hang'd,  beheading 
''  The  townsmen  and  peasants,  for  God  cares  alike 

**  For  all  who  life's  pathways  are  treading, 

'*  Restore  again  the  Criminal  Court 
»'  That  Charles  the  Fifth  invented ; 

'*  With  orders,  corporations,  and  guilds 
''  Let  the  people  again  be  contented. 

'^  To  the  sacred  old  Roman  Empire  again 

**  In  all  its  integrity  yoke  us  ; 
**  Its  musty  frippery  give  us  once  more, 

"  And  all  its  hocus-pocus. 

"  The  middle  ages,  if  you  like, 

*'  The  genuine  middle  ages 
*'  111  gladly  endure, — but  free  us,  I  pray, 

'*  From  the  nonsense  that  now  all  the  rage  ig,- 

"  From  all  that  mongrel  chivalry 

''  That  such  a  nauseous  dish  is 
"  Of  Gothic  fancies  and  modem  deceit, 

•'  And  neither  flesh  nor  fish  is. 

**  The  troops  of  Comedians  drive  away, 

"  And  close  the  theatres  sickly, 
*'  Wherein  they  parody  former  times, — 

**  O  Emperor,  come  thou  quickly  !*' 

CAPUT  XVIII. 

THE  town  of  Minden's  a  fortress  strong, 
With  arms  and  stores  well  provided  ; 
But  Prussian  fortresses,  truth  to  say, 
1  never  have  abided. 

We  got  there  just  as  evening  fell ; 

The  planks  of  the  drawbridge  sadly 
Beneath  us  groan 'd,  as  over  we  roll*i 

And  the  dark  moat  gaped  on  us  madly. 


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GERMANY.  359 

The  lofty  bastions  on  me  gazed 

With  threatening  and  sulky  wonder ; 
The  heavy  gate  open'd  with  rattling  loud, 

And  closed  witii  a  noise  like  thunder. 

Alas !  my  soul  felt  as  sad  as  the  soul 

Of  Odysseus,  the  world-renown'd  warrior, 

When  he  heard  Polyphemus  rolling  a  rock 
In  front  of  the  cave  as  a  barrier. 

A  Corporal  came  to  the  door  of  the  coach 
For  our  names  ;  I  replied  to  this  latter  act : 

"  I'm  Nobody  call'd ;  I  an  oculist  am, 
Who  couch  the  giants  for  cataract !" 

At  the  inn  I  found  my  discomfort  increase, 

My  victuals  fiU'd  me  with  loathing  ; 
I  straight  went  to  bed,  but  slept  not  a  wink, 

So  heavy  I  found  the  bed-clothing. 

The  bed  was  a  large,  broad  featherbed. 

Red  damask  curtains  around  it. 
The  canopy  wrought  with  faded  gold, 

While  a  dirty  tassel  crown'd  it. 

Accursed  tassel !  of  all  my  repose 

It  robb'd  me  all  the  night  through ; 
It  hung  over  head,  like  Damocles'  sword, 

And  threatened  to  pierce  me  right  through  ? 

A  serpent's  head  it  often  appear'd. 

And  I  heard  its  hissing  mysterious : 
"  In  the  fortress  thou  art,  and  canst  not  escape'* — 

A  position  especially  serious  I 

*'  O  would  that  I  were" — I  thought  with  a  sigh,— 

'*  Of  my  peaceable  home  a  sharer, 
"  With  my  own  dear  wife  in  Paris  once  more, 

''  In  the  Faubourg-Poissoni^re !" 

I  felt  that  a  Something  oftentimes 

Was  over  my  forehead  stealing. 
Just  like  a  Censor's  chilly  hand, 

And  all  my  thoughts  congeab'ng. 

Grendarmes,  in  the  dresses  of  corpses  conceal'd, 

In  white  and  ghostly  confusion 
Surrounded  my  bed,  while  a  rattling  of  chaiiiB 

I  heard,  to  swell  the  illnsion. 

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360  HBIKB*8  POBHS. 

Alas !  the  spectres  carried  me  ofi^ 

And  at  length  with  amazement  I  fonnd  me 

Beside  a  precipitous  wall  of  rocks, 
And  there  they  firmly  had  bound  me. 

Detestable  tassel,  so  dirty  and  foul  I 

Again  it  appeared  before  me, 
But  now  in  the  shape  of  a  vulture  with  claws 

And  black  wings  hovering  o'er  me. 

And  now  like  the  well-known  eagle  it  seemed 
And  grasp'd  me,  and  breathing  prevented ; 

It  ate  the  liver  out  of  my  breast, 
While  sadly  I  groan'd  and  lamented. 

Long  time  I  lamented,  when  crow'd  the  cock. 

And  the  feverish  vision  faded ; 
Perspiring  in  bed  at  Minden  I  lay, 

To  a  tassel  the  bird  was  degraded. 

I  travell'd  with  post-horses  on. 

And  free  breath  presently  drew  I 
On  the  domain  of  Buckeburg, 

As  by  my  feelings  knew  I. 

CAPUT  XIX. 

ODANTON,  great  was  thy  mistake, 
And  thy  error  was  paid  for  dearly  ! 
One  can  carry  away  one's  fatherland 
On  the  soles  of  one's  feet,  pretty  nearly. 

Of  the  princely  domain  of  Biickeburg 
One  half  to  my  boots  clung  in  patches ; 

In  all  my  life  I  never  have  seen 
A  place  that  in  filth  its  match  is. 

At  the  town  of  Buckeburg  shortly  I  stopp'd, 

To  see  the  ancestral  castle 
Whence  my  grandfather  came ;  my  grandmother  tlioutrl 

Of  Hamburg  was  part  and  parcel. 

I  got  to  Hanover  just  at  noon. 

And  there  had  my  boots  clean'd  neatly, 

And  afterwards  went  to  visit  the  town ; 
When  1  travel,  T  do  it  completely. 


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j 

'  GERMANY.  361 

By  heavens,  how  spruce  the  place  appeared  ! 

No  mud  iu  its  streets  was  lying ; 
Many  handsome  buildings  there  I  saw, 

In  inassive  splendour  vying.* 

I  was  mostly  charm'd  by  a  very  large  square, 

Surrounded  by  houses  superior ; 
There  lives  the  king  and  his  palace  there  stands, 

Of  a  really  handsome  exterior, — 

(The  palace  I  mean.)     On  each  side  of  the  door 

A  sentry-box  had  its  station ; 
Ilcdcoats  with  muskets  there  kept  guard. 

Of  threatening  and  wild  reputation. 

My  cicerone  said  :  "  Here  lives 

**  King  Ernest  Augustus,  a  tory 
**  Of  the  olden  school,  and  a  nobleman, — 

'*  Very  sharp,  though  his  hairs  are  hoary. 

"  In  safety  idyllic  here  he  dwells, 

*'  For  he's  far  more  securely  protected 
"  By  the  scanty  courage  of  our  dear  friends 

''  Than  his  satellites  ever  effected. 

'^  ]  see  him  sometimes,  and  then  he  complains 

'*  How  very  tedious  his  post  is, — 
**  The  regal  post,  of  which  he  hero 

'•  In  Hanover  now  the  boast  is. 

**  Accustom'd  to  a  British  life, 

**  And  plagued  by  spleen,  to  cure  it 
'*  He  finds  it  not  easy,  an/*,  greatly  fears 

*'  That  he  cannot  much  longer  endure  it. 

"  T  other  day  I  found  him  at  early  mom 

"  By  the  fireside  mournfully  bending ; 
"  For  his  dog,  who  was  sick,  with  his  own  royal  bandt 

"  A  comforting  draught  he  was  blending.'* 

CAPUT  XX. 

IN  an  hour  from  Harburg  to  Hamburg  I  went ; 
The  shades  of  evening  were  thickening. 
The  stars  in  the  heavens  their  greetings  sent. 
And  the  air  was  soft  and  quickening. 

*  The  rest  of  this  chapter  waa  eimsed  by  the  censr  rs  frou:  th« 
>iigiDal  edit  on. 

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362  Heine's  poeats. 

And  whon  I  reach'd  my  motlier  at  last, 
She  was  wellnigh  frighten'd  with  gladness 

She  cried  **  My  darling  child  I"  and  clasp'd 
Her  hands  together  with  madness. 

**  My  darling  child,  full  thirteen  years 
*'  Have  passed  since  our  last  meeting; 

'*  You  surely  are  hungry  ;  tell  me  now 
"  What  yoall  take  in  the  way  of  eating? 

"  IVe  here  some  fish,  and  goose-flesh  too, 

*'  And  handsome  oranges  also  !" — 
*'  Then  give  me  some  fish,  and  goose-flesh  too, 

"  And  handsome  oranges  also  1" 

And  whilst  I  ate  with  an  appetite  good, 

My  mother  was  lively  and  merry  ; 
She  ask'd  me  this,  and  she  ask'd  me  that, 

And  her  questions  were  awkward,  very. 

*'  My  darling  child,  in  your  foreign  home 
**  Do  you  get  all  the  things  you  require  ? 

"  Is  your  wife  pretty  skilful  at  keeping  house  ? 
'V  Are  your  shirts  and  stockings  dam*d  by  her  ?" 

"  The  fish  is  good,  my  mother  dear, 
"  But  in  silence  one  ought  to  eat  it ; 

*'  'Tis  easy  to  get  a  bone  in  one*s  throat, 
"  Pray  leave  me  in  peace  to  complete  it." 

And  when  I  had  finished  the  excellent  fish, 
The  goose  next  made  its  appearance ; 

My  mother  again  ask'd  for  this  and  for  that, 
With  the  same  ill-timed  perseverance. 

"  My  darling  child,  which  land  do  you  think 
*'  Is  the  best  for  people  to  dwell  in, — 

*'  This  place,  or  France  ?  which  nation's  the  best? 
"  What  thing  does  each  excel  in  ?" — 

"  A  German  goose,  my  mother  dear, 

"  Is  good  as  one  of  the  courses ; 
**  But  the  French  stuff  geese  far  better  than  we, 

'*  And  they  also  have  better  sauces." 

And  when  the  goose  had  taken  its  leave. 

The  oranges  presently  follow'd, 
A  nd  tasted  so  unexpectedly  nice, 

That  with  pleasure  they  quickly  were  swallow'd. 

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GERMANY.  363 

But  now  my  mother  again  began 

Her  questions  with  yery  much  pleasure ; 

She  ask'd  mo  a  thousand  things,  but  some 
Were  awkward  beyond  all  measure. 

**  My  darling  child,  pray  tell  me  now, 

''  If  politics  still  you're  inclined  to  ? 
*'  Which  party  in  the  state  to  support 

**  Have  you  the  greatest  mind  to  ?" — 

*•  The  quality,  my  mother  dear, 

"  Of  your  oranges  cannot  be  beaten ; 
**  The  sweet  juice  I  swallow  with  much  deligli, 

"  But  I  leave  the  r>eel  uneaten." 

CAPUT  XXL 
^T^HEY  bit  by  bit  are  building  again 
X     The  hapless  half-burnt  city  ; 
Like  a  half-shorn  poodle  Hamburg  now  looks, 
An  object  to  waken  one's  pity.* 

Full  many  a  street  has  disappeared 

That  mournfully  one  misses — 
Where  is  the  house,  wherein  I  kiss'd 

Love's  first  delicious  kisses  ? 

Where  is  the  printing-house,  where  I 

My  Betsebilder  printed  ? 
The  oyster  shop,  where  I  oysters  gulp'd  down 

With  appetite  unstinted  ? 

The  Dreokwall  too, — where  is  it  now? 

I  now  should  seek  it  vainly; 
Where  the  pavilion,  where  I  ate 

So  many  cakes  profanely? 

AVhere  is  the  town-hall,  wherein  sat 

The  senate  and  burghers  stately  ? 
A  prey  to  the  flames !   The  flames  spared  not 

Whatever  was  holiest  lately. 

The  people  still  were  sighing  with  grief. 

And  with  most  mournful  faces 
The  history  sad  of  the  great  fire  told, 

And  pointed  out  all  its  traces : — 

♦  The  jrreat  fire  at  Hamburg  took  place  in  Blay.  1842,  oi 
shortly  heSote  this  pcem  was  written. 


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864  Heine's  poems. 

*'  It  burnt  in  every  comer  at  once, 

"  All  was  smoke  and  flames  fiercely  flashing; 

*'  The  churches*  towers  all  blazed  on  high, 
"  And  tumbled  in  with  loud  crashing. 

*  The  old  exchange  was  also  burnt, 

"  Where  our  fathers  in  every  weather 
"  Were  wc  nt  to  assemble  for  centuries  past, 
"  And  honestly  traded  together. 

*  The  bank,  the  silvery  soul  of  the  town, 

"  And  the  books  which  have  always  served  us 
*'  To  note  the  assets  of  every  man, 

'*  Thank  heaven  1  have  been  preserved  us. 

"  Thank  heaven  I     In  every  land  they  made 

'*  On  our  behalf  large  collections ; 
"  A  capital  job, — we  got  no  less 

''  Than  eight  millions  in  all  directions. 

**  The  money  from  every  country  flow'd 

"  In  our  hands,  which  were  far  from  unwilling, 

"  And  plenty  of  food  they  also  sent, 
"  And  we  gladly  accepted  each  shilling. 

"  They  sent  us  clothes  and  bedding  enough, 
'^  And  bread,  and  meat,  and  soups  too ; 

"  The  King  of  Prussia,  to  show  his  regard, 
"  Would  fain  have  sent  us  troops  too. 

"  Our  losses  in  property  thus  were  replaced, 

"  A  matter  of  mere  valuation ; 
"  But  then  the  fright, — our  terrible  fright, 

'*  Admits  of  no  compensation  I" 

I  cheeringly  said :  "  My  worthy  friends, 
"  You  should  not  lament  and  bawl  so ! 

'*  A  far  better  city  than  yours  was  Troy, 
**  And  yet  it  was  burnt  down  also. 

"  Eebuild  your  houses  as  fast  as  you  can, 

*•  And  dry  up  every  puddle ; 
"  Get  better  engines  and  better  laws, 

*'  That  are  not  quite  such  a  muddle. 

"  Don't  put  in  your  nice  mock-turtle  soup 

So  very  much  Cayenne  pepper; 
"  YoMT  carp  are  not  wholesome  with  so  much  sauce, 
**  Or  when  eaten  with  scales,  like  a  leper. 

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GERMANY.  36S 

Tour  turkeys  will  not  do  much  harm, 
"  But  be  on  your  guard  'gainst  disastor 
From  the  knavish  bird  that  lays  its  eggs 
"  In  the  wig  of  the  burgomaster. 

"  'Tis  not  for  me  to  tell  you  the  name 

*'  Of  this  bird  of  bad  reputation ; 
*  When  thinking  about  him,  the  food  in  my  mew 

"  Is  stirr'd  with  indignation." 

CAPUT  XXII 

MOBE  changed  than  even  the  city  itself 
Appeared  the  people  within  it ; 
Like  walking  ruins  they  totter 'd  about, 
As  if  ready  to  tumble  each  minute. 

The  thin  still  thinner  than  ever  appeared, 

The  fat  appear' d  still  fatter. 
The  children  were  old,  and  the  old  were  young, 

(In  their  second  childhood  the  latter). 

Full  many  that  I  had  left  as  calves, 

As  oxen  were  herding  together, 
And  many  a  gosling  had  now  become 

A  goose  in  fullest  feajhtr. 

The  aged  Gudel  I  fbund  be-rouged, 

And  dressed  with  syren-like  brightness  \ 

She  had  procured  some  dark  black  hair. 
And  teeth  of  dazzling  whiteness. 

The  best  preserved  of  all  was  my  friend 

The  paper-dealer,  good  fellow  ; 
Like  John  the  Baptist,  round  his  head 

Was  floating  his  hair  so  yellow. 

I  only  saw  D —  a  long  way  off, 

He  slipp'd  away  so  fleetly ; 
I  hear  that  his  soul  was  burnt,  but  insured 

Fur  a  large  amount  discreetly. 

I  also  saw  my  old  Censor  again 

In  the  fog,  and  lowly  stooping 
I  met  him  iiL  the  goose  market  by  chance, 

And  ho  seem'd  completely  drooping. 


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366  ,  Heine's  poems. 

We  shook  each  other's  hands,  and  some  tears 

In  his  eye  appeared  collecting ; 
He  was  so  pleased  to  see  me  once  more ! 

The  scene  was  truly  affecting. 

I  fonnd  not  all,  for  many  a  one 

Had  quitted  this  scene  for  ever ; 
My  Gumpelino,  *  'mongst  others,  alas ! 

Was  gone,  to  appear  again  never. 

That  nohle  one  had  surrendered  his  soul 

To  Him  by  whom  it  was  given, 
And  now  had  a  glorified  seraph  become 

In  the  blissful  realms  of  heaven. 

In  vain  for  the  crooked  Adonis  I  sought, 

(Though  I  look'd  in  every  direction,) 
Who  used  to  sell  pots  and  pans  in  the  street, — 

A  very  chea{>  collection. 

And  Sarras,  the  trusty  dog,  was  dead, 

A  loss  of  a  serious  nature  ; 
Friend  Campef  would  sooner  have  lost  a  whole  host 

Of  writers  than  this  good  creature. 

The  population  of  Hamburg  town 

Has  from  time  immemorial  consisted 
Of  Jews  and  Christians ;  'tis  also  the  case 

That  the  latter  are  rather  close-fisted. 

The  Christians  all  behave  pretty  well, 

And  pass  their  time  in  clover. 
And  promptly  pay  their  bills  of  exchange, 

Ere  the  days  of  grace  are  over. 

The  Jews  are  however  divided  again 

Into  two  very  different  parties ; 
The  old  one  goes  to  the  synagogue. 

In  the  temple  the  new  one's  heart  is. 

The  new  party  eat  the  flesh  of  swine, 
Their  manners  are  somewhat  dogmatic ; 

They  democrats  are,  but  the  older  school 
Is  much  more  aristocratic. 

*  A  nickname  of  a  relation  ot  Heine's. 

t  A  leading  publisher  at  Hamburg,  employed  by  Heine  u 
publish  many  of  his  worksL 


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GERMANY.  367 

I  love  the  old,  and  I  love  tlie  new, 

Yet  I  swear  by  tlie  prophet  Jonas 
That  certain  fish  I  love  still  more, — 

Smoked  sprats  they  are  commonly  kiowu  as! 

CAPUT  XXIII. 

THOUGH  as  a  republic  Hamburg  was  ne'er 
As  great  as  Venice  or  Florence, 
Yet  Hamburg  has  better  oysters  ;  one  gets 
The  best  in  the  cellar  of  Laurence. 

I  went  there  with  Campe  at  evening  time. 

When  splendid  was  the  weather. 
Intending  on  oysters  and  Khenish  wine 

To  have  a  banquet  together. 

I  found  some  excellent  company  there. 

And  greatly  was  delighted 
To  see  many  old  friends,  such  as  Chaufepie, 

And  new  ones,  self-invited. 

There  Wille  was,  whose  very  face 

Was  an  album  where  foes  academic 
Right  legibly  had  inscribed  their  names 

In  the  shape  of  scars  polemic. 

There  Fucks  was  also,  a  heathen  blind, 

And  personal  foe  of  Jehovah, 
Who  believed  but  in  Hegel,  and  slightly  perhaps 

In  the  Venus  of  Canova. 

My  Campe  was  our  Amphytrion  there. 

And  smiled  and  enjoy'd  the  honour ; 
His  eye  was  beaming  with  happiness. 

Just  like  an  ecstatic  Madonna. 

I  ate  and  drank  with  an  appetite  good, 

And  these  thoughts  then  crossed  my  noddle 

"  This  Campe  is  really  an  excellent  man, 
"  And  of  publishers  quite  the  model. 

"  Another  publisher,  I  feel  sure, 

"  Would  have  left  me  of  hunger  to  perish ; 

'*  But  he  has  given  me  drink  as  well, 
''  His  name  I  ever  shall  cherish. 


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368  Heine's  POEsts^  > 

**  I  thank  tlie  mighty  Lord  of  all  f 

'*  Wlio  this  juice  of  the  grape  created,  j 

"  And  Campe  to  me  as  a  publisher  gaye,  | 
"  Whose  merits  can't  be  overrated. 

**  I  thank  the  mighty  Lord  of  all 

"  Who  by  His  own  mere  motion 
**  Created  on  earth  the  Ehenish  wine, 

''  And  the  oysters  in  the  ocean. 

'*  Who  also  made  the  lemons  to  grow, 
"  The  oyster's  flavour  to  sweeten, — 

**  O  may  I  peacefully  to-night 
"  Digest  what  I  have  eaten!" 

The  Bhenish  wine  makes  my  feelings  soft, 
All  quarrelsome  thoughts  congealing 

Within  my  breast,  and  kindling  instead 
A  philanthropic  feeling. 

It  now  compell'd  me  to  leave  the  room, 
Aud  through  the  streets  to  wander ; 

My  soul  sought  a  soul,  and  the  sight  of  each  dreae 
Of  a  woman  made  it  still  fonder. 

In  moments  like  this,  with  grief  I  could  melt, 
While  my  yearning  makes  me  tremble  ; 

The  cats  appear  to  me  all  too  grey, 
And  Helens  the  women  resemble. — 

And  when  I  came  to  the  Drehbahn  Street, 

I  saw  in  the  moonbeams  glancing 
The  noble  form  of  a  woman  fair. 

With  stately  grace  advancing. 

Her  face  was  perfectly  healthy  and  round, 

Her  cheek  like  a  damask  rose  was. 
Like  a  turquoise  her  eye,  like  a  cherry  her  mouth, 

While  somewhat  reddish  her  nose  was. 

Her  head  was  cover' d  with  a  cap 

Of  snowy  stiff  linen,  not  ragged, 
But  folded  like  a  mural  crown, 

With  turrets  and  battlements  jagged. 

She  wore  as  her  dress  a  tunic  white 
Which  down  to  her  calves  descended ; 

And  O  what  calves  I     The  pedestals  they 
Of  two  J)oric  columns  splendid. 


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aEBMAKT  369 

A.  very  worldly  nMvet^ 

Could  be  read  in  her  every  feature, 
But  her  superhuman  hinder  parts 

Betray'd  a  superior  creature. 

She  now  approach'd  me,  and  straightway  said : 

*'  To  the  Elbe  here's  a  welcome  hearty ! 
"  E'en  after  an  absence  of  thirteen  yeais, 

"  I  see  that  thou'rt  stilly  the  same  party ! 

*'  Perchance  thou  seekest  the  souls  so  fair 

''  Who  so  often  used  to  meet  thee, 
^'  And  all  night  long  in  this  beautiful  place 

'*  With  their  reveries  loved  to  greet  thee. 

'*  By  that  hundred-headed  hydra,  Life, 

"  That  monster  fierce,  they  were  swallow'd ; 

•*  Thoult  find  those  olden  times  no  more, 
"  Nor  those  friends  once  lovingly  followed. 

"  No  longer  thoult  find  those  beauteous  flowers, 
"  Which  enchanted  thy  youthful  bosom ; 

*•  'Twas  here  they  bloom'd, — they're  withered  now,  . 
''  And  the  tempest  has  scattered  each  blossom. 

**  Yes,  withered,  and  stripped,  and  trampled  down 

'•  By  destiny's  footsteps  appalling — 
**  My  Mend,  ^is  is  ever  the  fate  upon  earth 

*  Of  all  that  is  sweet  and  enthralling !" — 

* '  Who  art  thou  ?"  I  cried — "  like  a  dream  of  old  time? 

"  Thy  appearance  doth  strangely  beset  me  ; 
'*  Where  is  thy  dwelling,  enormous  one  ? 

**  I'll  follow  thee  there,  if  thou'lt  let  me." 

The  woman  then  smiled,  and  thus  she  replied : 
"  Thou  art  wrong,  I'm  a  decent  and  quiet 

**  And  highly  moral  personage  too, 
*'  By  no  means  given  to  riot. 

'  I'm  none  of  your  foreign  lorettes,  my  friend, 

**  And  none  of  your  common  ladies ; 
'  I'm  Hamburg's  goddess,  Hammonia  by  name, 

"  And  to  watch  o'er  its  welfare  my  trade  is ! 

*  Thou  art  startled  perchance  to  hear  this  news, 

''  Thou  once  undaunted  singer? 
•*  Art  thou  prepared  to  follow  me  still  ? 

*'  Then  quick,  and  no  more  let  us  linger." 

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S70  Heine's  poems. 

Put  I  in  reply  laugh'd  loudly  and  cried : 

**  111  follow  thee  instanter  1 
**  If  thoult  go  in  front,  I'll  go  behind, — 

**  Yes,  even  to  hell  in  a  canter  1" 

CAPUT  XXIV. 

HOW  I  managed  to  mount  the  narrow  staiTS 
I  haven't  the  slightest  notion ; 
Perhaps  the  spirits  carried  me  up 
Witii  some  invisible  motion. 

But  hero,  in  Hammonia's  little  room, 

The  hours  pass'd  swiftly  o'er  me  ; 
The  goddess  confessed  the  sympathy 

That  she  had  ever  felt  for  me. 

**  Look  hero" — said  she,  **  in  former  days 
*'  The  minstrel  who  sang  the  Messiah 

"  Was  dearest  to  me  of  all  the  throng, 
*'  With  his  piously-sounding  lyre. 

'*  To  this  day  the  bust  of  my  Klopstock  stands 
'*  On  that  chest  of  drawers,  but  though  on  it, 

"  For  many  a  year  it  has  only  served 
**  As  a  block  for  holding  my  bonnet. 

"  Thou'rt  my  favourite  now,  and  thy  likeness  hai  g£ 
"  At  the  head  of  my  bed  in  due  order ; 

"  And  see,  a  fresh  laurel  now  surrounds 
**  The  cherish'd  portrait's  border. 

"  Yet  thy  attacks  on  my  sons,  I  confess, 

"  Eepeated  by  thee  so  often, 
^*  Have  sometimes  caused  me  the  greatest  pain  ,- 

'*  Thy  language  thou  must  soften. 

*'  I  trust  that  time  has  cured  thee  now 

"  Of  rudeness  so  cold-hearted, 
"  And  somewhat  greater  tolerance 

**  For  even  the  fools  imparted. 

"  But  say  how  thou  camest  td  travel  north 

**  At  such  an  unclement  season? 
*  The  weather  already  is  winterly  quite,-^* 

*^  I  fain  would  know  the  reason." 


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OERICANY.  371 

•*  O  worthy  goddess  I"  I  said  in  reply, 

**  In  the  bosom's  inmost  recesses 
"  Are  slumbering  thoughts  which  often  awake 

"  At  a  time  which  rather  distresses. 

"  Externally  things  went  on  pretty  well, 

"  But  within  I  was  weigh'd  down  wil^  anguish, 

"  Which  every  day  grew  worse  and  worse, — 
*'  For  home  I  ceased  not  to  languish. 

*'  The  air  of  France,  so  usually  L'ght, 

"  Began  to  be  oppressive  ; 
"  I  long'd  to  breatiie  some  German  air, 

'^  To  relieve  this  burden  excessive. 

"  I  yeam'd  for  German  tobacco-smoke, 

"  And  the  smell  of  German  peat  too  ; 
"  My  foot  impatiently  quiver'd,  the  ground 

"  Of  Grermany  to  beat  too. 

^'  I  sigh*d  all  night,  and  I  long'd  and  long'd 

'*  Yet  once  again  to  view  her, 
'*  The  old  woman  who  close  to  the  Dammthor  lives^ 

'  And  Lotte,  who  lives  close  to  her. 

'"^  The  thought  of  that  old  and  worthy  man 

'*  Who  always  freely  reproved  me» 
*'  And  then  his  protection  over  me  threw, 

"  To  many  a  sigh  now  moved  me. 

^'  I  fain  would  hear  again  from  his  mouth 

"  The  words  *  young  stupid  !*  repeated, 
*'  Which  always  in  my  younger  days 

<*  My  heart  like  music  greeted. 

'*  I  yeam'd  for  the  blue  smoke  that  high  in  the  air 

'*  From  Overman  chimneys  reaches, 
*'  For  the  Lower-Saxony  nightingales, 

"  For  the  silent  groves  of  beeches. 

*'  I  yeam'd  for  all  the  sorrowful  spots, 

'^  The  places  where  once  I  resorted, 
"  Where  once  I  trailed  my  youthful  cross, 

''  And  my  crown  of  thorns  supported. 

**  I  &in  would  weep  where  I  formerly  wept 

*'  Those  tears  so  bitter  and  burning; 
**  The  love  of  fatherland  methinks 

"  They  call  this  fooliah  yearning.. 


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372  HEmE'8  FOEKS. 

*  I  love  not  to  talk  of  it ;  'tis  nought  ehe 

"  But  a  whim  of  the'  imagination  ; 
*'  ShamefiEtced  by  nature,  I  hide  my  woundu 

"  From  public  observation. 

"  O  how  I  detest  the  trumpery  set 

''  Who,  to  stir  men's  passion  heated, 
*^  Of  patriotism  make  a  show 

"With  all  its  ulcers  fetid. 

'^  They're  shameless  and  shabby  beggars  all, 

"  W^o  live  upon  people's  charity ; 
"  For  Menzel*  and  all  his  Swn]>ians,  here's 

"  A  penn'orth  of  popularity  ! 

'  My  goddess  I  thou  hast  found  me  to-da;/ 

*'  Of  a  tender  disposition ! 
"  I'm  rather  ill,  but  a  little  care 

"  Will  soon  recruit  my  condition. 

"  Yes,  I  am  ill,  and  thou  canst  refresh 

"  My  spirits  in  a  minute 
"  By  means  of  a  cup  of  excellent  tea, 

"  With  a  little  rum  mix'd  in  it." 

CAPUT  XXV. 

SOME  tea  the  goddess  quickly  made, 
And  then  the  rum  pour'd  die  in ; 
But  she  herself  preferr'd  the  rum 
Without  a  drop  of  tea  in. 

Against  my  shoulder  she  lean'd  her  head, 

And  rather  tumbled  her  bonnet 
Or  mural  crown,  and  gently  she  spake, 

While  I  reflected  upon  it  : 

*'  I  often  have  thought  with  much  alarm 

**  That  in  Paris,  that  wicked  city, 
*'  With  the  frivolous  French  thou'rt  living  still, — 

"  'Tis  really  a  very  great  pity. 

"  Without  an  object  thou'rt  passing  thy  time, 

**  And  hast  not  even  beside  thee 
"  Some  faithful  Grerman  publisher  who 

*'  As  a  Mentor  might  warn  and  guide  thee. 

*  A  noted  critic,  poet,  and  histcman,  bom  in  1798.    He  had 
literary  quarrels  with  both  Heine  and  BOrna 


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QERMANY.  873 

**  And  than  the  iemptations  there  are  8o  great, 

"  So  many  a  sylph  amuses, 
"  Whose  health  is  bad,  and  one's  peace  of  mind 

"  One  far  too  easily  loses. 

'^  Betum  not  again,  but  stop  with  us, 
"  Here  modesty  reigns  still,  and  morals ; 

"  And  here  thou  may'st  gatlier,  e'en  in  our  midst, 
"  In  silence  many  fSedr  laurels. 

**  In  Germany  stay,  and  thoult  relish  things  more 

'*  Than  thou  wert  formerly  able^; 
*'  We're  fast  advancing,  and  thou  must  have  seen 

*'  Our  progress  so  rapid  and  stable. 

**  The  censorship  even  less  rigorous  is, 
"  Friend  Hoffinann  is  milder  and  older; 

"  His  youthful  passion  for  cutting  up 
"  Thy  Beisebilder  is  colder. 

"  Thou  too  art  older  and  milder  now, 

*'  And  many  things  quietly  takest, 
*'  And  in  a  better  spirit  than  once, 

*'  Past  times  thou  now  awakest. 

''  That  matters  in  Germany  used  to  go  ill 

'*  Is  a  great  exaggeration ; 
"  One  could  always  escape,  like  the  Romans  of  old, 

'^  From  serfdom,  by  self-immolation. 

"  The  people  enjoy 'd  full  freedom  of  thought, 

''  For  the  masses  it  never  was  stinted ; 
'*  Bestrictions  affected  nobody,  savo 

^*  The  limited  number  who  printed. 

'^  No  lawless  despotism  then  reign'd, 

*'  The  worst  of  demagogues  never 
"  Were  deprived  of  their  rights  of  citizciMihip, 

'*  Till  condemn'd  for  some  wicked  endeavour. 

"  Things  never  in  Germany  went  so  ill, 

'^  Whatever  disputes  may  have  risen ; 
'^  Believe  me,  no  mortal  was  e'er  starved  to  death 

"  Inside  a  German  prison. 

*^  In  those  long  vanished  days  there  bloomVl 

"  Full  many  a  fair  apparition 
*  Of  simple  faith  and  ^ndlin^'sn  too, — 

"  Now  all  is  doubt  and  aeditiim. 


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874  Heine's  foehs. 

"'  The  practical  frt^edom  that's  all  outside 

"  WUl  soon  destroy  the  Ideal 
*"  That  we  bore  in  our  bosoms, — as  fioir  as  a  dream 

*'  Of  lilies,  and  not  more  real ! 

"  Our  beautiful  poetry's  fading  fast, 

'*  Already  'tis  somewhat  fiaded ; 
"  The  Moorish  King  of  Freiligrath, 

'^  Like  the  rest  of  the  kings,  is  d^raded. 

'  O  couldst  thou  be  silent,  I  soon  would  unseal 

**  The  book  of  fate,  free  from  all  error, 
'^  And  suffer  thee  future  ages  to  see 
"  Within  my  magic  mirror. 

*'  That  which  to  mortal  man  I  ne'er  show'd, 

"  To  thee  would  I  gladly  discoyer : 
"  The  future  of  thy  fatherland,— 

"  Thou  wouldst  tell  it,  though,  all  the  world  over  !* 

'*  Good  heavens,  dear  goddess  I"  I  cried  with  delight. 

'^  It  would  give  me  most  exquisite  pleasure ; 
"  O  let  me  the  future  of  Germany  see, 

"  I  know  how  a  secret  to  treasure. 

"  I'm  ready  to  swear  whatever  oath 

*'  Thou  soonest  would  have  me  swallow, 

"  As  a  pledge  to  thee  of  my  secrecy ; 
'*  So  say  what  form  I  shall  follow." 

But  she  rejoin'd :  "  Thou  must  swear  to  me 

*'  As  by  Father  Abraham's  order 
"  His  servant  Eliezer  swore, 

"  When  starting  to  cross  the  border. 

**  Lift  up  my  dress  and  place  thy  hand 

**  Upon  my  thigh  below  it, 
*'  And  swear  that  in  speaking,  the  secret  thou'lt  keep 

*'  And  in  thy  works  as  a  poet !" 

The  moment  was  solemn.     I  felt  as  though  fann'd 

By  the  breath  of  ages  long  perish'd. 
When  I  swore  the  oath  in  the  manner  ordain'd 

By  Abraham,  our  fore&ther  cherish'd. 

I  lifted  up  the  goddess's  dress. 

And  placed  on  her  thigh  below  it 
My  hand,  vowing  secrecy  both  in  my  words 

And  in  my  works  as  a  poet. 


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aBBMAKY.  375 

CAPUT  XXVI. 

I^HE  cheeks  of  the  goddess  gloVd  all-red 
.     (I  think  that  the  rum  had  adcended 
Up  into  her  head)  and  she  spoke  in  a  tone 

In  which  sorrow  was  painfully  blended  : 
"  I'm  fast  getting  old  ;  I  was  born  on  the  day 

"  Of  Hamburg's  first  foundation ; 
"  My  mother  was  a  mermaid,  who  had 

"  At  the  mouth  of  the  Elbe  her  station. 
"  My  father  was  a  monarch  renown 'd, 

**  Called  Charlemagne  the  glorious ; 
"  He  was  still  more  wise  than  Frederick  the  Great, 

**  And  also  still  more  victorious. 
*'  At  Aix-la-Chapelle  is  the  scat  where  he  sat 

"  On  the  day  of  his  coronation  ; 
'*  The  seat  where  he  sat  at  night  deyolved 

**  On  my  mother,  as  nearest  relation. 
"  My  mother  left  it  to  me  in  her  turn, 

**  A  common-looking  article  ; 
"  And  yet  for  the  whole  of  Bothschild's  gold 

"  I  wouldn't  surrender  one  particle. 
*'  Behold,  in  yon  comer  stands  a  chair, 

"  Both  old  and  weather-beaten ; 
*'  The  leather  that  covers  its  arms  is  torn, 

"  And  the  cushion  is  sadly  moth-eaten. 
*'  Approach  it  now,  and  gently  lift 

"  The  cushion  from  the  settle ; 
**  Thou'lt  see  an  oval  opening  then, 

^  And  under  it  a  ketde. 
"  That  is  a  magic  kettle  wherein 

**  The  magic  forces  are  brewing ; 
'*  On  placing  thy  head  in  the  aperture,  soon 

"  The  future  thou'lt  clearly  be  viewing. 
'*  Yes,  Grermany's  future  there  thou'lt  see, 

'*  Like  wondrously  rolling  pbantasmas ; 
"  But  shudder  not,  if  out  of  the  filth 

"  Arise  any  foul  miasmas !" 
She  spoke,  and  she  laugh'd  a  singular  laugh 

But  I  undauntedly  hasted 
To  hold  my  head  over  the  terrible  hole. 

And  there  I  eagerly  placed  it. 


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376  Heine's  poiaia 

I'll  not  betray,  for  silence  I  vow'd. 

The  things  that  T  saw  and  felt  there ; 
I  scarcely  dare  to  utter  a  word, 

Good  heavens,  of  what  I  smelt  there ! 

With  deep  disgust  I  think  to  this  day 
Of  that  smell,  which  blended  together, 

In  vile  and  accursed  union,  a  stench 
Of  old  cabbage  and  Eussia  leather. 

And  heavens !  the  stink  that  afterwards  rose 

Was  still  more  filthy  and  dirty ; 
Twas  as  though  they  had  swept  together  the  soil 

From  closets  six  and  thirty. 

I  know  full  well  what  was  said  by  ^aint  Just 

In  the  famous  Committee  of  Safety : 
'*  Great  illnesses  cannot  be  cured  by  musk 

**  And  rose-oil,"  he  told  them  with  naivete. 

And  yet  this  German  futurity^s  smell 

Was  infinitely  stronger 
Than  aught  that  my  nose  could  e'er  have  conceived - 

In  fact  I  could  bisar  it  no  longer. — 

My  senses  I  lost,  and  on  opening  my  eyes 

Once  more,  I  found  myself  sitting 
Beside  the  goddess,  and  leaning  my  head 

On  her  breast,  in  a  manner  befitting. 

Her  look  it  glisten'd,  her  mouth  it  glow*d. 
Her  nostrils  twitched,  with  bacchantic 

Excitement  she  clasped  the  poet,  and  sang 
With  ecstasy  fearful  and  frantic : 

**  Stay  with  me  in  Hamburg,  I  love  thee  full  well, 
*'  And  we'll  eat  and  drink  with  gladnesti 

'^  The  oysters  and  wine  of  present  times, 
*'  Forgetting  the  future's  sadness. 

*'  Put  on  the  covei,  for  fear  lest  the  stench 
"  Should  all  our  pleasure  doud  over ; 

'*  I  love  thea  no  German  poet  had  e'er 
"  A  more  affectionate  lover  I 

*  I  kiss  thee,  and  I  feel  myself  now 

"  By  thy  genius  quite  inspired ; 
•'  My  spirit  by  a  wondrous  kind 

*'  Of  paroxysm  is  firecL 


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GimMANY.  377 

'*  I  feel  as  though  I  heard  in  the  street 

"  The  watchmen  singing  in  chorus ; 
'*  'Tis  wedding  music  and  bridal  songs, 

"  Sweet  friend,  that  are  rising  o'er  us. 

"  The  attendants  on  horseback  also  approach, 

"  With  their  torches  flaring  brightly  ; 
*'  The  torch-dance  they  dance  in  dignified  wise, 

"  And  hop  and  spring  about  lightly. 

"  The  noble  and  worshipful  Senate  is  there, 

"  And  the  elders  according  to  station ; 
"  The  burgomaster  clears  his  throat, 

'*  Preparing  a  lengthy  oration. 

'^  In  glittering  uniforms  also  appear 

"  The  whole  of  the  corps  diplomatic, 
"  In  the  name  of  the  neighbouring  states  to  present 

*'  Congratulations  emphatic. 

"  A  clerical  deputation,  too,  comes, 

"  By  rabbis  and  pastors  guided  ; 
''  But,  alas !  here  Hoffmann  also  draws  near, 

"  With  his  scissors,  as  censor,  provided. 

**  The  scissors  rattle  in  his  hand, 

"  And  eagerly  he  races 
"  To  seize  thy  body, — he  cuts  thy  flesh — 

''  Methinks  it  by  far  the  best  place  is." 

CAPUT  XXVIl. 

AXT'HEN  summer's  pleasant  days  have  come 

T  T      111  teU  you  aU  the  history 
Of  the  other  wonders  that  came  to  pass 
In  that  long  night  of  mystery. 

The  olden  hypocritical  race, 

Thank  heaven,  is  rapidly  dying ; 
To  the  grave  it  is  sinlong,  and  owes  its  death 

To  its  ceaseless  habit  of  lying. 

Another  race  is  rising  up  fast, 

By  rouge  and  by  sin  untamish'd, 
Of  genial  humour  and  thoughts, — ^to  it 

m  tell  my  story  imvamish'd. 

\ 

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378  feine's  poems. 

I 
The  youth  which  the  poet*8  goodness  and  prida 

Appreciates,  pnts  forth  its  blossom. 
And  warms  itself  at  his  radiant  sonl, 

And  against  his  feeling  bosom. 

My  heart  is  loving  as  the  light, 

And  pure  and  chaste  as  the  fire ; 
The  noblest  Graces  themselyes  have  tuned 

The  chords  of  my  sweet  lyre. 

'Tis  the  selfsame  lyre  that  in  his  songs 

My  worthy  father  uses,— ^ 
The  poet  Aristophanes, 

The  fayouiite  of  the  Muses. 

In  the  previous  chapter  I  tried  my  hand 

.  At  copying  the  conclusion 
Of  the  play  of  the  "  Birds,"  which  certainly  is 
My  other's  finest  effusion. 

The  "  Frogs  "  is  also  capital     This 

Is  now,  in  a  Grerman  translation. 
Performed,  I  am  told,  on  the  stage  at  Berlin 

For  his  Majesty's  edification. 

The  King  likes  the  piece.     This  shows  his  tasU 
For  the  old-fashion'd  style  of  joking  ; 

The  late  King  far  more  amusement  found 
In  modem  frogs'  loud  croaking. 

The  King  likes  the  piece      But  nevertheless 
Were  the  author  still  living,  I  kindly 

Would  counsel  him  to  trust  himself 
In  Prussia  not  too  blindly. 

The  genuine  Aristophanes 

Would  find  it  no  subject  for  laughter ; 
We  should  see  him  move,  wherever  he  went, 

With  a  chorus  of  gendarmes  after. 

O  King,  I  really  wish  thee  well 

When  this  piece  of  advice  I'm  giving : 

Due  reverence  pay  to  the  poets  who're  dead, 
And  tender  be  to  the  living. 

Affront  the  living  poets  not. 

With  weapons  and  flames  they  are  fumish'd, 
More  terrible  far  than  the  lightnings  of  Jove, 

By  the  poets  created  and  bumish'd. 


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\.. 


GERMANY.  ^ 

4.ffi.*ont  the  gods  in  Olympus  who  dwell, 

Begardless  whether  they  know  it ; 
xAffront  the  mightiest  Lord  of  all, 

But  O,  affront  not  the  poet  1 

The  deities  harshly  avenge  in  truth 

Man's  crimes,  and  allow  him  no  shelter  ; 
•  The  fire  of  hell  is  passably  hot, 

And  there  he  must  roast  and  must  swelter 

Yet  pious  steps  can  the  sinner  release 

From  the  flames ;  for  saying  masses 
And  giving  to  churches  with  liberal  hand 

From  torment  a  certain  pass  is.  [scend, 

When  the  days  are  accomplished,  then  Christ  w^U  de^ 

And  burst  hell's  gloomy  portals ; 
And  though  he  may  sit  in  judgment  strict, 

He  still  will  acquit  many  mortals. 

And  yet  there  are  hells  from  out  of  whose  clutcl 

There's  no  escape  to  heaven  ; 
No  prayers  there  avail,  and  powerless  too 

Is  the  Saviour's  pardon  even. 

Is  Dante's  hell  to  thee  unknown. 

With  its  terrible  trinary  verses  ? 
The  man  whom  the  poet  there  has  shut  up 

Will  never  escape  from  his  curses. 

He  ne'er  wiD  be  freed  from  those  musical  flames 

By  any  god  or  Saviour ; 
So  for  fear  we  condemn  thee  to  such  a  sad  hell, 

Thou  hadst  better  mind  thy  behavioui*  t 


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37P  fM) 


ROMANCERO. 


BOOK  I.^HISTOBIES. 

When  vex'd  by  slander's  treacherous  Ufjath, 

Let  thy  faith  soar  the  higher ; 
And  when  thy  soul  is  sad  unto  death. 

Then  strike  thou  the  lyre. 

A  flaming  and  glowing  heroical  song 

The  chords  breathe  discreetly  I 
All  anger  flies,  and  thy  spirit  ^e  long 

Will  bleed  to  death  sweetly. 


EHAMPSENITUa* 

WHEN  the  King  Bhampsenitns 
Enter'd  in  the  halls  resplendent 
Of  his  daughter,  she  was  langhing. 
As  was  aJso  each  attendant. 

E'en  the  blackamoors,  the  ennnchs, 

FoUow'd  in  lend  chorus  after ; 
E'en  the  mummies,  e'en  the  sphynxes 

Seem'd  about  to  burst  with  laughter. 

Then  the  princess  said :  *•  I  fancied 

"  That  I  held  the  thief  securely, 
"  But  it  was  a  dead  arm  only 

'^  That  my  hand  had  seized  so  surely. 

**  I  can  see  now  how  the  robber 

"  To  thy  storehouse  penetrated, 
''  And  despite  all  bars  and  fSetsfnings 

"All  thy  treasure  confiscated. 

*  For  the  full  particulars  of  this  stary  see  Iterodotus,  Book  IL 
t.  121. 


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BOUANGEBO.  381 

.  He  a  magic  key  possesses, 

"  Which  the  door  of  house  or  stable 
"  Straightway  opens ;  to  resist  it 

'^  Are  the  strongest  doors  nnable. 

"  Now  I'm  really  not  a  strong  door, 

"  Nor  could  I  resist  his  pleasure ; 
"  So  this  night,  while  treasure-watching, 

"  Have  I  lost  my  little  treasure  !" 

Round  the  chamber  danced  the  princess, 

Laughing  at  this  notion  clever, 
And  the  maidens  and  the  eunuchs 

Laugh'd  again  as  loud  as  ever. 

On  that  day  all  Memphis  laugh'd  too, 

E'en  the  crocodiles  so  bloody 
Laughingly  their  heads  protruded 

From  the  yellow  Nile-stream  muddy, 

When  they  heard  the  drum's  loud  beating, 

And  the  foU'wing  proclamation 
Shouted  by  the  public  crier 

On  the  bank,  to  all  the  nation : — 

"  We,  Rhampsenitus,  by  God's  grace 

*'.  King  of  Egypt,  to  our  loyal 
"  Well-beloved  friends  and  subjects 

**  Hereby  send  our  greeting  royal. 

"  In  the  night  between  the  third  and 
*•  Fourth  of  June,  the  fourteen  hundred 

*'  Four  and  twentieth  year  before  Christ, 
''  Came  a  certain  thief,  who  plimder'd 

*'  Many  jewels  from  the  storehouse 

"  "Wiere  we  kept  them,  and  more  lately 

*'  Further  theffcs  has  perpetrated, 
"  So  that  we  have  suffer'd  greatly. 

**  To  discover  the  offender, 

"  Made  we  our  beloved  daughter 
**  Sleep  beside  the  treasure  ;  but  he 

"  Robb'd  her  too,  and  napping  caught  her. 

"  Now,  to  check  this  wholesale  plunder, 

"  And  to  show  our  deep  affection 
*'  For  the  thief,  our  admiration, 

"  And  our  grateful  recollection. 


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382  Heine's  poems. 

"  We  will  give  our  only  daughter 

'*  As  his  lawful  wife — GoA  bless  her  I— 

"  And  to  princely  rank  promote  him, 
'*  Owning  him  as  our  successor. 

"  Since  our  son-in-law's  abode  is 
;    "  Unknown  to  us  just  at  present, 
*'  This  our  rescript  shall  inform  him 

^^  That  weVe  now  made  all  things  pl^isant. 

"  Done  the  third  of  January 

**  Thirteen  hundred  twenty-six 
**  Years  before  Christ ;  here  our  seal  wo, 

'*  King  Ehampsenitus,  affix." 

And  he  kept  his  word ;  the  thief  he 

As  his  son-in-law  soon  counted, 
And  when  he  was  dead,  the  robber 

On  the  throne  of  Egypt  mounted. 

And  he  ruled  like  other  monarchs, 

Trade  and  talent  patronizing, 
And  the  fewness  of  the  robb'ries 

In  his  reign  was  quite  surprising. 

THE  WHITE  ELEPHANT. 

GEEAT  Mahawasant,  of  Siam  the  King, 
Has  half  of  India  under  his  wing  ; 
Twelve  kings,  with  the  Great  Mogul,  obey 
His  rule,  and  acknowledge  his  sovereign  sway. 

Each  year  with  banner,  trumpet,  and  drum 
To  Siam  the  trains  with  the  tribute  come ; 
Many  thousand  camels,  with  backs  piled  Iiigh 
With  the  costliest  treasures  of  earth,  draw  nigh. 

When  the  camels  he  sees  with  their  heavy  piles. 

The  soul  of  the  King  in  secret  smiles ; 

But  in  public  in  truth  he  always  deplores 

That  his  storehouses  serve  not  to  hold  all  his  stores. 

Tet  these  storehouses  all  are  so  lofty  and  spacious. 
So  full  of  magnificence,  so  capacious, 
The  reality's  splendour  surpasses  in  glory 
The  Aiabian  Nights'  most  wondrous  story. 


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BOMANCERO.  383 

The  "  Castle  of  Indra  "  call  they  the  hall 
In  which  are  display'd  the  deities  all, 
The  golden  images,  chiselFd  with  care, 
And  all  incrusted  with  jewels  so  fair. 

Full  thirty  thousand  their  numbers  are, 
Their  ugliness  passes  description  far : 
A  compound  of  men  and  animals  dread. 
With  many  a  hand  and  many  a  head. 

In  the  "  Hall  of  purple  "  one  wond'ringly  sees 
Some  thirteen  hundred  coral  trees, 
As  big  as  palms,  a  singular  sight, 
With  spiral  blanches,  a  forest  bright. 

The  floor  of  purest  crystal  is  made, 
And  all  the  trees  are  in  it  display'd. 
While  pheasants  of  glittering  plumage  gay 
Strut  up  and  down  in  a  dignified  way. 

The  ape  on  which  the  monarch  doth  dote 
A  ribbon  of  silk  wears  round  his  throat. 
Whence  hangs  the  key  that  opens  the  hall 
Which  people  the  *  Chamber  of  Slumber"  call. 

All  kinds  of  jewels  of  Talue  high 
All  over  the  ground  here  scattered  lie 
Like  common  peas,  with  diamonds  rare 
That  in  size  with  tiie  egg  of  a  fowl  compare. 

On  sacks  that  stuff 'd  with  peails  appear 
The  Monarch  is  wont  to  stretch  himself  her<j  • 
The  ape  lies  down  by  the  monarch  proud, 
And  both  of  them  slumber  and  snore  aloud. 

But  the  King's  most  precious,  costly  treasure, 
His  happiness,  his  soul's  first  pleasure, 
The  joy  and  the  pride  of  Mahawasant 
Is  truly  his  snow-white  elephant; 

As  a  home  for  a  guest  so  highly  respected 
A  splendid  palace  the  King  has  erected ; 
Qfkj  lotos-headed  columns  uphold 
Its  roof,  all  coyer'd  with  plates  of  gold. 

Three  hundred  heralds  stand  at  the  gate, 
As  the  elephant's  guard  of  honour  to  wait ; 
And  kneeHng  down  with  low-bent  back 
There  serve  him  a  hundred  eunuchs  black. 


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384  Heine's  poeus. 

For  his  proboscis  the  daintiest  meat 
On  golden  dishes  they  bring  him  to  eat ; 
From  silver  buckets  he  drinks  his  wine, 
Well  seasoned  with  spices  sweet  and  fine. 

With  perfumes  they  rub  him,  and  otto  of  rosee 
On  his  head  a  chaplet  of  flowers  reposes, 
The  richest  shawls  that  are  made  in  the  East 
As  carpets  serve  for  the  dignified  beast. 

The  happiest  life  appears  to  be  his. 

But  no  one  on  earth  contented  is ; 

The  noble  creature, — one  cannot  tell  why, — 

Gives  way  to  a  deep  despondency. 

The  melancholy  monster  white 
Is  wretched,  all  this  profusion  despite ; 
They  fain  would  enliven  and  cheer  him  again, 
But  all  their  cleverest  efforts  are  vain. 

In  vain  with  singing  and  springing  there  come 
The  bayaderes  ;  the  kettle  drum  ' 

And  comet  in  vain  the  musicians  play. 
But  nothing  can  make  the  elephant  gay. 

As  matters  continue  to  go  on  badly, 
The  heart  of  Mahawasant  beats  sadly ; 
He  sends  for  the  wisest  astrologer  Imown, 
And  bids  him  stand  before  his  throne. 

"  Stargazer,  I'll  cut  off  at  once  your  head'' — 
Thus  speaks  he,  "  unless  you  can  tell  me  instead 
"  What  is  it  that  my  poor  elephant  needs, 
**  And  why  his  spirit  with  sorrow  so  bleeds." 

The  other  one  threw  himself  thrice  on  the  ground, 

And  finally  spoke  with  obeisance  profound  : 

"  O  monarch,  I'll  tell  thee  the  actual  fact, 

"  And  then  as  thou  will'st,  thou  canst  afterwards  act 

"  There  lives  in  the  North  a  woman  fair, 
**  Of  lofty  stature  and  beauty  rare ; 
"  Thy  elephant's  certainly  handsome.  Sir, 
•'  But  still  not  fit  to  be  liken'd  to  her. 

"  Compared  with  her,  he  only  appears 
**  A  little  white  mouse ;  her  form  she  rears 
-  '*  Like  giantess  Bimha  in  Eamajana, 
••  And  like  the  Ephesians'  great  Diana. 

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BOHANOEBO.  385 

''  Hei  limbs  are  combined  in  a  beautiful  frame ; 
'*  Two  lofty  pilasters  support  the  same, 
**  And  proudly  and  gracefully  stand  upright, 
*'  Of  alabaster  dazzling  and  white. 

"  This  is  God  Amor's  temple  gigantic, 
*'  In  other  words,  love's  cathedral  romantic! 
**  As  lamp  there  bums  within  the  fSane 
""  A  heart  quite  free  from  spot  and  stain. 

''  The  poets  are  nonpluss'd  how  to  begin 

*'  To  describe  the  charms  of  her  snow-white  skin ; 

"  E'en  Gautier*  unable  to  do  it,  alas !  is, 

''  Its  whiteness  all  description  surpasses. 

"  The  highest  Himalaya's  snow 

**  Beside  her  seems  ash-grey  to  grow  ; 

"  The  lily  that  she  by  accident  thumbs 

*'  Through  envy  or  contrast  yellow  becomes. 

'*  The  Countess  Bianca  is  the  name 

"  Of  this  enormous  snow-white  dame ; 

**  At  Paris  she  dwells,  in  the  land  of  France, 

**  And  the  elephant  loves  her  by  singular  chance. 

*'  By  strange  and  wondrous  elective  affinity 

"  She  became  through  a  dream  his  bosom's  divinity, 

*'  And  into  his  heart  this  lofty  Ideal 

*'  First  crept  by  means  of  a  vision  imreal. 

'*  Since  then  he's  consumed  by  a  yearning  stealthy, 
"  And  he,  who  was  once  so  joyous  and  healthy, 
"  As  a  four-footed  Werther  sadly  stands, 
*'  And  dreams  of  a  Lotte  in  Northern  lands. 

'*  O,  Sympathy's  mysterious  thrill ! 
"  He  never  saw  her,  but  thinks  of  her  still ; 
*'  Oft  tramps  he  round  in  the  moonlight  fair, 
"  And  sighs :  *  O  were  I  a  bird  of  the  air  !* 

**  His  body  alone  is  in  Siam,  his  mind 

"  In  France  with  Bianca  thou'lt  certaiulv  find  ; 

*'  And  yet  this  ])arting  of  body  and  soul 

**  Must  greatly  injure  his  health  as  a  whole. 

*  The  French  author 

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886  Heine's  poems. 

'*  From  the  daintiest  morsels  reyolts  his  belly, 
"  He  cares  for  nothing  but  vermicelli ; 
'*  He's  coughing  already,  and  fSast  grows  thinner  ; 
"  His  yearning  will  kill  him,  or  I*m  a  sinner. 

"  If  thou  wouldst  save  him,  preserve  him  alive, 
**  His  return  to  the  animal  world  contrive, 
•'  O  King,  then  send  the  renown'd  invalid 
**  Direct  to  Paris,  with  utmost  speed. 

'*  When  he  on  the  spot  in  the  actual  sight 
♦'  Of  the  beautiftd  lady  can  take  delight — 
"  Of  her  who  the  prototype  was  of  his  dream, 
'*  He'll  soon  be  cured  of  his  sadness  extreme. 

"  There  where  his  mistress's  glances  fall, 
**  His  spirit's  torments  will  vanish  all ; 
'^  Her  smiles  will  the  last  of  the  shadows  efface 
"  Which  in  his  bosom  had  taken  their  place. 

**  And  then  her  voice,  like  a  magical  tune, 
**  Will  cure  his  distracted  mind  full  soon; 
*'  The  flaps  of  his  ears  he'll  joyfully  raise, 
"  And  feel  as  he  felt  in  youthftd  days. 

"  All  things  are  so  very  enchanting  and  pretty 
**  On  the  banks  of  the  Seine,  in  Paris'  fair  city  I 
"  How  thy  elephant  there  will  civilized  be, 
"  Amusing  himseK  right  merrily ! 

'*  But  most  of  all,  O  monarch,  take  care 
"  That  plenty  of  money  he  has  with  him  there, 
"  And  a  letter  of  credit,  all  charges  to  meet, 
'*  On  Eothschild  Freres  in  the  Eue  Lafitte, 

**  For  a  million  of  ducats  or  thereabouts ; 
"  Then  Baron  Eothschild  will  harbour  no  doubtfl 
"  About  him,  but  say  with  an  accent  mellow : 
*'  *  The  elephant's  really  a  capital  fellow !' " 

The  astrologer  thus  discoursed,  and  then 
He  threw  hunself  thrice  on  the  ground  again. 
The  king  with  rich  presents  sent  him  away. 
And  stretched  himseK,  his  course  to  survey. 

He  thought  of  this,  and  he  thought  of  that ; 
(Kings  seldom  And  their  thoughts  come  pat). 
His  ape  beside  him  took  his  seat, 
And  both  of  them  fell  asleep  with  the  heat 

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BOMANOEBO.  387 

What  lie  resolved,  I'll  hereafter  relate  ; 
The  Indian  mails  are  behind  their  date. 
The  last  of  these  which  has  come  to  hand 
Was  by  way  of  Suez,  and  overland* 

KNAVE  OF  BERGEN. 

AT  Dusseldorf  castle  on  the  Ehine 
They're  gaily  masquerading ; 
The  waxlights  sparkle,  the  company  dance, 
The  music  their  nimbleness  aiding. 

The  beauteous  Duchess  dances  too, 

And  ceases  laughing  never  ; 
Her  partner  is  a  slender  youth, 

Who  seems  right  courtly  and  clever. 

He  wears  a  mask  of  velvet  black. 

Whence  merrily  is  peeping 
An  eye  just  like  a  shining  dirk 

From  out  of  its  sheath  half  creeping. 

The  carnival  throng  exultingly  shout 

As  they  whirl  in  the  waltz's  embraces, 
While  Drickes  and  Marizzebill* 

Salute  with  loud  noise  and  grimaces. 

The  trumpets  crash,  and  the  merry  hum 

Of  the  double-bass  increases, 
Until  the  dance  to  an  end  has  come, 

And  then  the  music  ceases. 

"  Most  excellent  Lady,  thy  pardon  I  beg, 

**  'Tis  time  for  me  to  go  now — " 
The  Duchess  said  smiling :  "  You  shall  not  depart, 

"  Unless  your  face  you  show  now." 

"  Most  excellent  Lady,  thy  pardon  I  beg, 

"  My  fece  is  a  hideons  creature's — ** 
The  Duchess  said  smiling :  <'  I  am  not  afraid, 

"  I  insist  upon  seeing  your  features.'" 

**  Most  excellent  Lady,  thy  pardon  I  beg, 
"  For  night  and  death  are  my  portion — " 

The  Duchess  said  smiling  :  "  FU  not  let  you  go, 
*'  111  see  you,  despite  all  your  caution." 

*  Oanifali 


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388  heime'b  poems. 

In  yam  he  struggled  with  gloomy  words 

To  change  her  determination  ; 
At  length  she  forcibly  tore  the  mask 

From  his  face  for  her  information. 

'*  'Tis  the  headsman  of  Bergen  I"  the  throng  in  the  hall 

Exclaim  with  a  feeling  of  terror, 
And  timidly  shrink  ;— the  Bnchess  rosh'd  out, 

Her  husband  to  tell  of  her  errot*. 

The  Duke  was  wise,  and  all  the  disgrace 
Of  the  Duchess  straightway  effac'd  he  ; 
He  drew  his  bright  sword  and  said :  "  Eneel  down, 
*'  Good  fellow  I"  with  accents  hasty. 

^  With  this  stroke  of  the  sword  I  make  you  now 

*•  A  limb  of  the  order  knightly  ; 
"  And  since  you're  a  knave,  you'll  hereafter  be  calFd 

*'  Sir  Knave  of  Bergen  rightly." 

So  the  headsman  became  a  nobleman  proud, 

Of  the  Bergen  Knaves*  family  foimder; 
A  haughty  race !  they  dwelt  on  the  Ehine, 

Though  now  they  all  underground  are  I 

THE  VALKYBES.* 

WHILE  below  contending  forces 
Fight,  above  on  cloudy  horses 
Three  Valkyres  ride ;  their  song 
Through  the  air  re-echoes  long. 

"  Princes  wrangle,  nations  quarrel, 
"  Each  would  bear  away  the  laurel ; 
*'  Conquest  is  the  highest  prize, 
**  Highest  worth  in  courage  lies. 

"  No  proud  helmet  gives  protection, 
*'  Death  brings  all  things  in  subjection ; 
''  And  the  hero's  blood  is  shed, 
"  And  the  wicked  win  instead. 

''  Laurel  wreaths,  triumphal  arches ! 
"*  On  the  morrow  in  he  marches, 
"  Who  the  better  one  o'erthrew, 
"  Winning  land  and  people  toa 

*  Or  Yalkyriors;  a  race  of  martial  virgins,  described  iu 
northera  mythology  as  riding  in  the  air  and  fighting  under 
Odin. 


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BOMANOEBO.  389 

^  Senator  and  burgomaster 
**  Go  to  meet  the  victor  faster  . 
**  With  the  keys  that  ope  the  gate, 
**  And  the  train  then  enters  straight 

"  Cannon  from  the  walls  are  crashing, 
"  Kettle-drums  and  trumpets  clashing, 
"  Bells'  loud  ringing  fills  the  sky, 
"  And  *  hurrah  I'  the  people  cry. 

"  On  the  balconies  are  standing 

"  Smiling  beauteous  women,  handing 

"  To  the  victor  flowery  wreaths ; 

"  He  with  haughty  calmness  breathes.' 

HASTINGS  BATTLE-FIELD. 

THE  Abbot  of  Waltham  deeply  sigh'd 
When  he  heard  the  tragical  story 
That  Harold  the  kmg  had  lost  his  life 
On  Hastings  battle-field  gory. 

Two  monks,  named  Asgod  and  Aibik,  he 

As  messengers  then  selected. 
To  seek  at  Hastings  amongst  the  dead 

For  Harold's  body  neglected. 

The  monks  went  forth  with  sorrowing  hearts. 

And  retum'd  with  faces  averted : 
**  O  Father,  the  world  goes  wrong  with  ns  now, 

"  We  seem  by  Fortune  deserted. 

**  The  better  man  has  fallen  in  fight, 

"  O'ercome  by  that  bastard  demon ; 
'*  Arm'd  thieves  amongst  them  divide  the  land, 

''  And  make  a  slave  of  the  freeman. 

**  The  veriest  rascal  in  Normandy  now 

*'  Is  lord  of  the  island  of  Britain ; 
*'  A  tailor  from  Bayeux  with  golden  spurs 

'*  We  saw  as  gay  as  a  kitten. 

'*  Woe,  woe  to  the  man  of  Saxon  birth  t 

'*  Ye  Saxon  sainted  ones  even, 
*'  Te  had  l)etter  take  care,  ye're  not  safe  from  lisgrace, 

"  E  en  now  in  the  kin^om  of  heaven* 


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390  Heine's  i^ems. 

**  The  meaning  now  we  can  understand 
**  Of  the  blood-red  comet  which  hitely 

"  On  a  broomstick  of  fire  rode  through  the  skj 
*'  One  nighty  and  astonish'd  us  greatly. 

'*  At  Hastings  there  was  realized 

*'  The  evil  starts  prediction ; 
"  Amongst  the  dead  on  the  battle-field  there 

"  We  sought  with  deep  affliction. 

"  Till  every  hope  had  disappeared 

"  We  sought  in  each  direction  ; 
"  The  corpse  of  King  Harold,  we  grieve  to  say^ 

"  Escaped  our  close  inspection." 

'Twas  thus  that  Asgod  and  Ailrik  spoke ; 

His  hands  wrung  the  Abbot,  while  moan'd  he 
Then  sank  in  deep  thought,  and  finally  said, 

As  heavily  sigh'd  and  groan'd  he  : 

"  At  Grendelfield,  by  the  bards'  old  stone, 
'*  In  a  hut  in  the  forest,  is  dwelling 

"  Her  whom  they  Edith  the  Swanneck  call, 
"  In  beauty  once  so  excelling. 

*'  They  call'd  her  Edith  the  Swanneck  erst, 
"  Because  her  neck  in  its  splendour 

'^  Eesembled  the  neck  of  the  swan ;  the  king 
'*  Loved  the  maid  with  affection  tender. 

'*  He  loved,  kiss'd,  fondled  her  long,  and  then 

"  Forgot,  like  a  faithless  lover; 
"  Time's  fleeting  on,  full  sixteen  years 

''  Have  since  those  days  pass'd  over. 

"  Now,  brethren,  go  to  this  woman  straight, 
"  And  bid  her  return  with  you  quickly 

**  To  Hastings ;  her  eye  will  discover  the  king 
"  'Mid  the  corpses  scatter 'd  so  thickly. 

**  And  when  you  have  found  his  body,  with  speeJ 
**  To  Waltham  Abbey  transfer  him, 

**  That  we  for  his  soul  due  masses  may  sing, 
"  And  like  a  Christian  inter  him." 

At  midnight's  hour  the  messengers  reach'd 

The  hut  in  the  forest,  saying : 
**  Awake,  O  Edith  the  Swanneck,  awake, 

"  And  follow  without  delaying. 


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BOMANOEBO.  391 

•*  The  Duke  of  tlio  Normans  as  victor  hath  come, 

'*  And  the  routed  Saxons  are  flying, 
"  And  on  the  field  of  Hastings  the  corpse 

**  Of  Harold  the  King  is  lying. 

•*  Come  with  us  to  Hastings,  we're  seeking  there 

"  The  body  benciith  the  dead  hidden, 
**  To  bring  it  to  Waltham  Abbey  with  care, 

"  As  we  by  the  Abbot  are  bidden." 

Then  Edith  the  Swanneck  girded  herself, 

And  not  one  word  she  utter'd. 
But  followed  the  monks,  while  her  grizzly  hair 

In  the  wind  all  wildly  fluttered. 

The  poor  woman  foUow'd  with  naked  feet, 

And  through  marsh,  wood,  and  briar  on  hied  they, 

Till  the  chalky  cliffs  on  the  Hastings  coast 
At  the  dawning  of  day  descried  they. 

The  mist,  which  like  a  snowy  veil, 

The  battle-field  was  cloaking, 
Dispersed  by  degrees ;  the  noisy  daws 

Were  flapping  their  wings  and  croaking. 

Many  thousand  corpses  were  lying  there 

On  the  earth  with  blood  bespattered, 
Stripp'd  naked,  and  mangled,  with  many  a  steed 

Among  the  carcases  scattered. 

Poor  Edith  the  Swanneck  in  the  blood 

With  naked  feet  now  waded  ; 
No  single  spot  the  searching  glance 

Of  her  piercing  eye  evaded. 

Both  here  and  there  she  sought,  and  she  oft 

Had  to  scare  away  the  devouring 
Black  troop  of  ravens  that  prey'd  on  the  dead  ; 

The  monks  behind  her  were  cowering. 

She  sought  throughout  the  livelong  day, 
Till  the  shades  of  the  evening  were  falling ; 

When  out  of  the  poor  woman's  breast  there  burst 
A  shriek  both  wild  and  appalling. 

For  Edith  the  Swanneck  had  found  at  last 
The  corpse  of  the  king,  poor  creature  I 

No  word  ^e  utter'd,  no  tear  she  wept, 
She  kiss'd  each  pallid  feature. 


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392  Heine's  poems 

She  kiss*d  his  forehead,  she  kiss'd  his  mouth, 

Her  arms  encircled  him  tightly ; 
She  kiss'd  the  bloody  breast  of  the  king, 

Disfigured  by  wounds  unsightly. 

Upon  his  shoulder  she  likewise  spied, — 
And  coverd  them  over  with  kisses, — 

Three  little  scars  that  her  teeth  had  made. 
The  signs  of  their  former  blisses. 

And  in  the  meantime  the  pair  of  monks 

Some  branches  of  trees  collected  ; 
These  form'd  the  bier,  on  which  they  bore 

The  body,  with  hearts  dejected. 

To  Waltham  Abbey  the  body  they  took, 

To  bury  it  rightly  and  duly, 
And  EdiiJi  the  Swanneck  foUow'd  the  corpse 

Of  him  she  had  loved  so  truly. 

The  litanies  for  the  dead  she  sang 

In  childlike  pious  fashion, 
And  in  the  night  they  fearfully  rang, — 

The  monks  pray*d,  full  of  compassion. 

OHABLES  I. 

IN  the  charcoal-burner's  hut  in  the  wood 
Sits  the  king,  an  object  of  pity ; 
The  charcoal-burner's  child's  cradle  he  rocks. 
And  sings  this  monotonous  ditty : 

'  Eiapopeia,  why  rustles  the  straw  ? 

'*  The  sheep  in  the  stalls  bleat  loudly ; 
"  Thou  bearest  the  sign  on  thy  forehead,  and  smil'st 

"  In  thy  sleep  so  wildly  and  proudly. 

'*  Eiapopeia,  thou  bear'st  on  thy  brow 

"  The  sign, — and  dead  is  the  kitten ; 
"  When  grown  to  manhood,  thou'lt  flourish  the  axo, 

"  And  the  oak  in  the  wood  will  be  smitten. 

**  The  charcoal-burner's  religion  is  dead, 
"  And  now  no  longer  receive  they,  — 

"  Eiapopeia, — the  faith  in  a  Qod, 
*'  Still  less  in  the  king  believe  they. 


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BOMANCBBO.  393 

**  The  kitten  is  dead,  and  the  mice  rejoice 
"  And  we  from  their  presence  are  driven.  — - 

**  Eiapopeia, — I,  monarch  on  earth, 
"  And  God,  the  monarch  in  heaven. 

**  My  heart  grows  sicker  day  by  day, 

**  My  brow  grows  sterner  and  sterner; 
"  Eiapopeia, — my  headsman  art  thou, 

**  Thou  child  of  the  charcoal-burner  I 

*'  My  song  of  death  is  thy  cradle  song — 

*'  Eiapopeia, — thoult  fumble 
'*  My  grey  locks  about,  and  cut  them  off, — 

"  Thine  axe  on  my  neck  will  tumble. 

"  Eiapopeia, — why  rustles  the  straw  ? 

'*  Thou  hast  gained  a  kingdom  splendid ; 
*•  Thou  strikest  off  from  my  body  my  head, — 

"  The  life  of  the  kitten  is  ended. 

*'  Eiapopeia,  —  why  rustles  the  straw  ? 

"  The  sheep  in  the  stalls  bleat  loudly  ; 
"  The  kitten  is  dead,  and  the  mice  rejoice, — 

''  My  dear  little  headsman,  sleep  proudly  !'* 

MARIE  ANTOINETTE. 

THE  plate-glass  windows  gleam  in  the  sun 
In  the  Tuileries  Castle  gaily ; 
And  yet  the  well-known  spectres  of  old 
Still  walk  about  in  it  daily. 

Queen  Marie  Antoinette  still  doth  haunt 

The  famous  pavilion  of  Flora ; 
With  strict  etiquette  she  holds  her  court 

At  each  return  of  Aurora. 

Full  dress'd  are  the  ladies, — they  most  of  them  stand, 

On  tabourets  others  are  sitting, 
With  dresses  of  satin  and  gold  brocade, 

Hung  with  lace  and  jewels  befitting. 

Their  waists  are  small,  their  hoop-petticoats  s^ell, 
And  from  underneath  them  are  peeping 

Their  high-heerd  feet,  that  so  pretty  appear, — 
If  their  heads  were  but  still  in  their  keeping  I 


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394  HEINE  S  POEMS. 

Not  one  of  the  number  a  head  has  on. 

The  queen  herself  in  that  article. 
Is  wanting,  and  so  Her  Majesty  boasts 

Of  frizzling  not  one  particle. 

Yes,  she  with  toupee  as  high  as  a  tower, 

In  dignity  so  resplendent, 
Maria  Theresa's  daughter  fair, 

The  German  CsBsar's  descendant, 

She,  curlless  and  headless,  now  must  walk 

Amongst  her  maids  of  honour. 
Who,  equally  headless  and  void  of  curls, 

Are  humbly  waiting  upon  her. 

All  this  from  the  French  Eevolution  has  sprung, 

And  its  doctrines  so  pernicious. 
From  Jean  Jacques  Rousseau  and  the  guillotine, 

And  Voltaire  the  malicious. 

Yet  strange  though  it  be,  I  shrewdly  think 
That  none  of  these  hapless  creatures 

Have  ever  observed  how  dead  they  are, 
How  devoid  of  head  and  features. 

The  first  dame  d'atour  a  linen  shifb  brings, 

And  makes  a  reverence  lowly ; 
The  second  hands  it  to  the  queen, 

And  both  retire  then  slowly. 

The  third  and  fourth  ladies  curtsy  atid  kneel 
Before  the  queen  discreetly,  ) 

That  they  may  be  able  to  draw  on 
Her  Majesty's  stockings  neatly. 

A  maid  of  honour  curtsying  brings   . 

Her  Majesty's  robe  for  the  morning ; 
Another  with  curtsies  her  petticoat  hold^ 

And  assists  at  the  queen's  adorning. 

The  mistress  of  the  robes  with  her  fen 

Stands  by,  the  time  beguiling ; 
And  as  her  head  is  unhappily  gone, 

With  her  other  end  she  is  smiling. 

The  sun  his  inquisitive  glances  throwf 

Inside  the  di^peried  casement ; 
But  when  the  apparitions  he  sees. 

He  starts  in  fearful  amazenient. 


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BOMANOEBO.  395 

THE  SILESIAN  WEAVERS  * 

NO  tears  from  their  gloomy  eyes  are  flowing, 
They  sit  at  the  loom,  their  white  teeth  showing : 
"  Thy  shroud,  O  Grermany,  now  weave  we, 
**  A  threefold  curse  we're  weaving  for  thee, — 

*'  We're  weaving,  we're  weaving ! 
"  A  curse  on  the  God  to  whom  our  petition 
'*  We  vainly  address'd  when  in  starving  condition ; 
"  In  vain  did  we  hope,  and  in  vain  did  we  wait, 
*•  He  only  derided  and  mock'd  our  sad  fate, — 

**  We're  weaving,  we're  weaving  ! 
'*  A  curse  on  the  King  of  the  wealthy,  whom  often 
''  Our  misery  vainly  attempted  to  soften  ; 
'*  Who  takes  away  e'en  the  last  penny  we've  got, 
"  And  lets  us  like  dogs  in  the  highway  be  shot, — 

'*  We're  weaving,  we're  weaving! 
"  A  curse  on  our  fatherland  false  and  contriving, 
**  Where  shame  and  disgrace  alone  are  seen  thriving, 
"  Where  flowers  are  plucked  before  they  unfold, 
"  Where  batten  the  worms  on  corruption  and  mould, — - 

"  We're  weaving,  we're  weaving ! 
**  The  shuttle  is  flying,  the  loom  creaks  away, 
**  We're  weaving  busily  night  and  day ; 
"  Thy  shroud.  Old  Germany,  now  weave  we, 
'*  A  threefold  curse  we're  weaving  for  thee,— 

'*  We're  weaving,  we're  weaving !" 

POMARE. 
1. 
LL  the  gods  of  love  are  shouting 
In  my  heart,  and  blowing  airy 
Flourishes,  and  crying :  *'  Hail ! 

**  Hail,  thou  mighty  queen  Pomare !" 
Not  the  queen  of  Otaheite 

Whom  'twas  missionaries'  duty 
To  convert ;  no,  she  I  mean 

Is  a  wild  untutor'd  beauty. 
Twice  in  every  week  appears  she, 

All  her  subjects  quite  entrancing 
In  that  dear  Jardin  Mabille, 

Waltzes  and  the  polka  dancing. 
*  This  poem  was  formerly  suppressed  by  the  censors. 

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A' 


896  hsunr's  poems. 

Majesty  in  all  her  footsteps, 

Grace  and  beauty  ne'er  forsake  her, 

Quite  a  princess  every  inch, 
Whichsoever  way  you  take  her. 

Thus  she  dances — gods  of  love  are 

In  my  heart  all  blowing  airy 
Flourishes,  and  crying :  '*  Hail ! 

'*  Hail,  thou  mighty  queen  Pomare !" 

2. 

SHE  dances.     How  her  figure  sways ! 
What  grace  her  every  limb  displays  I 
There's  as  much  flitting,  leaping,  swinging. 
As  if  she  from  her  skin  were  springing. 

She  dances.     When  she  twirls  with  skill 
Upon  one  foot,  and  then  stands  still 
At  last  with  both  her  arms  extended, 
My  very  reason  seems  suspended. 

She  dances.     'Tis  the  very  same 
That  once  Herodias'  daughter  came 
And  danced  to  Herod.     As  she  dances, 
Her  eye  casts  round  it  deadly  glances. 

She'll  dance  me  frantic.     Woman,  say, 
What  shall  be  thy  reward  to-day  ? 
Thou  smil'st  ?     Quick,  herald !  to  the  gate^my 
Decapitate  the  Baptist  straightway ! 


"TTESTEEDAY  for  very  broad, 
X     In  the  mire  she  waUowdd ; 
But  to-day,  with  pride  o'erbearing, 
In  her  carriage  takes  an  airing. 
On  its  silken  cushions  she 
Bests  her  head,  and  haughtily 
Looks  upon  the  thronging  masses 
Whom  on  foot  her  carriage  passes. 
When  I  see  thee  travelling  so. 
Then  my  heart  is  fill'd  with  woe ! 
Ah,  this  carriage, — so  prepare  thec,- 
To  the  hospital  will  bear  thee, 
Where  unfeeling  cruel  death 
Soon  will  take  away  thy  breath. 


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ROMANCEBO.  397 


And  the  student,  with  coarse  greasy 
Prentice  hand,  so  free  and  easy. 
Will  cut  up  thy  body  foir 
Anatomically  there ; 
And  at  Montfaucon  thy  horses 
At  the  knacker's  end  their  courses. 


THOU  hast  been  by  fate  befriended 
Better  than  at  first  I  said ; 
God  be  praised,  all  now  is  ended ! 
God  be  praised,  and  thou  art  dead  1 

In  thy  poor  and  agM  mother's 
Garret  thou  at  length  didst  die 

She,  with  love  beyond  all  others, 
Closed  thy  fair  eyes  tenderly. 

She  a  winding-sheet  bought  duly, 

And  a  coffin,  and  a  grave ; 
Somewhat  close  and  wretched  truly 

Was  the  funeral  that  they  gave. 

No  priests  at  that  funei-al  lonely 
Sang,  no  bell  toU'd  mournfully ; 

Thy  fi-iseur  and  poodle  only 
As  thy  mourners  followed  thee. 

"  Ah !"  the  former  sigh'd  :  "  I  often 
**  Used  to  comb  Pomare's  hair, 

"  And  her  long  black  tresses  soften, 
**  Sitting  in  her  easy  chair !" 

But  the  dog, — away  he  scamper'd 
At  the  churchyard  gate  anon, 

And  was  lodged  and  fed  and  pamper  d 
Afterwards  by  Eose  Pompon. 

She,  the  Proven9aler,  grudged  thee 
•    Thy  hard-earned  name  of  queen. 
As  a  hated  rival  judged  thee, 
Made  thee  victim  of  her  spleen. 

Ah,  poor  queen  of  jests  diurnal, 
With  thy  mud  crown  on  thy  head. 

Thou  art  saved  by  God's  eternal 
Groodnesa,  thou  at  last  art  dead. 


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S98  Heine's  poems. 

As  thy  mother,  so  thy  Father 
Mercy  show'd  thee  from  above ; 

This  He  did,  methinks,  the  rather 
In  that  thou  so  much  didst  love. 

THE  APOLLO  GOD. 

THE  convent  stands  high  on  the  rocky  stoep. 
The  Ehine  beneath  it  glistens ; 
The  youthful  nun  doth  eagerly  peep 
Through  the  lattice  window,  and  listens. 

A  bark  of  fable  is  sailing  past. 

By  the  evening  glow  tinged  brightly ; 

While  chequer'd  pennons  stream  from  the  mast, 
With  laurels  and  flowers  crown*d  lightly. 

Amid-ship  stands  a  beauteous  youth, 

With  flowing  auburn  tresses ; 
Of  very  ancient  cut,  in  truth. 

His  gold  and  purple  dress  is. 

Before  his  feet  nine  women  lie, 

Of  marble-lovely  graces  ; 
A  tunic  fair  and  loop'd  up  high 

Each  slender  form  embraces. 

The  goldeu-tress*d  one  sweetly  sings, 

And  likewise  plays  his  lyre; 
The  song  the  poor  nun's  bosom  stings, 

And  sets  it  all  on  fire. 

She  makes  a  cross,  and  once  again 

The  nun  repeats  the  measure ; 
The  cross  scares  not  her  blissful  pain, 

Nor  checks  her  bitter  pleasure. 


I  AM  the  god  of  music  bright, 
Kevered  in  every  nation ; 
Li  Greece,  on  Mount  Parnassus'  heighli 
My  temple  had  its  station. 

In  Greece  I  oft  have  sat  and  play'd 
On  famed  Parnassus'  mountain, 

Beneath  the  cypress'  pleasant  shade^ 
Beside  Castelia's  fountain. 


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ROMANOERO.  399 

Mj  daughters  sat  around  their  Pa, 

And  raised  a  vocal  chorus  ; 
They  sweetly  sang :  la-la,  la-la  I 

While  laughter  floated  o'er  us. 

The  bugle  rang :  tra-ra,  tra-ra  I 

From  out  the  forest  loudly ; 
There  hunted  Artemisia, 

My  little  sister,  proudly. 

And  whensoe'er  I  took  some  sips, — 

I  can't  describe  it  neatly, — 
From  out  Castalia's  fount,  my  lips 

Burst  into  music  sweetly. 

I  sang — my  lyre,  as  it  replied, 

O'er  its  own  chords  seem'd  sweeping ; 

I  felt  as  if  I  Daphne  spied 
Behind  the  laurels  peeping. 

I  sang — ambrosial  incense  stream'd, 

And  lightly  o'er  me  hover'd ; 
And  the  whole  world  around  me  seem'd 

By  a  bright  halo  covered. 

A  thousand  years  from  Grecia's  land 

Have  I  been  sadly  banish'd ; 
Tet  hath  my  heart  in  Grecia's  land 

Kemain'd,  though  I  have  vanish'd. 


IN  the  costume  of  the  Beguins, 
In  the  cloak  with  cap  upon  it 
Of  ihe  coarsest  blackest  serge, 
Is  the  youthful  nun  envelop'd. 

Hastily  along  the  Ehine  banks 
Paces  she  adown  the  highway 
On  the  road  to  Holland,  asking 
Eagerly  of  every  passer : 

"  Hast  thou  chanced  to  see  Apollo  ? 
•*  He  a  scarlet  cloak  is  wearing, 
**  Sweetly  sings  he,  plays  the  lyre, 
**  And  he  is  my  darlong  idol." 


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400  hbinb's  poems. 

None  will  answer  her  inquiry, 
Many  turn  their  backs  in  silence, 
Many  stare  upon  her  smiling, 
Many  sigh  :  '*  Alas,  poor  creatui'e  V 

But  along  the  highway  trotting 
Comes  a  slovenly  old  man ; 
Making  figures  in  the  air,  he 
Keeps  on  singing  through  his  nose. 

He  a  clumsy  wallet  carries. 
And  a  Httle  hat  three-comer'd, 
And  with  sharp  and  smiling  eyes  he 
Listens  to  the  nun's  inquiry : 

'*  Hast  thou  chanced  to  see  Apollo  ? 
"  He  a  scarlet  cloak  is  wearing, 
"  Sweetly  sings  he,  plays  the  lyre, 
"  And  he  is  my  darling  idol." 

He  however  gave  this  answer, 
Whilst  his  little  head  he  waggled 
Here  and  there,  and  comically 
At  his  sharp  beai'd  kept  on  twitching : 

"  Have  I  chanced  to  see  Apollo? 
*•  Yes,  I  certainly  have  seen  him 
"  When  at  Amsterdam  full  often, 
"  In  the  German  synagogue. 

"  He  was  there  the  leading  singer, 
"  Known  by  name  of  Eabbi  Faibisch, 
"  Which  in  High-Dutch  means  Apollo,— 
"  But  he*s  not  my  idol  truly. 

**  Scarlet  cloak  ?     His  scarlet  cloak  too 
*'  I  remember ;  genuine  scarlet, 
**  And  the  price  per  ell  eight  florins, — 
*'  Not  all  paid  for  to  this  moment. 

''  His  old  father,  Moses  Jitscher, 
"  Know  I  well ;  he's  circumciser 
*'  To  the  Portuguese,  I  fancy, 
'*  And  to  various  sovereigns  also. 

^'  And  his  mother  is  a  cousin 

*  Of  my  sister's  husband,  trading 

*  On  the  Gracht  in  pickled  gherkins, 
And  in  worn-out  pairs  of  breeches. 


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ROMANOERO.  401 

*'  In  their  sod  they  take  no  pleasure ; 
"  On  the  lyre  he  plays  not  badly, 
"  But,  I  grieve  to  say,  far  better 
"  Plays  he  at  taroe  and  ombre. 

''  He  is  likewise  a  free  thinker, 
"  Lost  his  place  through  eating  swine's  flesh, 
*'  And  then  travell'd  round  the  country 
''  With  some  painted  low  comedians. 

'*  In  the  shops  and  on  the  markets 
**  Has  he  acted  as  Jack-pudding, 
*'  Holofemes,  or  King  David, 
*'  But  the  latter  most  excell'd  in. 

'*  For  the  king's  own  sorrows  sang  he 
"  In  the  king's  own  mother  language, 
**  Giving  all  the  proper  quavers 
"  In  the  proper  olden  fashion. 

*'  Recently  some  wenches  took  he 
"  From  the  Amsterdam  casino, 
"  And  he's  travelling  with  these  Muses 
"  Round  the  country  as  Apollo. 

*'  One  amongst  them  is  a  stout  one, 

"  Squeaking  very  much  and  gruntini?  * 

**  On  account  of  her  green  laurel 

"  Head-dress,  they  *  3ie  green  sow'  caii  iic«. 

HYMN  TO  KING  LOUIS.* 

BEHOLD  great  Louis,  Bavaria  s  lun^r, 
Few  monarchs  are  half  so  splendid ; 
In  him  a  king  the  Bavarians  revere, 
From  an  ancient  line  descended. 

He's  fond  of  art ;  fair  women  to  get 
For  their  portraits  to  sit,  is  his  passion : 

In  this  painted  seitiglio  takes  he  las  walks, 
In  eunuch-artistic  fashion. 

A  marble  place  of  skulls  hath  he 

Near  Ratisbon  constructed, 
And  all  the  arrangements  for  every  head 

In  his  own  royal  person  conducted. 

This  poem  was  origmally  suppressed  by  the  censors 

2  D 


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402  HEINE'S  POEMS. 

Walhalla-companions !  A  masterpiece, 
Where  the  merit  of  every  man  is 

Set  forth,  with  his  character  and  his  acts, 
From  Teut  ♦  to  Schinderhannes.! 

But  Luther,  the  blockhead,  amongst  them  all, 
Has  no  place  in  this  proud  mausoleum  ; 

The  whale  'mongst  the  fishes  is  often  left  out 
In  a  natural  hist*ry  museum. 

King  Louis  is  also  a  poet  renown'd ; 

Whenever  sings  or  plays  he, 
Apollo  falls  down  at  his  feet  and  exclaims  : 

"  O  stop,  or  you'll  drive  me  quite  crazy !" 

King  Louis  is  also  a  hero  renown'd. 
Like  his  child,  his  little  son,  Otho, 

Who  was  chosen  to  sit  on  the  throne  of  Greece 
(He  disgraced  it  long  ago,  tho'). 

When  Louis  dies,  he'll  canonised  be 

At  Rome  by  the  holy  Father  ; 
A  cat  with  ruffles  a  face  like  his 

With  its  Glory  will  look  like  rather. 

As  soon  as  the  monkeys  and  kangaroos 

Are  converted  to  Christianity, 
They'll  make  St.  Louis  their  guardian  saint, 

Li  proof  of  their  perfect  sanity. 

TWO  KNIGHTS. 

CRAPULINSKI  and  Waschlapski, 
Poles  in  Poland  born  and  bred. 
Fought  for  their  dear  country's  freedom 
'Gainst  the  Eussian  tyrant  dread. 

Boldly  did  they  fight,  and  lastly 

Found  at  Paris  a  retreat ; 
Living,  just  as  much  as  dying 

For  one's  fatherland,  is  sweet. 

Like  Achilles  and  Patroclus, 

David  and  his  Jonathan, 
Loved  the  pair  of  Poles  each  other, 

Kiss'd,  and  said  :  "  Kochan !  Kochan  I"  J 

♦  Meaning  the  founder  of  the  Teutonic  race. 
t  A  noted  brigand,  executed  in  1803. 
t  A  Polish  term  of  endearment 


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BOMANOERO.  408 


Neither  e'er  betray'd  the  other. 
Both  were  faithful  friends  and  true, 

Notwithstanding  that  they  Poles  were, 
Bom  and  bred  in  Poland  too. 

They  the  same  apartment  dwelt  in, 
In  the  selfsame  bed  slept  they, 

And  in  noble  emulation 

Scratched  themselves  by  night  and  day^ 

In  the  selfsame  beershop  dined  they. 

And  as  neither  was  content 
That  the  other  paid  his  reckoning, 

Neither  ever  paid  a  cent. 

'Twas  the  selfsame  washerwoman 
Did  the  washing  for  the  pair ; 

Humming,  for  their  linen  came  she 
Every  month  to  wash  and  air. 

Yes,  they  really  had  their  linen, 
Each  one  had  two  shirts,  well-worn. 

Notwithstanding  that  they  Poles  were, 
Poles  in  Polwid  bred  aiid  bom. 

They  to-day  sit  near  the  chimney. 
Where  the  flames  a  bright  glow  cast; 

Out  of  doors  are  night,  a  snowstorm, 
And  the  coaches  driving  past. 

They  a  mighty  bowl  of  punch  have 
Drained  already  and  devour'd ; 

(Understand  me,  'twas  unsugar'd. 
And  unwater'd  and  unsour'd.) 

Sorrow  o'er  their  souls  is  creeping, 
Tears  their  furrow'd  faces  streak : 

With  a  voice  of  deep  emotion 
Thus  doth  Crapulinski  speak ; 

**  Would  that  I  had  here  in  Paris 
"  My  dear  bearskin,  my  old  cotton 

"  Dressing-gown,  my  catskin-nightcap^ 
"  In  my  fatherland  forgotten  T' 

Thus  to  him  replied  Waschlapski : 

**  O  thou  art  a  driv'ller  true ; 
•*  Of  thy  home  thou'rt  ever  thinking, 

**  Catskin-nightcap,  bearskin  too. 

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104  Heine's  poems. 

"  Poland  lias  not  yet  quite  perish 'J, 

'*  Still  our  wives  to  sons  give  biith, 
*'  And  our  girls  will  do  so  likewise, 

"  And  produce  us  men  of  worth, 
"  Heroes,  like  great  Sobieski, 

'*  Like  Schelmufski  and  Uminski, 
"  Eskrokewitsch,  Schubiakski, 

"  And  the  mighty  Eselinski." 

OUB  MARINE* 

(A  Nautical  tnle.) 

ADEEAM  of  a  fleet  we  lately  dreamt. 
And  enjoy'd  a  sail  delicious 
Far  over  the  wide  and  boundless  sea, 

The  wind  was  quite  propitious. 
We  gave  our  fiigates  the  proudest  names 

That  we  in  our  calendar  reckon'd ; 
One  Hoffmann  of  Fallersleben  we  called. 

And  Prutz  f  we  christened  the  second. 
There  floated  the  cutter  Freiligrath, 

Whereon  was  seen  the  figure 
Of  the  Moorish  king,  which  gazed  below 

Like  a  moon  (but  as  black  as  a  nigger). 
There  floa.ted  Gustavus  Schwab  as  well, 

A  Pfizer,  a  Kolle,  a  Mayer ; 
On  each  of  them  stood  a  Swabian  face. 

Each  holding  a  wooden  lyre. 
There  floated  Birch-Pfeiffer,  a  brig  which  bore 

On  its  mast  the  escutcheon  olden 
(J7  ilie  iKmoiss  Gorman  Admiralty, 

On  tatters  black-red-golden. 
We  boldly  clamber'd  on  bowsprit  and  yard. 

And  bore  ourselves  like  sailors ; 
Our  jackets  were  short,  our  hats  betarr'd. 

And  our  trousers  as  big  as  a  tailor's. 
Full  many,  who  formerly  sipp'd  but  tea 

As  husbands  kind  and  forbearing, 
Now  drank  their  rum,  their  pigtail  chew'd, 

And,  seaman-like,  took  to  swearing. 

*  This  puem  was  originally  suppressed  by  the  censors. 
t  A  poet  and  writer,  bom  in  1816,  and  persecuted  J>y  the 
police  for  his  liberal  writings. 

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BOHANCBBO.  405 

So  briglit  was  our  vision,  we  well  nigh  won 

A  naval  victory  splendid ; 
But  when  return'd  the  morning  sun, 

Both  fleet  and  vision  had  ended. 

We  still  were  lying  at  home  in  bed. 

Our  limbs  all  over  it  sprawling ; 
We  rubbed  the  sleep  from  out  of  our  eyea, 

The  following  wise  speech  bawling  : 

"  The  world  is  round ;  why  seek  to  be  tost 

"  On  the  idle  billows,  faint-hearted  ? 
"  When  we  sail  round  the  world,  at  last  we  return 

"  To  the  point  from  which  we  started." 

THE  GOLDEN  CALF. 

FIDDLE,  flute,  and  horn  uniting. 
To  the  idol-dance  inviting — 
Bound  the  golden  calf  with  springing 
All  of  Jacob's  daughters  come — 
Brum — brum — ^brum — 
Kettle  drums  and  laughter  ringing  I 

Girding  up  their  tunics  lightly. 
Clasping  hands  together  tighldy. 
Noble  maidens,  off  nngs  bringing, 

Twist,  like  whirlwinds  at  i£e  least, 

Bound  the  beast — 
Kettle  drums  and  laughter  ringing  I 

Aaron's  self  joins  in  the  mazy 
Circling  dance  with  motions  crazy ; 
His  concerns  not  looking  after, 
'  Skips  he,  in  his  high-priest's  coat, 

Like  a  goat — 
Kettle  drums  and  ringing  laughter ! 

KING  DAVID 

DESPOTS  smiling  yield  their  breath, 
Knowing  after  their  own  death 
That  their  slaves  but  change  their  master, 
And,  if  anything,  work  faster. 

Ah,  poor  race  I  like  horse  and  bull 
They  the  waggons  still  must  pull, 
And  their  backs  will  soon  be  broken 
If  they  heed  not  what  is  spoken. 


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406  HEnrafs  POZMa 

David  said,  to  Solomon 
(  n  his  deathbed :  ^'  List,  my  son ! 
'*  My  most  dreaded  foe  of  conrse  is 
'•  Joab,  general  of  my  forces. 

''  This  brave  general  many  a  year 
*'  I  have  view'd  with  hate  and  fear; 
*'  But,  however  I  detest  him, 
"  I  ne'er  ventured  to  arrest  him. 

"  Thou,  my  son,  of  sterner  stuff, 
"  Fearing  God,  art  strong  enough ; 
"  'Tis  for  thee  an  easy  matter 
"  That  said  JoaVs  brains  to  scatter." 

KING  RICHARD.  [springt 

THROUGH  the  silent  glades  of  the  forest  there 
An  eager  horseman  proudly ; 
He  blows  his  horn,  he  laughs,  and  he  sings 
Exultingly  and  loudly. 

His  armour  is  made  of  the  brass  most  strong. 

But  stronger  still  is  his  bosom ; 
'Tis  CcBur  de  Lion  that's  riding  idong. 

That  Christian  chivalry's  blossom. 

"  Thou'rt  welcome  to  England  I*'  each  verdant  bough 

Exclaims  with  joyous  assurance; 
"  We're  heartily  glad,  O  monarch,  that  thou 

"  Hast  escap'd  from  thine  Austrian  durance." 

The  king  snuffs  up  the  free  air  the  while, 

Like  a  newborn  creature  lives  he ; 
He  thinks  of  his  Austrian  dungeon  vile, — 

And  his  spurs  to  his  proud  horse  gives  he. 

THE  ASRA. 

BAILY  went  the  wondrous  lovely 
Sultan's  daughter  at  the  cooling 
Hour  of  evening  to  the  fountain, 
Where  the  waters  white  were  plashing. 

Daily  at  the  hour  of  evening 
Stood  the  young  slave  at  the  foimtain 
Where  the  waters  white  were  plashing. 
Daily  grew  he  pole  and  paler. 


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BOMANGERO.  407 

And  one  evening  came  the  princess, 
And  these  sudden  words  address'd  him : 
"  Thou  must  tell  me  what  thy  name  is, 
"  And  thy  country  and  thy  Mndred  1" 

And  the  slave  replied :  "  My  name  is 
"  Mahomet,  I  came  from  Yemmen, 
**  And  my  race  is  of  those  Asras, 
"  Who,  whene'er  they  love,  must  perish. ' 

THE  NUNS. 

WHO  at  night  the  convent  walls 
Passes,  sees  the  windows  brightly 
Lighted  up,  for  there  the  spectres 
Make  their  gloomy  circuit  nightly. 

Tis  dead  Ursulines  that  join 

In  the  sad  and  dark  procession ; 
From  the  linen  hoods  are  peeping 

Faces  young  of  sweet  expression. 

Tapers  bear  they  in  their  hands, 
Glimm'ring  bloodred  and  mysterious 

Strangely  echo  in  the  crossway 

Whispers  low,  wails  sad  and  serious. 

To  the  church  the  train  moves  on  ; 

Sitting  on  the  wooden  benches 
Of  the  quire,  their  mournful  chorus 

Straight  begin,  the'  unhappy  wenches. 

Like  a  litany  it  sounds. 

But  the  words  are  wild  and  shocking 
They  are  poor  and  outcast  spirits 

At  the  heavenly  portal  knocking. 

**  Brides  of  Christ  we  used  to  be, 

*'  But  by  love  of  earth  were  chainM^ 

**  And  we  render'd  unto  Cfesar 
*'  Things  that  unto  God  pertainM. 

^  Charming  is  a  uniform 

''  And  mustachios  smooth  and  shining 
**  For  the  epaulettes  of  CsBsar 

*'  Were  our  hearts  in  secret  pining. 


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408  hhjue'b  poems. 

'*  Antlers  to  the  brow  we  gave 
**  By  our  shameless  ill  behaviour, 

"  AVhich  the  crown  of  thorns  once  carried, — 
'*  We  betray'd  our  heavenly  Saviour. 

*  Jesus, — ^mercy's  very  self, — 
"  Softly  wept  o*er  our  transgression, 

**  And  he  said :  *  Your  souls  be  cursed 
"  *  For  disgracing  your  profession  !* 

"  Grave-sprung  spectres  of  the  night, 
**  We  must  wander  in  these  dreary 

"  Walls,  our  folly  to  atone  for, — 
**  Miserere  I  Miserere  ! 

**  Ah,  within  the  grave  'tis  well  I 

*'  Though  indeed  *tis  far  more  cheery 

"  In  the  glowing  realms  of  heaven,— r 
'*  Miserere!  Miserere! 

**  Jesus  sweet,  forgive  at  length 
'*  Our  transgression  sad  and  weary ; 

"  Let  us  feel  tibe  warmth  of  heaven, — 
*'  Miserere !  Miserere  1" 

Thus  the  troop  of  nuns  sing  on. 
And  a  long-dead  clerk  is  playing 

On  the  organ.  Hands  of  spirits 
0*er  the  keys  are  wildly  straying. 

PALSGRAVINE  JUTTA 

THE  Palsgravine  Jutta,  in  bark  so  light. 
Is  crossing  the  Ehine  in  the  moonlight  bright ; 
The  Countess  speaks,  while  rows  the  maid  : 
'*  Hast  thou  yon  seven  corpses  surveyed 
''  That,  seeking  to  find  us, 
"  Are  floating  behind  us  ? — 
''  So  sadly  are  floating  the  corpses! 

''  Seven  knights  were  they,  who  their  love  confessed, 
''  And  tenderly  sank  on  my  heaving  breast, 
''  And  swore  to  be  faithful;  so,  certain  to  make 
**  That  they  their  oaths  should  never  break, 
**  I  seized  and  bound  them, 
"  And  straightway  drown'd  them, — 
'•  So  sadly  are  floating  the  corpses !" 


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EOMANOiatO.  409 

The  Countess  laughs,  while  the  maiden  rown, 
Through  the  air  her  laughter  scornfully  goes ; 
From  the  water  the  corpses  rise  high  as  the  thigh, 
And  point  with  their  fingers  towards  the  sky, 

In  token  of  swearing, 

With  glassy  eyes  staring — 
So  sadly  are  floating  the  corpses  I 

THE  MOORISH  KING. 

TO  the  Alpuxarres'  exile 
Went  the  youthful  Moorish  monarch  .• 
Silent  and  with  heart  full  mournful 
Heading  the  procession  rode  he. 

And  behind,  on  lofty  palfreys 

Or  in  golden  litters  riding, 

Sat  1;he  women  of  his  household ; 

Swarthy  maids  on  mules  were  sitting. 

And  a  hundred  trusty  followers 
Rode  on  noble  Arab  horses ; 
Haughty  steeds,  and  yet  the  riders 
Carelessly  bestrode  the  saddles. 

Not  a  drum  and  not  a  cymbal. 
Not  a  single  song  resounded  : 
Silver  bells  upon  the  mules,  though. 
Echoed  sadly  in  the  silence. 

On  the  height,  from  whence  the  glances 

Sweep  across  the  Duero  valley, 

And  Granada's  battlements 

For  the  last  time  rise  before  one, 

There  the  moumfal  king  dismounted. 
And  he  gazed  upon  the  city 
Glittering  in  the  light  of  evening, 
As  though  deck'd  with  gold  and  purple. 

But,  great  Allah !  what  a  sight  'twas ! 
In  the  place  of  that  dear  crescent 
Gleamed  the  Spaniard's  cross  and  standard 
On  the  tow*rs  of  the  Alhambra. 

Ah  I  deep  sighs  at  this  discov'ry 
Broke  from  out  the  monarch's  bosom; 
Suddenly  the  tears  'gan  falling 
Like  a  torrent  down  his  cheeks. 


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ilO  HEINE^S   POEMS. 

Sadly  from  her  lofty  palfrey 
Downward  gazed  the  monarcli's  mother^ 
Looking  on  her  son's  affliction ; 
Proudly,  bitterly,  she  chided : 

**  Boabdn  el  Chico,"  said  she, 

"  Like  a  woman  thou  bewaileet 

"  Yonder  town,  which  thou  neglectedst 

'*  To  defend  with  manly  courage." 

When  the  monarch's  dearest  mistress 
Heard  these  words,  so  harsh  and  cruel, 
Hastily  she  left  her  litter. 
Her  lord's  neck  embracing  fondly. 

"  Boabdil  el  Chico,"  said  she, 
**  Comfort  take,  my  heart-belov'd  one! 
"  From  the  deep  abyss  of  sorrow 
"  Blossoms  forth  a  beauteous  laurel. 

**  Not  alone  the  glorious  victor, 
"  Not  alone  the  proud  triumphant 
**  Fav'rite  of  the  blind  jade  Fortune, 
'*  But  misfortune's  bloody  son,  too, 

"  And  the*  heroic-fighting  warrior, 
"  Who  to  destiny  o'erpow  ring 
"  Has  succumb' d,  will  live  for  ever 
"  In  the  memory  of  mortals."  — 

"  Mountain  of  the  Moor's  last  sigh  " 
To  this  very  moment  call  they 
Yonder  height  from  whence  the  monarch 
For  the  last  time  saw  Granada. 

Time  has  now  fulfill'd  full  sweetly 
His  beloved  one's  prophecy. 
And  the  Moorish  monarch's  name  is 
KeverencjBd  and  held  in  honour. 

Never  will  his  glory  vanish. 
Never,  till  the  last  chord's  broken 
Of  the  last  guitar  remaining 
In  the  land  of  Andalusia. 


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BOMANOERO.  411 

GEOFFRY  RUDfiL  AND  MELISANDA  OF 
TRIPOLI. 

IN  the  CMteau  Blay  still  see  we 
Tapestry  the  walls  adorning, 
Worked  by  Tripoli's  fair  countess' 
Own  fair  hands,  no  labour  scorning. 

Hel*  whole  soul  was  woven  in  it, 

And  with  loving  tears  and  tender 
Hallow'd  is  the  silken  picture, 

Which  the  following  scene  doth  render  r 

How  the  Countess  saw  Eudel 

Dying  on  the  strand  of  ocean. 
And  the'  ideal  in  his  features 

Traced  of  all  her  heart's  emotion. 

For  the  first  and  last  time  also 

Living  saw.Kudel  and  breathing 
Her  who  in  his  every  vision 

Litertwining  was  and  wreathing. 

Over  him  the  Countess  bends  her, 

Lovingly  his  form  she  raises, 
And  his  deadly-pale  mouth  kisses, 

That  so  sweetly  sang  her  praises. 

Ah  I  the  kiss  of  welcome  likewise 

Was  the  kiss  of  separation. 
And  they  drain'd  the  cup  of  wildest 

Joy,  and  deepest  desolation. 

In  the  Chateau  Blay  at  night-time 
Comes  a  rushing,  crackfing,  shaking 

On  the  tapestry  the  figures 
Suddenly  to  life  are  waking. 

Troubadour  and  lady  stretch  their 
Drowsy  ghostlike  members  yonder, 

And  from  out  the  wall  advancing, 
Up  and  down  the  hall  they  wander. 

Whispers  fond  and  gentle  toying. 
Sad-sweet  secrets,  heart-enthiuUing, 

Posthumous  gallant  soft  speeches. 
Minnesingers'  times  recalling : 


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412  Heine's  poems. 

'•  Gaoffiy  !  At  thy  voice's  music 

**  Warmtli  is  in  my  dead  heart  glowing, 

"  And  I  feel  once  more  a  glimmer 

"  In  the  long-quench'd  embers  growing  !** 

**  Melisanda !  I  awaken 

*^  Unto  happiness  and  gladness, 
**  When  I  see  thine  eyes ;  dead  only 

"  Is  my  earthly  pain  and  sadness." 

"  Geoffry  I  Once  we  loved  each  other 
"  In  our  dreams ;  now,  cut  astmder 

'*  By  the  hand  of  death,  still  love  we, — 
**  Amor  'tis  that  wrought  this  wonder  I" 

**  Melisanda  I  What  are  dreams  ? 

"  What  is  death  ?  Mere  words  to  scare  one ! 
**  Truth  in  love  alone  e'er  find  we, 

*•  And  I  love  thee,  ever  fair  one  !" 

**  Geofl&y  I  O  how  sweet  our  meetings 
"  In  this  moonlit  chamber  nightly, 

"  Now  that  in  the  day's  bright  sunbeams 
*'  I  no  more  shall  wander  lightly." 

"  Melisanda !  Foolish  dear  one  I 

'*  Thou  art  light  and  sun,  thou  knowest ! 

"  Love  and  joys  of  May  are  budding, 

"  Spring  is  blooming,  where  thou  goest  1" — 

Thus  those  tender  spectres  wander 
Up  and  down,  and  sweet  caresses 

Interchange,  whilst  peeps  the  moonlight 
Through  the  window's  arch'd  recesses. 

But  at  length  the  rays  of  morning 

Scare  away  the  fond  illusion ; 
To  the  tapestry  retreat  they 

On  the  wall,  in  shy  con^ion. 


THE  POET  FERDUSI. 

1. 

EN  of  gold,  and  men  of  silver  ' 

When  a  fool  about  a  thomao 

Talks,  of  silver  he  is  speaking. 

And  he  means  a  silver  thoman. 


M 


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ROMANCEBO.  418 

In  a  prince's  mouthy  however, 
Or  a  shah's,  a  thcmian's  always 
Golden,  for  a  shah  will  only 
Give  and  take  in  golden  thomans. 

Worthy  people  have  this  notion, 
And  Ferdusi  thought  so  also, 
The  composer  of  the  famous 
And  immortal  work  Scliah  Nameh. 

This  divine  heroic  poem 
At  the  Shah's  command  compose<i  ho, 
Who  for  every  verse  a  thoman 
Promised  to  bestow  upon  him. 

Seventeen  times  bloom'd  the  roses, 
Seventeen  times  did  they  wither, 
And  the  nightingales  sang  sweetly 
And  were  silent  seventeen  times, — 

And  meanwhile  the  bard  was  sitting 
At  the  loom  of  thought,  composing 
Day  and  night,  and  nimbly  weaving 
His  sweet  numbers'  giant-carpet, — 

Giant-carpet,  where  the  poet 
Interwove  with  skill  his  country's 
Chronicles  from  times  of  fable, 
Farsistan's  primeval  monarchs, 

Fav'rite  heroes  of  his  nation, 
Knightly  deeds,  adventures  wondrous, 
Magic  beings,  hateful  demons. 
Intertwined  with  flowers  of  fable. 

All  were  blooming,  all  were  living. 
Bright  with  colours,  glowing,  burning, 
With  the  heavenly  rays  illumin'd 
From  the  sacred  light  of  Iran, 

From  the  godlike  light  primeval. 
Whose  last  pure  and  fiery  temple, 
Spite  of  Koran  and  of  Mufti, 
In  the  poet's  heart  flam'd  brightly. 

When  at  last  the  work  was  finish'd, 
Then  the  manuscript  the  poet 
Sent  to  his  illustrious  patron, 
E'en  two  hundred  ^ousand  versos. 


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414  Heine's  poems. 

It  was  in  the  public  batli  room, 
In  the  bathing  place  at  Gasna, 
That  the  Shah's  black  messengers 
Found  at  last  the  bard  Ferdusi. 

Each  a  bag  of  money  carried, 
Which  before  the  poet's  feet  he 
Kneeling  placed,  to  be  the  guerdon 
To  reward  his  minstrel  labours. 

Hastily  the  poet  open'd 
Both  the  bags,  his  eyes  to  gladden 
With  the  gold  so  long  kept  from  him,- 
When  he  saw  with  consternation 

That  the  bags  contained  within  them 
Silver  only,  silver  thomans, 
Some  two  hundred  thousand  of  them  ;- 
Bitterly  then  laugh'd  the  poet. 

Laughing  bitterly,  the  money 
He  divided  in  three  equal 
Portions,  and  a  third  part  gave  he 
To  the  two  black  messengers. 

Each  a  third,  to  be  his  guerdon 
For  the  message,  and  the  third  part 
Grave  he  to  the  man  who  waited 
On  his  bath,  as  drinking-money. 

Then  his  pilgrim  staff  he  straightway 
Grasp'd,  and  left  at  once  the  city, 
And  before  the  gate  the  dust  he 
From  his  very  dioes  rejected. 


*'  TTAD  he  been,  like  other  men, 
XX    "  Heedless  of  his  words  once  spoken, 
"  And  his  promise  merely  broken, 

**  I  had  not  been  angry  then. 

**  Suffer  this  f    I  never  will  I 
*'  His  deceit  my  heart  amazes, 
"  Both  his  double-ineaning  phrases, 

**  And  his  silence,  falser  still. 


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BOHANCEBO.  415 

•*  Ht>  was  noble,  fair  to  see, 

"  Proud  his  gestures  were,  and  stately  ; 

"  Other  men  excelled  he  greatly, 
"  Every  inch  a  king  was  he. 

•'  Firelike  did  his  glance  once  meet  me, 
'*  As  the  sun  in  yonder  heaven 
**  He,  truth's  haughty  image  even — 

**  And  he  yet  hath  deign'd  to  cheat  me.*' 

3. 

SHAH  Mahomet  full  well  has  dined. 
And  his  soul  to  be  merry  is  fully  inclined. 

In  the  garden  at  twilight,  on  purple  seat 

He  sits  by  the  fountain.     Its  splashing  sounds  sweet 

With  looks  respectful  his  servants  stand  : 
His  fav'rite  Ansari's  amongst  the  band. 

From  marble  vases  a  fiery  gush 

Of  luxuriant  flowers  appears  to  rush. 

Like  Odalisques  with  graceful  arms 

Stand  fanning  themselves  the  slender  palms. 

The  cypresses  stand  with  branches  unfurl'd. 
As  if  dreaming  of  heaven,  forgetting  the  world. 

But  sudden  to  strains  of  the  lute  ere  long 
Is  heard  a  gentle  mysterious  song. 

The  Shah  sprang  up,  as  if  sorely  perplex'd  : 
'*  Who  wrote  of  this  song  the  charming  text?" 

Ansari,  from  whom  he  sought  to  know  it, 
Eeplied  :  **  'Tis  the  work  of  Ferdusi  the  poet." 

**  Ferdusi  I — exclaim'd  the  prince  in  dismay, — 
"  Where  is  he  ?    How  fares  the  poet,  0  say !" 

**  Ansari  gave  answer :  "  In  poverty  great 
'*  He  has  Hved  fall  long  in  a  mournful  state 

**  At  Thus,  the  native  town  of  the  bard, 
**  Where  he  in  his  garden  works  fuU  hard." 

Bhah  Mahomet  paused,  and  presently  said  : 
*'  Ansari,  a  thought  has  come  in  my  head. 

<'  To  my  stables  make  haste,  and  with  hands  unthrifty 
**  Take  a  hundred  mules,  and  camels  fifty. 


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416  HEINE*S  POEMS. 

**  And  lade  them  all  with  every  treat  uie 

**  That  fills  the  heart  of  a  mortal  with  pleasure, 

"  With  splendid  articles,  rich  and  rare; 
"  With  costly  dresses  and  furniture  fair 

"  Of  sandal  wood  and  ivory  white, 
**  With  gold  and  silver  tissues  dight ; 

"  With  precious-handled  goblets  and  pots, 
*'  And  leopard-skins,  all  covered  with  spots, 

'*  With  carpets  and  shawls  and  the  richest  brocade 
**  That  in  my  kingdom  has  ever  been  made. 

"  And  don*t  forget  to  pack  with  the  rest 

''  Some  glittering  arms,  and  of  housings,  the  b*st, 

**  As  well  as  drinks  of  every  kind 

**  And  eatables  such  as  in  pots  we  find, 

*'  And  almond  cakes  and  sweetmeats  Egyptian, 
"  And  gingerbread  of  every  description. 

"  And  also  add  a  dozen  steeds 

"  As  swift  as  arrows,  of  Arab  breeds, 

"  And  likewise  a  dozen  slaves,  black  as  coals, 
"  With  bodies  of  steel,  and  sturdy  souls. 

*'  Ansari,  when  all  these  things  thou  hast  got, 
"  Thou  must  start  on  thy  journey,  and  linger  not 

"  Thou  must  take  them  all  with  my  kind  regard 
"  To  Thus,  to  Ferdusi,  the  mighty  bard.*'— 

Ansari  fulfilled  his  lord's  behest, 

And  loaded  the  camels  and  mules  with  the  best 

And  costliest  presents,  the  value  of  which 

Was  enough  to  make  a  whole  province  quite  rich. 

In  propria  persona  he  left  at  last 

The  psdace,  when  some  three  days  had  past. 

And  with  a  general's  banner  red 
In  front  of  the  caravan  he  sped. 

At  the  end  of  a  week  to  Thus  came  they ; 
The  town  at  the  foot  of  the  mountain  lay. 

The  caravan  the  western  gate 

With  shouts  and  noises  entered  straight. 


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EOMANCERO.  417 

The  trumpets  sounded,  the  loud  drums  beat, 
And  songs  of  triumph  rang  through  the  street. 

**  La  Ula  II  Allah  !"  with  joyous  shout 
The  camel  drivers  were  calling  out. 

But  through  the  East  gate  at  the  farther  end 
Of  Thus,  at  that  moment  chanced  to  wend 

The  funeral  train  so  full  of  gloom, 
That  the  dead  Ferdusi  bore  to  his  tomb. 

VOYAGE  BY  NIGHT. 

THE  half-moon  peer'd  from  the  darksome  clouds 
With  coyness,  while  rock'd  the  sea ; 
And  when  in  the  bark  our  places  we  took, 
Our  number  then  was  three. 

There  plash'd  in  the  water  the  strokes  of  the  oar 

With  sad  monotony ; 
White  foaming  billows  came  with  a  roar, 

And  sprinkled  all  of  us  three. 

She  stood  in  the  bark,  as  pale,  as  slim. 

As  void  of  motion  too, 
As  though  she  a  marble  statue  were, 

Diana's  image  true. 

The  moon  disappeared.     The  nightwind  piped 

With  chilly  blast  on  high ; 
When  over  our  heads  there  suddenly  rose 

A  wild  and  piercing  cry. 

*Twas  the  white  and  ghostlike  seamew*s  voice. 

And  at  that  terrible  cry. 
Which  fearfully  rang  like  a  warning  call. 

All  three  felt  like  to  die. 

Am  I  in  a  fever?    A  vision  is  this 

Of  nightly  phantasy  ? 
Am  I  aped  by  a  dream  ?     I'm  dreaming  a  dream 

Of  wild  buffoonery. 

Buffoonery  wild  I     Methinks  in  my  dream 

That  I  a  Saviour  am  ; 
And  fSfidthfully  bear  the  weight  of  the  Cross, 

As  gentle  as  a  lamb. 

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418  hbine's  poems. 

Poor  beauty  beside  me  is  sore  distress'd. 

But  soon  I'll  set  her  free 
From  sin  and  shame  and  sorrow  and  pain* 

And  earthly  misery. 

Poor  beauty,  O  be  not  thou  terrified, 
Though  bitter  the  medicine  be  ; 

Although  my  heart  may  break,  I  myself 
Will  mete  out  death  to  thee. 

0  folly  wild  and  terrible  dream ! 

0  madness  fearful  to  see ! 
The  night  is  yawning,  the  ocean  yells— 

O  God,  have  mercy  on  me ! 

Have  mercy  on  me,  0  merciful  God ! 

O  merciful  God !     Schaddey  I* 
A  Something  falls  in  the  sea — Alas ! 

Schaddey !  Schaddey  !  Adonay  If 

The  sun  arose,  we  came  to  the  land, 
Sweet  smiled  the  spring  to  the  view ; 

And  when  at  length  we  left  the  bark. 
Our  number  then  was  two. 

THE  PRELUDE. 

THIS,  then,  is  America ! 
This  indeed  the  new  world  is! 
Not  the  present,  which  already 
Europeanized,  is  with'ring. — 

This  indeed  the  new  world  is. 
As  by  Christopher  Columbus 
From  the  ocean  extricated ; 
In  its  billowy  freshness  gleams  it, 

With  its  watery  pearls  still  dripping, 
Which  are  scattered,  colour-sprinkling, 
When  the  sunlight  fair  it  kisses. 
0  how  healthy  this  new  world  is  I 

'Tis  no  churchyard  of  romance, 
Tis  no  ancient  Scherbenberg, 
All  made  up  of  mouldy  symbols. 
And  of  petrified  perukes. 

*  An  ancient  Hebrew  word  for  Ahw'ghi^. 
t  A  Hebrew  word  for  Lord, 


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ROMANCERO.  419 

From  the  healthy  earth  are  shooting 
Healthy  trees,  and  none  amongst  them 
Blase  is,  or  has  consumption 
Eating  up  its  spinal  marrow. 

On  the  branches  are  disporting 
Mighty  birds.     Of  chequer' d  colours 
Js  their  plumage.     With  their  solemn 
Lengthy  beaks,  and  eyes  encircled 

With  black  marks,  like  spectacles, 
They  in  silence  gaze  upon  thee, 
Till  they  shriek  with  sudden  clamour 
And  like  washerwomen  chatter. 

Yet  I  know  not  what  they're  saying. 
Notwithstanding  that  I'm  learned 
In  birds'  tongues  as  Solomon, 
Who  a  thousand  wives  rejoiced  in. 

And  with  birds'  tongues  was  acquainted, — 
Not  the  modern  ones  alone, 
But  all  dialects  whatever. 
Whether  dead,  or  ojd,  or  worn-out. 

New  the  land  is,  new  the  flowers  I 
New  the  flowers  and  new  the  fragrance  I 
Fragrance  wild,  and  never  heard  of, 
Piercing  sweetly  through  my  nostrils. 

Teasing,  prickling,  full  of  passion — 
And  my  subtle  sense  of  smelling 
Itacks  itself  with  meditating : 
"  Where  have  I  e'er  smelt  this  odour  ? 

"  Was't  in  Eegent  Street,  perchance, 
"  In  the  sunny  arms  so  yellow 
"  Of  that  Javanese  thin  woman 
**  Who  was  always  eating  flowers  ? 

**  Was  it  else  at  Eotterdam, 

"  Near  the  Column  of  Erasmus, 

**  In  the  wafer-shop  notorious 

**  With  its  most  mysterious  curtain  ?** 

Whilst  I  in  this  puzzled  fashion 
The  new  world  was  contemplating, 
Seeming  to  instil  into  it 
Still  more  bashfulness, — ^a  monkey. 


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420  Heine's  poems. 

Who,  affrighted,  sought  the  boshes, 
Cross'd  himself  at  my  appearance, 
Crying  with  alarm :  "  A  Spirit ! 
"  Yes,  a  Spirit  from  the  old  world  I**  — 

"  Monkey,  be  not  thus  confounded ! 
**  I  m  no  spirit,  I'm  no  spectre ; 
"  Life  vnthin  my  veins  is  boiling, 
^'  I'm  life's  most  true-hearted  son. 

"  Yet  by  living  many  years 
"  With  the  dead,  have  I  adopted 
"  Dead  men's  manners  very  likely, 
'*  And  peculiar  ways  of  thinking. 

"  All  the  fairest  years  of  life 
"  Spent  I  in  Kyffhauser's  cavern, 
"  In  the  Venusberg,  and  other 
'*  Catacombs  of  the  Bomantic. 

"  Have  no  fear  of  me,  good  monkey ! 
"  Thee  1  like,  for  on  thy  hairless 
'*  Tann'd  and  shaven  hinder-quarters 
"  Thou  dost  bear  my  fav  nte  colours.**— 

Darling  colours !     Black-red -golden ! 
Yes,  these  monkey-buttock-colours, 
Sorrowfully  they  remind  me 
Of  the  flag  of  Barbarossa. 

vrrzLiPUTZLi. 
1. 

ON  his  head  he  wore  the  laurel, 
And  upon  his  boots  there  gLtter'd 
Grolden  spurs, — but  notwithstanding 
He  was  neither  knight  nor  hero. 

He  was  but  a  robber  captain. 
Who  within  the  book  of  glory 
Wrote  with  his  own  wicked  hand 
His  own  wicked  name  of — Cortoz. 

Underneath  Columbus'  name  he 
Wrote  his  own, — yes,  close  beneath  it. 
And  the  schoolboy  at  his  lessons 
Learns  by  heart  both  narne^  together. 


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BOMANCBBO.  421 

After  Christopher  Golumbus 
He  now  names  Fernando  Cortez, 
As  the  second  greatest  man 
In  the  new  world's  proud  Pantheon. 

Heroes'  fate's  last  stroke  of  malice  ^ 
That  our  name  should  thus  be  coupled 
With  the  name  of  a  vile  scoundrel 
In  the  memory  of  mortals ! 

Were't  not  better  e'en  to  perish 
All  unknown,  than  draggle  with  it 
Through  eternity's  long  ages 
iS^uch  a  name  in  comradeship  ? 

Master  Christopher  Columbus 
Was  a  hero, — and  his  temper. 
That  was  pure  as  e'en  the  sunlight. 
Was  as  gen'rous  in  addition. 

Many  people  much  have  given, 
But  Columbus  to  the  world 
Hath  a  world  entire  imparted, 
And  'tis  caird  America. 

Ho  had  not  the  power  to  free  us 
From  our  dreary  earthly  prison, 
But  he  managed  to  enlarge  it 
And  our  heavy  chain  to  lengthen. 

Mortals  thankfully  revere  him, . 
Being,  not  of  Europe  only, 
But  of  Africa  and  Asia, 
Equally  quite  sick  and  weary. 

One  alone,  one  hero  only 
Grave  us  more  and  gave  us  better 
Than  Columbus — that  one  mean  I 
Who  a  God  bestowed  upon  us. 

His  old  father's  name  was  Amram, 
And  his  mother's  Jochebed, 
And  himself,  his  name  was  Moses, 
And  he  is  my  greatest  hero. 

But,  my  Pegasus,  thou'rt  loitering 
Far  too  long  with  this  Columbus ; 
Know  thou  that  our  flight  to-day  is 
With  the  lesser  man, — with  Cortex  > 


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422  Heine's  fdems. 

So  extend  thy  colour'd  pinion?, 
Winged  steed !  and  carry  me 
To  the  new  world's  beauteous  country 
That  they  Mexico  entitle. 

Carry  me  to  yonder  castle, 
Which  the  monarch  Montezuma 
Kindly  offer'd  ta  his  Spanish 
Guests,  to  be  their  habitation. 

Not  mere  food  and  shelter  only 

In  extravagant  profusion 

Gave  the  prince  these  foreign  strollers,-^ 

Presents  rich  and  precious  also, 

Valuable,  wrought  with  cunning, 
All  of  massive  gold,  and  jewels, 
Bear  gay  witness  to  the  monarch's 
Generosity  and  favour. 

This  unciviL'sed,  unlearned, 
Superstitious,  blinded  heathen 
Still  believed  in  faith  and  honour, 
And  the  sacredness  of  guest -right. 

He  accepted  a  proposal 
To  be  present  at  a  banquet 
That  the  Spaniards  in  their  castle 
Wish'd  to  give,  to  do  him  honour. 

And  with  all  his  court  attendants 
Came  the  inoffensive  monarch 
Kindly  to  the  Spanish  quarters, 
Where  by  tnmipets  he  was  greeted. 

What  they  call'd  the  entertainment 
Know  I  not.     *Twas  very  likely 
*'  Spanish  Truth !"  of  which  the  author's 
Name  was  Don  Fernando  Cortez. 

Cortez  gave  the  signal — straightway 
They  attacked  the  peaceful  monarch. 
And  they  bound  him  and  retained  him 
In  the  castle  as  a  hostage. 

But  poor  Montezuma  died  there. 
And  the  dam  was  broken  down 
Which  the  bold  adventurers 
From  the  people's  wrath  protected. 


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BOMANCEBO  423 

Terribly  began  the  tempest ; 
Like  a  wild  and  furious  ocean 
Baved  and  bluster'd  ever  nearer 
The  excited  human  billows. 

Valiantly  in  truth  the  Spaniards 
Drove  the  tempest  back.     But  daily 
Was  the  castle  fresh  blockaded. 
And  the  conflict  was  exhausting. 

When  the  King  was  dead,  the  convoys 
Of  provisions  ceased  entirely ; 
In  proportion  as  the  rations 
Shorter  grew,  each  face  grew  longer. 

With  long  faces  on  each  other 
Gazed  the  sons  of  Spain  with  sadness, 
And  they  sigh'd,  when  they  bethought  them 
Of  their  cosy  Christian  dwellings 

In  their  cherish'd  fatherh^d. 
Where  the  pious  bells  were  ringing. 
And  upon  the  hearth  there  bubbled 
Peaceful  olla  podridas, 

Thickly  studded  with  garbanzos. 
Under  which,  with  waggish  fragrance 
Chuckling  fSunously,  were  hidden 
Those  dear  garlic  sausages. 

Then  the  leader  held  a  council, 
And  upon  retreat  decided ; 
On  the  following  mom  at  daybreak 
Was  the  force  to  leave  the  city. 

Easy  'twas  for  clever  Cortez 
Cunningly  to  gain  an  entrance. 
But  retreat  to  terra  firma 
Offer'd  fatal  obstacles. 

Mexico,  the  island  city, 

In  a  mighty  lake  is  founded, 

In  the  middle,  wavensurrounded  : 

E'en  a  haughty  water  fortress. 

With  the  continent  connected 
But  by  ships  and  rafte  and  bridges. 
Which  repose  on  piles  gigantic, 
Little  islEUids  forming  forts. 


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424  hsine's  poems. 

'Twos  before  the  sun  had  risen 
That  their  march  began  the  Spaniards 
Not  a  single  drum  was  beaten, 
Not  a  trumpeter  was  blowing. 

'Twas  their  object  not  to  waken 
From  their  quiet  sleep  their  hosts — 
(For  a  hundred  thousand  Indians 
Were  encamp*d  in  Mexico). 

Yet  without  his  host  the  Spaniard 
Beckon'd,  when  his  plans  he  settled ; 
For  the  Mexicans  had  risen 
Earlier  still  to-day  than  he  had. 

On  the  rafts  and  on  the  bridges, 
On  the  forts  they  all  were  waiting. 
That  they  to  their  guests  might  offer 
Then  and  there  the  parting  cup. 

On  the  rafts  and  forts  and  bridges 
Ha !  a  frantic  banquet  follow'd ; 
In  red  torrents  streamed  the  blood, 
And  the  bold  carousers  struggled, — 

Struggled,  body  press'd  to  body, 
And  we  see  on  many  naked 
Indian  breasts  the  arabesque 
Of  the  Spanish  arms  imprinted. 

*Twas  a  throttling  and  a  choking 
And  a  butchery  that  slowly. 
Sadly  slowly,  roll'd  still  onward 
Over  rafts  and  forts  and  bridges. 

Whilst  the  Indians  sang  and  bellow'd, 
Silently  the  Spaniards  struggled. 
Step  by  step  with  toil  and  labour 
For  their  flight  a  footing  gaining. 

Fighting  thus  in  narrow  passes 
Small  to-day  the'  advantage  lying 
In  old  Europe's  strategy, 
Or  her  cannons,  armour,  horses. 

Many  Spaniards  in  addition 
With  the  gold  were  heavy  laden. 
Lately  captured  or  extorted — 
Ah  1  that  yellow  load  of  sin 


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KOMANCERO.  425 

Lamed  and  hemm'd  them  in  the  conflict, 
And  the  devilish  metal  proved 
Not  to  the  poor  spirit  ouly 
Kninong,  but  to  the  body. 

And  meanwhile  the  lake  around  them 
With  canoes  and  barks  was  cover'd ; 
Archers  in  them  sat,  all  shooting 
At  the  rafts  and  forts  and  bridges. 

True  they  hit  in  the  confusion 
Many  of  their  Indian  brethren, 
But  they  also  hit  full  many 
Excellent  and  brave  hidalgos. 

On  the  third  bridge  fell  at  last 
Poor  young  Gaston,  who  was  bearing 
On  that  day  the  flag  whereon 
Was  the  Holy  Virgin's  image. 

E'en  this  image'  self  was  struck 
By  the  missiles  of  the  Indians ; 
Six  such  missiles  were  left  sticking 
In  its  very  heart, — bright  arrows, 

Like  those  swords  of  golden  colour 
Which  transfix  the  sorrowing  bosom 
Of  the  Mater  Dolorosa 
In  Good  Friday's  sad  procession. 

Graston,  when  he  died,  made  over 
His  proud  banner  to  Gonsalvo, 
Who  soon  afterwards  was  stricken 
E'en  to  death,  and  died.     Then  Gortez 

Seized  himself  the  precious  banner, 
He,  the  leader,  and  he  bore  it 
On  his  steed  till  tow'rd  the  evening, 
When  the  fight  at  length  was  over. 

On  that  day  a  hundred  Spaniards 
Fell,  and  sixty  in  addition  ; 
Eighty  more  alive  were  taken 
By  the  Indians'  cruel  hands. 

Many  of  them  sorely  wounded, 
Who  ere  long  their  breath  surrender'd 
And  a  dozen  horses,  too,  were 
Partly  kill'd  and  partly  captured. 

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126  Heine's  poems 

Cortez  and  his  army  only- 
Just  at  evening  gained  the  shelter 
Of  the  shore,  a  seacoast  planted 
Niggardly  with  weeping  willows. 

2. 
TTTHEN  the  battle  day  is  over, 

T  T     Comes  the  frantic  night  of  triumph 
So  in  Mexico  a  hundred 
Thousand  lamps  of  joy  are  flaring ; 

Hundred  thousand  lamps  of  joy,  with 
Woodpine  torches,  pitch-ring  fires, 
Throw  a  light  as  clear  as  daylight 
Over  palaces  and  temples. 

And  guildhouses, — likewise  over 
Vitzliputzli's  splendid  temple. 
Idol-fortress  built  of  red  brick. 
Strangely  like  the  old  Egyptian, 

Babylonian,  and  Assyrian 
Monster  buildings  so  colossal, 
As  we  see  them  in  the  pictures 
Of  the  English  Henry  Martin.* 

Yes,  it  is  the  same  broad  staircase. 
So  exceeding  broad,  that  on  it 
Many  thousand  Mexicans 
Up  and  down  are  walking  freely. 

Whilst  upon  the  steps  are  lying 
Mighty  troops  of  savage  warriors, 
Banqueting  in  joyous  fashion, 
Flush'd  with  triumph  and  with  palm-wina 

This  great  staircase  leadeth  upwards 
Like  a  zigzag  to  the  platform, 
By  a  balustrade  surrounded 
At  the  summit  of  the  temple. 

There,  upon  his  altar-throne, 
Sits  the  mighty  Vitzliputzli, 
Mexico's  bloodthirsty  wargod. — 
He  is  but  an  evil  monster, 

*  Doubtless  John  Martin  is  here  meaui 

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KOMANOERO.  427 

But  SO  droll  is  his  exterior, 
Full  of  carvings,  and  so  childish, 
That  despite  our  inward  horror 
It  must  needs  excite  our  laughter. 

His  appearance  altogether 
Brought  to  mind  a  combination 
Of  the  "  Dance  of  Death  "  at  Basle, 
And  the  Mannekin  at  Brussels. 

On  the  god's  left  side  his  priests  are 
Stationed,  on  his  right  the  people  ; 
Ornaments  of  coloured  feathers 
Are  to-day  the  former  wearing. 

On  the  altar- stairs  of  marble 
Squats  a  man  a  hundred  years  old ; 
On  his  chin  and  skull  no  hair  is, 
And  he  wears  a  scarlet  waistcoat. 

He's  the  priest  of  sacrifires. 
And  his  bloody  knife  he's  whetting ; 
As  he  whets,  he  grins,  and  ofttimes 
Leers  upon  the  god  above  him. 

Yitzliputzli  seems  the  glances 
Of  his  servant  to  appreciate, 
And  he  twitches  every  eyelash, 
And  his  lips  at  times  he  twitches. 

On  the  altar  steps  squat  also 
The  musicians  of  the  temple, 
Eettle-drummers,  cowhom  blowers— 
Loud  the  clatter,  loud  the  tooting  ! 

Loud  the  clatter,  loud  the  tooting  ! 
And  the  Mexican  Te  Deum 
Eises  up  in  noisy  chorus, 
As  if  many-  cats  were  mewing — 

As  if  many  oats  were  mewing, 
But  of  that  enlarged  description 
Which  are  "  tiger-cats  "  entitled, 
And,  instead  of  mice,  eat  people! 

When  the  nightwind  carries  with  it 
These  loud  noises  to  the  seashore. 
The  poor  Spaniards  there  encamping 
Feel  sensationfl  iea  from  pleasant. 


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128  HEINE^S  POEMS. 

Sadly  'neath  the  weeping  willowa 
Are  the  Spaniards  still  remaining, 
Gazing  towVd  the  distant  city 
Which  within  the  dark  sea  water 

Mirrors  back,  in  sheer  derision, 
All  the  flames  of  former  pleasure- 
There  they  stand,  as  in  the  pit 
Of  a  vast  gigantic  playhouse, 

Yitzliputzli's  temple's  radiant 
Platform  serving  as  the  stage 
Where  they  act  a  tragic  myst'ry 
To  commemorate  their  triumph. 

'*  Human  sacrifice  "  the  play  is, 
Old,  full  old,  its  plot,  its  fable  ; 
But  the  piece  is  not  so  fearful 
In  the  Christian  treatment  of  it. 

For  into  the  blood  is  red  wine. 
And  into  the  actual  body 
Is  a  thin  and  harmless  wafer 
Transubstantiated  truly. 

'Mongst  these  savages  at  present 
Was  the  joke  in  downright  earnest 
Taken  up ;  they  fed  on  flesh, 
And  the  blood  was  human  blood. 

This  time  'twas  indeed  the  pure  blood 
Of  old  Christians,  which  had  never 
Never  mingled  with  the  baser 
Blood  of  Jews  or  of  Moriscos. 

0  be  joyful,  Vitzliputzli  I 
For  to-day  'tis  Spanish  blood. 
And  thou  mayst  refresh  thy  nostrils 
With  its  warm  scent  greedily. 

Eighty  Spaniards  will  be  slaughter  d 
On  this  day  to  do  thee  honour — 
Proud  repast  to  grace  the  table 
Of  thy  priests,  who  flesh  delight  in. 

For  the  priest  is  but  a  mortal, 
And  poor  man,  unhappy  glutton. 
Cannot,  like  the  gods,  live  only 
On  sweet  smells  and  savoury  odours. 

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ROMANCBRO.  429 

Hark  !  the  death-drum  now  is  beating, 
And  the  evil  cowhom  screeches ! 
They  proclaim  the*  approaching  advent 
Of  the  victims'  sad  procession. 

Eighty  Spaniards,  vilely  naked, 
With  their  hands  securely  fasten'd 
To  their  backs,  are  harshly  driven 
Up  the  temple's  lofty  staircase. 

And  to  Vitzliputzli's  image 
They  must  bow  the  knee  right  humbly, 
And  must  dance  the  wildest  dances, 
Forcibly  constrained  by  tortures, 

All  so  teriible  and  fearful, 
That  their  madden'd  screams  of  anguish 
Overpow'r  the  whole  collective 
Cannibals'  wild  charivari. 

Poor  spectators  by  the  ocean ! 
Cortez  and  his  warlike  comrades 
But  too  plainly  could  distinguish 
All  their  friends'  loud  cries  of  torment. 

On  the  stage,  too  clearly  lighted, 
They  could  see,  alas !  too  plainly, 
Every  figure,  every  gesture, — 
See  the  knife  and  see  the  blood. 

Then  from  off  their  heads  their  helmets 
Silently  they  took,  and  kneeling, 
Chaunted  they  the  death-psalm  sadly. 
And  they  sang  the  De  Profundis. 

'Mongst  the  number  of  the  victims 
Was  yoimg  Eaimond  de  Mendoza, 
Offspring  of  the  lovely  abbess, 
Cortez'  first  and  youtMul  love. 

When  he  on  the  stripling's  bosom 
Saw  the  well-remember'd  locket 
Which  enclosed  his  mother's  portrait 
Bitter,  bitter  tears  wept  Cortez — 

But  from  off  his  eyes  he  wiped  them 
With  his  buffalo's  hard  gauntlet — 
Deeply  sigh'd,  and  sang  in  chorus 
With  the  others :  Miserere  I 


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430  HEINE  S  POEMS. 

3. 

NOW  the  stars  are  glimm'ring  paler, 
And  the  morning  mists  are  rising 
From  the  ocean-flood,  like  spirits 
Dragging  their  white  shrouds  behind  theuL 
Feasts  and  lights  are  all  extinguished 
In  the  temple  of  the  idol. 
Where,  upon  the  blood-soak'd  pavement, 
Priest  and  laity  lie  snoring. 
None  are  waking  save  Eed  Jacket. 
By  the  last  lamp's  flickering  glimmer. 
Sickly  grinning,  grimly  jesting, 
Thus  the  priest  lus  god  addresses  : 
"  Vitzliputzli,  Putzlivitzlil 
"  Darling  god,  my  Vitzliputzli  I 
**  Thou  to-day  hast  had  amusement, 
"  And  has  smelt  a  fragrant  odour  I 
'*  Spanish  blood  to-day  we  offered, 
**  O  how  savourily  steam'd  it  1 
"  And  thy  fine  and  dainty  nostrils 
*'  Suck'd  the  scent  in,  full  of  rapture  I 
'*  We*ll  to-morrow  slay  the  horses, 
"  Neighing  noble  monsters  are  they, 
'•  Offspring  of  the  tempest  spirits' 
"  Amorous  toying  with  the  seacow. 
"  If  thou'lt  gracious  be,  I'll  slaughter 
"  In  thine  honour  my  two  grandsons, 
"  Pretty  children, — sweet  their  blood  is, — 
*'  My  old  age's  only  pleasure.  ^ 

*'  But  indeed  thou  must  be  gracious, 
"  And  must  grant  us  further  triumphs, 
"  Let  us  conquer,  darling  godhead, 
^      *'  Putzlivitzli,  Vitzliputzli ! 
**  All  our  enemies  destroy  thou, 
**  All  these  strangers  who  from  distant 
*'  And  still  undiscover'd  countries 
"  Hither  came  across  the  ocean— 
*'  Wherefore  did  they  leave  their  dwellings  ? 
**  Was  it  crime  or  hunger  drove  them  ? 
**  '  Stop  at  home  and  live  in  quiet ' 
"  Is  i  sensible  old  proverb. 


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BOMANCEBO.  431 

"  What  is  their  desire  ?  Our  money 
**  Stick  they  in  their  greedy  pockets, 
"  And  they  wish  us  to  be  happy — 
"  So  they  tell  us, — in  the  heavens  I 

**  We  at  first  believed  them  fully 

"  Beings  of  a  higher  order, 

'*  Children  of  the  Sun,  immortal, 

**  Arm'd  with  lightning  and  with  thunder. 

"  But  they're  only  men,  as  mortal 
"  As  ourselves ;  my  knife  to-night  has 
**  Proved  beyond  aJl  doubt  and  question 
**  Their  extreme  mortality. 

"  They  are  mortal,  and  no  faii*er 
**  Than  ourselves,  and  many  of  them 
"  Are  as  ugly  as  the  monkeys, 
"  And  their  faces,  like  the  latter, 

'*  Are  all  hairy,  and  'tis  whisper'd 
"  Many  of  them  carry  hidden 
**  In  their  breeches  monkeys'  tails,  for 
**  Those  not  monkeys  need  no  breeches. 

**  Morally  they're  also  ugly 

'*  And  of  piety  know  nothing, 

**  And  'tis  said  that  they're  accustom'd 

'*  Their  own  deities  to  swallow ! 

**  0  destroy  this  vile  abandon'd 

"  Wicked  brood,  these  god-devourers — 

**  Vitzliputzli,  Putzlivitzli, 

"  Let  us  conquer,  Vitzliputzli !" — 

Thus  the  priest  address'd  the  god. 
And  the  god's  reply  resounded 
Sighing,  rattling,  like  the  nightwind 
Toying  with  the  ocean  sedges  : 

*'  Bed-coat,  red-coat,  bloody  slayer! 

"  Thou  hast  slaughter'd  many  thousands,-^ 

^'  Plunge  thy  sacrificial  knife  now 

"  In  thine  own  old  worn-out  body  I 

*'  From  thy  body,  thus  slit  open, 
**  Will  thy  spirit  make  its  exit, 
"  Over  roots  and  over  pebbles 
'*  Tripping  to  the  green  frog's  pond. 


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432  Heine's  poems. 

"  There  thou'lt  find  my  aunt,  the  rat-queen, 
'*  Squatting,  and  she'll  thus  address  thee  : 
"  *  So  good  morning,  naked  spirit  I 
*'  *  Pray  how  fares  it  with  my  nephew  ? 

"  *  Is  he  Vitzliputzlied  nicely 
**  *  In  the  gold-light,  sweet  as  honey  ? 
**  '  Does  good  fortime  from  his  forehead 
•*  *  Brush  away  all  flies  and  sorrows  ? 

'*  *  Or  does  Katzlagara  scratch  him, 
*'  '  Hated  goddess  of  all  evil, 
**  *  With  her  black  paws  made  of  iron, 
**  *  Which  are  steep'd  in  adder's  poison  ?* 

**  Naked  spirit,  give  this  answer  : 
*'  *  Vitzliputzli  sends  thee  greeting, 
''  *  And  a  pestilence  he  wishes 
**  '  In  thy  belly,  thou  accurst  one  I 

**  *  Thou  didst  urge  him  to  the  conflict, 
"  *  And  thy  counsel  was  destruction ; 
'*  *  Soon  will  be  fulfill'd  the  evil 
'•  *  Old  and  mournful  prophecy 

"  *  Of  the  kingdom's  subjugation 
*'  '  By  the  men  so  fiercely  bearded, 
"  '  Who  on  wooden  birds  all  flying 
*'  '  From  the  Eastern  land  come  hither. 

"  *  There's  an  ancient  proverb  also — 
**  *  Woman's  will  is  God's  will  likewise — 
**  *  And  the  God's  will  is  redoubled 
*'  '  When  the  woman  is  his  mother. 

**  *  She  it  is  that  wakes  my  anger, 
*'  'She,  the  haughty  queen  of  heaven, 
"  *  She,  a  piure  and  spotless  virgin, 
«(  (  Working  charms  and  versed  in  magic 

"  *  She  protects  the  Spanish  people, 
*'  '  And  we  all  at  length  must  perish, 
'*  *  I,  the  poorest  of  the  godheads, 
'*  *  And  my  poor,  dear  Mexico.' — 

"  When  thou  hast  fuMll'd  thy  message, 
"  Bed-coat,  let  thy  naked  spirit 
'^  In  a  sandhole  creep ;  sleep  soundly 
•*  Out  of  sight  of  all  my  misery. 

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BOaCANCERO.  433 

**  This  proud  temple  will  be  shatter  d, 
'•  I  myself  shall  in  its  ruins 
**  Disaj^ear, — mere  dust  and  rubbish, — 
'*  No  one  e'er  again  will  see  me. 

**  Tet  I  shall  not  die ;  we  godheads 
•*  Grow  as  old  as  do  the  parrots, 
''  And  we  cast  our  skins,  and  like  theni 
*'  Only  change  at  times  our  feathers. 

"  To  my  foemen's  native  country 
**  Which  they  give  the  name  of  Europe 
"  I  shall  fly  away,  beginning 
"  There  a  really  new  career. 

"  111  turn  devil,  and  the  god 

**  Then  shall  be  a  God-be- with-us ; 

**  As  my  foemen's  evil  spirit 

'*  I  can  work  as  best  may  suit  me. 

"  There  my  enemies  I'll  trouble, 

^  And  alarm  them  all  with  phantoms ; 

**  As  a  foretaste  of  hell's  torments, 

"  Brimstone  they  shall  smell  in  plenty. 

*'  Both  their  wise  men  and  their  dollards 
"  I'll  allure  with  my  seductions ; 
**  And  their  virtue  will  I  tickle 
*'  Till  it  laughs  like  any  strumpet. 

"  Yes,  I'll  turn  into  a  devil, 
*'  And  salute  as  my  dear  comrades 
**  Satanas  and  Belial  ^th  him, 
"  Astaroth  and  Beelzebub. 

«  Thee  I'll  also  greet,  0  Lilis, 

**  Sin's  own  mother,  smooth-skinn'd  serpent 

"  Teach  me  all  thy  dreadful  secrets, 

^  And  the  charming  art  of  lying  I 

**  My  belovM  Mexico, 

•*  I  no  longer  can  preserve  thee, 

**  But  111  fearfully  avenge  thee, 

<«Mybelov^MoziooI" 

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i84  Heine's  poems. 


BOOK  IL—LAMENTATI0S8. 

Good  fortuue  quite  a  fickle  miss  is. 
And  in  one  place  will  never  stay  ; 

The  hair  from  off  thy  face  with  kisses 
She  strokes,  and  then  she  flies  away. 

Misfortune  to  her  heart,  however, 
To  clasp  thee  tightly,  ne'er  omits ; 

She  says  she's  in  a  hiirry  never. 
Sits  down  beside  thy  bed  and  knits. 


WOOD  SOLITUDE. 


IN  former  days,  in  my  life's  young  morning, 
I  wore  a  garland  my  brow  adorning ; 
How  wondronsly  glisten'd  then  every  flower ! 
The  garland  was  flll'd  with  a  magical  power. 

While  all  in  the  beantifcd  garland  took  pleasure. 
Its  wearer  they  hated  beyond  all  measure ; 
I  fled  from  the  envy  of  mortals  rude, 
I  fled  to  the  wood's  green  solitude. 

To  the  wood  I  to  the  wood  I    A  life  of  enjoyment 
With  spirits  and  beasts  was  my  sole  employment. 
The  fairies  and  stags,  with  their  antlers  tall, 
Without  any  fear  approach'd  me  all. 

They  all  approach'd  me  without  any  terror, 
In  this  they  knew  they  committed  no  error ; 
That  I  was  no  himtsman,  the  doe  well  knew, 
That  I  was  no  babbler,  the  fairies  saw  too. . 

None  but  fools  ever  boast  of  the  fays'  approbation, 
But  how  the  remaining  gentry  of  station 
That  lived  in  the  forest  treated  me  well, 
I've  not  tlie  slightest  objection  to  tell. 

How  round  me  hover'd  the  elfin  rabble. 
That  airy  race,  vdth  their  charming  gabble  I 
'Tis  dangerous  truly  their  gaze  to  meet. 
The  bliss  it  imparts  is  so  deadly,  thou^  sweet. 

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ROMANCERO.  435 

With  May  dance  and  May  games  amused  they  me  highly 
And  tales  of  the  court  narrated  they  slily, 
For  instance,  the  scandalous  chronicles  e'en 
Of  lovely  Titania,  the  faery  queen. 

If  I  sat  by  the  brook,  with  leaping  and  springing 
Rose  out  of  the  flood,  their  tresses  wringing, 
With  long  silver  veils  and  fluttering  hair, 
The  water-bacchantes,  the  nixes  fair ! 

They  play'd  on  the  lute  and  the  fiddle  so  sweetly, 
And  danced  the  nixes'  famed  dances  discreetly ; 
The  tunes  that  they  sang,  the  antics  they  play'd, 
Of  rollicking  boisterous  madness  seem'd  made. 

And  yet  at  times  was  much  less  alarming 
The  noise  that  they  made;  these  elfins  charming 
Before  my  feet  lay  quietly, 
Their  heads  reclining  on  my  knee. 

Some  foreign  romances  they  trill'd, — for  example 
I'll  name  the  "  three  oranges  "  song  as  a  sample ; 
A  hymn  of  praise  they  sang  also  with  grace 
On  me  and  my  noble  human  face. 

They  oft  interrupted  their  songs  with  loud  laughter. 
Many  critical  matters  inquiring  after. 
For  instance :  "  On  what  particular  plan 
'*  Did  God  determine  on  fashioning  man  ? 

'*  Is  each  individual's  soul  altogether 

'*  Immortal  ?    These  souls,  are  they  made  all  of  leatheTj 

"  Or  stiff  linen  only  ?     How  comes  it  to  pass 

"  That  almost  every  man  is  an  ass  ?" 

The  answers  I  gave,  I'll  conceal  for  the  present, 
And  yet  my  immortal  soul  (which  is  pleasant) 
Was  not  in  the  slightest  degree  ever  hurt 
By  the  prattling  talk  of  a  water-sprite  pert. 

While  sportive  and  roguish  are  elfins  and  nixes. 
Not  so  the  truehearted  earth-spirits  and  pixies. 
Which  love  to  help  man.     I  prefer  most  of  all 
The  race  that  they  dwar&  or  mannikins  call. 

They  all  wear  a  long  and  swelling  red  doublet, 
Their  face  is  noble,  though  care  seems  to  trouble  it; 
I  let  them  not  see  that  I  had  descried 
Why  they  their  feet  so  carefully  hide. 


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436  Heine's  voehq. 

They  all  have  ducks'  feet,  but  object  much  to  show  it; 
And  fancy  that  nobody  else  can  know  it ; 
Their  sorrow's  so  deep  and  hard  to  bear. 
That  to  teaze  them  about  it  I  never  could  dare. 

Alas !  we  all,  like  those  dwarfs  full  of  feeling, 
We  all  have  something  that  needs  concealing ; 
No  Christians,  we  fancy,  have  ever  descried . 
Where  we  our  ducks'  feet  so  carefully  hide. 

Salamanders  for  me  had  never  attractions, 
I  learnt  very  little  respecting  their  actions 
From  other  wood  spirits.     They  pass'd  me  by  night 
Like  fleeting  shadows,  mysteriously  light 

They  are  thin  as  a  spindle,  and  long  as  a  baby, 
With  breeches  and  waistcoats  tight-fltting  as  may  be 
Of  scarlet  colours,  embroider'd  with  gold ; 
Their  faces  are  sickly  and  yellow  and  old. 

A  golden  crown,  with  rubies  all  over. 
The  head  of  each  of  their  number  doth  cover ; 
The  whole  of  these  vain  conceited  elves 
Quite  absolute  monarchs,  consider  themselves. 

That  they  are  not  burnt  in  the  fire  is  truly 
A  great  piece  of  art,  I  acknowledge  it  duly ; 
And  yet  the  uninflammable  wight 
Is  far  from  being  a  true  fire-sprite. 

The  sharpest  woodspirits  are  mandrakes  however ; 
Short  legs  have  these  bearded  mannikins  clever ; 
They  have  old  men's  faces,  the  length  of  a  span, 
But  whence  they  proceed,  is  a  secret  to  man. 

When  head  over  heels*  in  the  moonlight  they  tumble. 
They  remind  one  of  roots  in  their  nature  quite  humble ; 
But  as  my  welfare  they  always  have  sou^t, 
Their  origin  really  to  me  matters  nought. 

In  small  acts  of  witchcraft  they  gave  me  instructions. 

How  to  exorcise  flames,  ply  the  birds  with  seductions. 

And  also  to  pluck  on  Midsunmier  night 

The  root  that  makes  one  invisible  quite.         Fastraddle 

They  taught  me  the  stars  and  strange   signs— how 

To  ride  on  the  winds  without  any  saddle. 

And  Eunic  sentences,  able  to  call 

The  dead  from  out  of  their  silent  graves  alL 

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BOMANCERO.  437 

They  also  taught  me  the  whistle  mysterious 
That  serves  to  deceive  the  woodpecker  serious, 
And  makes  him  give  us  the  spurge,  to  show 
Where  secret  treasures  are  hidden  below. 

The  words  that  'tis  needful  for  people  to  mutter 
When  digging  for  treasure,  they  taught  me  to  utter ; 
Eiit  all  in  vain,  for  I  ne'er  got  by  heart 
The  treasure-digger's  wonderful  art. 

For  money  in  fact  I  then  cared  not  a  tittle, 
My  wants  were  soon  satisfied,  being  but  little ; 
I  possess'd  many  castles  in  Spain's  fair  land. 
The  income  from  which  came  duly  to  hand. 

0  charming  time,  when  the  heaven's  high  arches 
With  fiddles  were  hung,  when  elfin  marches 
And  nixes'  dances  and  cobolds'  glad  play 
My  story-drunk  heart  enchanted  all  day  ! 

0  charming  time,  when  into  auspicious 
Triumphal  arches  the  foliage  delicious 
Appear'd  to  be  twining  I     I  wander'd  around. 

My  brow,  like  a  victor's,  with  laurel-wreath  crown'd. 

That  charming  time  has  utterly  vanish'd. 
And  all  those  pleasures  for  ever  are  banish'd  ; 
And,  ah  I  they  have  stolen  the  garland  so  fair 
That  I  was  then  wont  on  my  head  to  wear. 

The  garland  is  gone  that  my  locks  shaded  over. 
But  how  it  happen'd,  I  ne'er  could  discover ; 
Yet  since  that  beauteous  garland  they  stole. 
My  spirit  has  seem'd  deprived  of  its  soul. 

The  ghosts  of  the  world,  with  looks  dimly  staring. 
Gaze  on  me,  and  heaven  seems  barren  and  glaring, 
A  churchyard  blue,  its  deities  gone ; 

1  roam  in  the  forest,  depress'd  and  alone. 

From  the  forest  have  vanish'd  the  elves  with  their  graces 
Horns  hear  I,  and  yelping  of  dogs  in  their  places ; 
While  hid  in  the  thicket,  the  trembling  roe 
Is  licking  her  wounds  with  tearful  woe.  [biding 

And  where  are  the  mandrakes?    Methinks  they  are 
In  clefts  of  the  rocks,  as  a  safe  place  of  hiding ; 
My  dear  little  friends,  I'm  returning  again, 
Bnt  reft  of  my  garland  and  joy  I  remain. 

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138  Heine's  poems. 

0  where  is  the  fairy,  with  hair  long  and  golden. 
First  beauty  to  whom  I  was  ever  beholden  ? 
The  oak-tree  wherein  her  lifetime  she  pass'd 
Stands  mournfully  stripp'd,  and  bared  by  the  blast. 

The  waves  of  the  streamlet  run  sad  as  the  Styx's ; 

Beside  its  lone  banks  sits  one  of  the  nixes, 

As  pale  and  as  mute  as  a  figure  of  stone, 

While  marks  of  deep  grief  o'er  each  feature  are  thrown 

1  softly  approach'd  her  with  heartfelt  compassion, — 
She  arose  and  gazed  on  me  in  singular  fashion, 
And  then  she  fled  with  a  terrified  mien, 

As  if  she  some  fearful  spectre  had  seen. 

SPANISH  LYEICS. 

TflWAS  on  Hubert  s  day — the  year  was 
X    Thirteen  hundred,  three  and  eighty — 
That  the  king  a  banquet  gave  us 
In  the  castle  at  Segovia. 

These  state  banquets  just  the  same  are 
Everywhere,  and  at  the  tables 
Of  all  princes  sovereign  tedium 
Yawns  with  uncontested  vigour. 

Everywhere  the  same  silk  rabble, 
Gaily  dress'd,  and  proudly  nodding, 
Like  a  bed  of  gorgeous  tulips  ; 
Different  only  are  the  sauces. 

Whispers  all  the  time  and  buzzing 
Lull  the  senses  like  the  poppy, 
Till  the  sound  of  trumpets  wakes  us 
Trom  our  state  of  chewing  deafiiess. 

Near  me,  by  good  luck,  was  sitting 
Don  Diego  Albuquerque, 
From  whose  lips  the  conversation 
Flow'd  in  one  imbroken  torrent. 

He  with  wondrous  skill  related 
Bloody  stories  of  the  palace, 
Of  the  times  of  old  Don  Pedro, 
Whom  they  call'd  the  cruel  monarch 


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BOHANGERO.  439 

When  I  ask'd  him  why  Don  Pedi'o 
Caused  his  brother  Don  Fredrego 
To  be  secretly  beheaded, 
With  a  sigh  my  neighbour  answer' d  5 

Ah,  Senor !  the  tales  believe  not 
Jingled  on  their  vile  guitars  by 
Balladsingers  and  muledrivers 
In  posadas,  beershops,  taverns. 

And  believe  not  what  they  chatter 
Of  the  love  of  Don  Fredrego 
And  Don  Pedro's  wife  so  beauteous, 
Donna  Blanca  of  Bourbon. 

'Twas  not  to  the  husband's  jealous 
Feelings,  but  to  his  low  envy 
That  as  victim  fell  Fredrego, 
Chief  of  Calatrava's  order. 

For  the  crime  Don  Pedro  never 
Would  forgive  him,  was  his  glory, — 
Glory  such  as  Donna  Fama 
Loves  with  trumpet-tongue  to  herald— 

Never  could  Don  Pedro  pardon 
His  magnam'mous  high  spirit, 
Or  the  beauty  of  his  person. 
Which  was  but  his  spirit's  image. 

Still  within  my  memory  blossoms 
That  slim  graceful  hero-flower ; 
Ne'er  shall  I  forget  those  lovely 
Dream-like,  soft  and  youthful  features. 

They  were  just  of  that  description 
That  the  fairies  take  delight  in. 
And  a  fable-seeming  secret 
Spoke  &om  all  those  features  plainly. 

Blue  his  eyes  were,  their  enamel 
Being  dazzling  as  a  jewel, 
But  a  jewel's  staring  hardness 
Seem'd  reflected  in  them  likewise. 

Black  his  hair  was  in  its  colour, 
Bluish  black,  and  strangely  glistening. 
And  in  fair  luxuriant  tresses 
Falling  down  upon  his  ahoulders. 


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HQ  HEIKE*S  POEMS. 

In  the  charming  town  of  Coimbra 
Which  he  from  the  Moors  had  taken. 
For  the  last  time  I  beheld  him. 
In  this  world, — ^imhappy  prince  I 

He  was  coming  from  Alcanzor, 
Through  the  narrow  streets  fast  riding  i 
Many  a  fair  yonng  Moorish  maiden 
Eyed  him  from  her  latticed  window. 

O'er  his  head  his  helm-plume  floatetl 
Gallantly,  and  yet  his  mantle's 
Bigid  Calatraya  cross 
Scared  away  all  loving  fancies. 

By  his  side,  and  gaily  wagging 
With  his  tail,  his  favourite  Allan 
Sprang, — a  beast  of  proud  descent^ 
And  whose  home  was  the  Sierra. 

He,  despite  his  size  gigantic. 
Was  as  nimble  as  a  reindeer ; 
Noble  was  his  head  to  look  at, 
Though  the  fox's  it  resembled. 

Snow-white  and  like  silk  in  softness. 
Down  his  back  his  long  hair  floated. 
And  with  rubies  bright  incrusted 
Was  his  broad  and  golden  collar. 

It  was  said  this  collar  hid  the 
Talisman  fidelity ; 
Never  did  the  faithful  creature 
Leave  the  side  of  his  dear  master. 

O  that  fierce  fidelity  I 
It  excites  my  startled  feelings, 
When  I  think  how  'twas  made  public 
Here,  before  our  Mghten'd  presencct. 

O  that  day  so  full  of  horror  I 
Here,  within  this  hall,  it  happen'd. 
And  as  I  to-day  am  sitting. 
At  the  monarch's  table  sat  L 

At  the  high  ^d  of  the  table. 
Where  to-day  young  Don  Henrioa 
Gaily  tipples  with  tiie  flower 
Of  CastQian  chivalry. 


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ROMANCEEO.  441 

On  that  day  there  sat  Don  Pedro 
Darkly  mlent,  and  beside  him, 
Proudly  radiant  as  a  goddess, 
Sat  Maria  de  Padilla. 

At  the  table's  lower  end,  where 
Here  to-day  we  see  the  lady 
With  the  linen  frill  capacious, 
Like  a  white  plate  in  appearance. 

Whilst  her  yellow  face  is  gilded 
With  a  smile  of  sour  complexion, 
Like  the  citron  that  is  lying 
On  the  plate  already  mentioned, — 

At  the  table's  lower  end  here 
Was  a  place  remaining  empty  ; 
Some  great  guest  of  lofty  station 
Seem'd  the  golden  seat  to  wait  for. 

Don  Fredrego  was  the  guest,  for 
Whom  the  golden  seat  was  destined ; 
Tet  he  came  not, — ah !  now  know  we 
But  too  well  why  thus  he  tarried. 

Ah  I  that  selfsame  hour  the  wicked 
Deed  of  blood  was  consummated, 
And  the  innocent  young  hero 
Suddenly  attack'd  and  basely 

By  Don  Pedro's  myrmidons, 
Tightly  bound,  and  quickly  hurried 
To  a  dreary  castle  dungeon 
Lighted  only  by  some  torches. 

Executioners  stood  ready. 
And  their  bloody  chief  was  with  them, 
Who,  upon  his  axe  while  leaning, 
Thus  with  sadden'd  look  address'd  him  : 

'^  Now,  Grand  Master  of  San  Jago, 
'*  Now  must  thou  for  death  prepare  thee  ; 
''  Just  one  quarter  of  an  hour 
"  Still  is  left  for  thee  to  pray  in." 

Don  Fredrego  then  knelt  humbly. 
And  he  pray'd  with  pious  cahnness. 
And  then  said  :  **  I  now  have  finish'd,** 
And  receited  the  stroke  of  death. 


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442  heikb's  POEifa 

In  the  Tory  selfsame  moment 
That  the  head  roU'd  on  the  pavement, 
Faithful  Allan,  who  had  followed 
All  unseen,  sprang  qoickly  to  it. 

With  his  teeth  the  head  straight  seized  he 
By  the  long  luxuriant  tresses, 
And  with  this  much  valued  booty 
Shot  away  with  speed  of  magic. 

Agonizing  shouts  resounded 
Everywhere  as  on  he  hastened. 
Through  the  passages  and  chambers, 
Sometimes  upstairs,  sometimes  downstairs. 

Since  the  banquet  of  Belshazzar 

Never  company  at  table 

Was  so  utterly  confounded 

As  was  ours  that  £Jl'd  this  hall  then, 

When  the  monstrous  creature  leapt  in, 
With  the  head  of  Don  Fredrego, 
Which  he  with  his  teeth  was  dragging 
By  the  dripping  bloody  tresses. 

On  the  seat  which,  being  destined 
For  his  master,  still  was  empty. 
Sprang  the  dog  and  like  a  plaintiff 
Held  file  head  before  our  faces. 
Ah  I  it  was  the  well-remember'd 
Hero's  features,  but  still  paler 
And  more  solemn  npw  when  dead. 
And  ail-fearfully  encircled 

By  the  locks  in  black  luxuriance, 
Which  stood  up  as  did  the  savage 
Serpent-headdress  of  Medusa, 
Turning  into  stone  through  terror. 

Yes,  tum*d  into  stone  felt  all  then, 
Wildly  stared  we  on  each  other. 
And  each  tongue  was  mute  and  palsied 
Both  by  etiquette  and  horror. 

But  Maria  de  Padilla 
Broke  the  universal  silence ; 
Wringing  hands,  and  sobbing  loudly, 
She  forebodingly  lamented : 


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EOMANCERO.  443 

"  Now  it  will  be  said  'twas  I  that 
**  Brought  about  this  cruel  murder ; 
"  Eancour  will  assail  my  children, 
**  My  poor  innocent  young  children! — * 

Don  Diego  interrupted 

At  this  place  his  tale,  observing 

That  the  company  had  risen, 

And  the  court  the  hall  was  leaving. 

Kind  and  courteous  in  his  manners, 
Then  the  knight  became  my  escort, 
And  we  rambled  on  together 
Through  the  ancient  Gothic  castle. 

In  the  crossway  which  conducted 
To  the  kennels  of  the  monarch, 
Which  proclaimed  themselves  already 
By  &r  growling  sounds  and  yelpings, 
There  I  noticed,  built  up  strongly 
In  the  wall,  and  on  the  outside 
Firmly  fosten'd  by  strong  iron, 
Like  a  cage,  a  narrow  cell. 

And  inside  it  sat  two  human 
Figures,  two  young  boys  appearing ; 
By  the  legs  securely  fetter'd. 
On  the  dirty  straw  they  squatted. 

Scarcely  twelve  years  old  the  one  seem'd, 
Scarcely  older  seem'd  the  other ; 
Fair  and  noble  were  their  faces. 
But  through  sickness  thin  and  sallow. 

They  were  clothed  in  rags,  half  naked, 
And  their  withered  bodies  offer  d 
Plainest  signs  of  gross  ill-treatment ; 
Both  with  fever  shook  and  trembled* 

From  the  depth  of  their  deep  mis'ry 
They  upon  me  tum'd  their  glances ; 
White  and  spirit-like  their  eyes  were, 
And  I  felt  aU  terror-stricken. 

*^  Who,  then,  are  these  wretched  objoots  ?" 
I  ezclaim'd,  with  hasty  action 
Don  Diego's  hand  tight  grasping, 
Which  was  trembling  as  I  touch'd  it. 


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444  heute's  poems. 

Don  Diego  eeeni'd  embarrassed, 
Looked  if  any  one  was  listening, 
Deeply  sigh'd,  and  said,  assuming 
A  mere  worldling's  jaunty  accents : 

These  are  children  of  a  monarch, 
Early  orphan'd,  and  their  father 
Was  Don  Pedro,  and  their  mother 
Was  Maria  de  FadiUa. 

After  the  great  fight  at  Narvas, 
Where  Henrico  Transtamara 
Freed  his  brother,  this  Don  Pedro, 
From  his  crown's  oppressive  burden. 

And  from  that  still  greater  burden 
Which  by  men  is  Life  entitled, 
Don  Henrico's  victor-kindness 
Also  reach'd  his  brother's  children. 

Under  his  own  care  he  took  them, 
As  becomes  a  kindly  uncle, 
And  in  his  own  castle  gave  them 
Free  of  charge,  both  board  and  lodging. 

Narrow  is  indeed  the  chamber 
That  he  there  allotted  to  them ; 
Yet  in  summer  it  is  coolish, 
And  not  over  cold  in  winter. 

For  their  food,  they  live  on  ryebread. 
As  delicious  in  its  flavour 
As  if  Ceres'  self  had  baked  it 
For  her  dear  child  Proserpina. 

Oftentimes  he  also  sends  them 
Quite  a  bowl-full  of  garbanzos, 
And  the  youngsters  in  this  manner 
Learn  that  'tis  in  Spain  a  Sunday. 

Yet  not  always  is  it  Sunday, 
And  garbanzos  come  not  always, 
And  the  upper  huntsman  treats  them 
To  a  banquet  with  his  whip. 

For  this  worthy  upper  huntsman. 
Who  is  with  the  care  entrusted 
Of  the  pack  of  hounds,  together 
With  the  cage  that  holds  the  nephew% 


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BOMANOEBO.  445 

Is  the  most  unhappy  husbasd 

Of  that  acid  Citronella 

With  the  frill  so  white  and  plate-like. 

Whom  we  saw  to-day  at  table ; 

And  she  scolds  so  loud,  that  oftien 
On  the  whip  her  husband  seizes, 
Hither  hastens,  and  chastises 
First  the  dogs,  and  then  the  children. 

But  the  king  is  very  angry 
With  his  conduct,  and  commanded 
That  his  nephews  should  in  future 
Never  like  ^e  dogs  be  treated. 

He  will  not  entrust  to  any 

Mercenary  fist  the  duty 

Of  correcting  them,  but  do  it 

With  his  own  right  hand  henceforward.-^ 

Suddenly  stopp'd  Don  Diego, 

For  the  castle  Seneschal 

Now  approach'd  us,  and  politely 

Ask'd  :  Had  we  enjoy'd  our  dinner? — 

THE  EX-LIVIJ^G  ONE. 

SAY,  Brutus,  where  can  thy  Cassius  be, 
The  watchman,  the  crier  nightly. 
Who  once  on  the  banks  of  the  Seine  with  thee 
Used  to  ramble  in  converse  sprightly  ? 

Ye  often  were  wont  to  gaze  up  on  high. 
Where  the  darksome  clouds  were  scudding ; 

A  far  darker  cloud  were  the  thoughts,  by-the-by, 
That  in  your  bosoms  were  budding. 

Say,  Brutus,  where  can  thy  Cassius  be  ? 

No  longer  he  thinks  of  destroying ; 
By  the  Neckar  he  dwells,  where  his  talents  is  he 

As  a  reader  to  tyrants  employing. 

But  Brutus  replied :  "  A  fool,  friend,  art  thou, 

**  Shortsighted  as  every  poet ; 
'*  To  a  tyrant  my  Cassius  now  reads,  I  allow, 

"  But  his  object's  to  kill  him, — 1  know  it 


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146  Heine's  poems. 

^  So  Matzerath's*  poems  he  reads  him  each  day, 

^*  A  dagger  is  each  line  in  it ; 
"  And  so  the  poor  tyrant,  I'm  sorry  to  say, 

*'  May  die  of  ennui  any  minnte." 

THE  EX-WATCHMAN. 

FEOM  the  Neckar  he  departed, 
With  the  town  of  Stuttgardt  vex'd, 
And  as  play-director  started 
In  fsdr  Munich's  city  next. 

All  that  country's  very  pretty. 

And  they  in  perfection  here, 
In  this  fancy-stirring  city, 

Brew  the  very  best  of  beer. 

But  'tis  said  the  poor  Director 

Eambles,  like  a  Dante,  glum. 
Melancholy  as  a  spectre, 

Like  Lord  Byron,  gloomy,  dumb. 

Oomedies  no  longer  heeds  he. 

Nor  the  very  worst  of  rhyme  ; 
Wretched  tragedies  oft  reads  he. 

Not  once  smiling  all  the  time. 

Oft  herself  some  fair  one  flatters 
She  will  cheer  his  sorrowing  heart ; 

But  his  coat  of  mail  soon  shatters 
Every  love-directed  dart. 

All  in  vain  his  friends  endeavour 

To  enliven  him  and  sing : 
^*  In  thy  life  rejoice  thee  ever, 

**  While  thy  lamp's  still  glimmering  I** 

Is  there  nought  can  raise  thy  spirits 

In  this  fair  and  charming  town. 
Which,  among  its  many  merits, 

Boasts  such  men  of  great  renown  ? 

It  is  true,  that  it  has  lately 

Lost  full  many  a  man  of  worth 
Whom  we  miss  and  valued  greatly, 

Chorus-leaders  and  so  forth. 

*  A  recent  poet  of  no  great  reputation.    He  was  the  join! 
editor  of  the  *<  Bhine  Annual  *'  with  Freiligiath  and  Simrock. 


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EOMAKCifiBO.  ,        147 

Would  that  Massmann  left  us  never  I 
He  would  surely  have  some  day 

By  his  antics  strange  but  clever 
Driven  all  thy  cares  away. 

Schelling's*  loss  is  very  serious, 

And  can  never  be  replaced, 
A  philosopher  mysterious, 

And  a  mimic  highly  graced. 

That  the  founder  of  Walhalla 

Went  away,  and  left  behind 
All  his  manuscripts, — by  Allah  I 

That  was  really  too  unkind  I 

With  Comeliusf  also  perish*d 

All  his  pupils  whatsoe'er ; 
They  shaved  off  their  tresses  cherish'd. 

And  their  strength  was  in  their  hair 

For  their  prudent  Master  planted 
In  their  hair  some  magic  springs. 

And  it  seem'd,  as  if  enchanted, 
To  be  fall  of  living  things. 

Apropos  I    The  arch-notorious 
Priest,  as  Dollingerius  known, — 

That's,  I  think,  his  name  inglorious, — 
Has  he  from  the  Isar  flown  ? 

In  Good  Friday's  sad  procession 

I  beheld  him  in  his  place ; 
Iklongst  the  men  of  his  profession 

He  had  £Eur  the  gloomiest  face. 

On  Mon^ho  Monachorum 

Now-ardays  the  cap  doth  fit 
Of  virorum  obscurorum. 

Glorified  by  Hutten's  wit  J 

*  The  fiEUDDns  philoBopher,  who  at  one  time  resided  in  Mmiich 
t  The  emiDent  painter,  who  decorated  the  Glyptothek  and 

Pinaoothek  at  Munich.    He  was  afterwards  Director  of  the 

Berlin  Academy. 
X  One  of  Hutten's  well-known  wcrks  was  entitled  "  Epistoloo 

Obscuronuu  Yirornm." 


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448  Heine's  poems. 

At  his  name  thy  dull  eye  flashes ; 

Ex-nightwatchman,  watchful  be  I 
There  the  cowls  are,  here  the  lash  is,— - 

Strike  away  as  formerly  I 

Scourge  them,  worthy  friend,  devoutly, 

As  at  sight  of  every  cowl 
Ulrich  did  ;  he  smote  them  stoutly, 

And  they  fearfully  did  howL 

Old  Erasmus  could  not  master 
His  loud  laughter  at  the  joke ; 

And  this  fortunate  disaster 
His  tormenting  ulcer  broke. 

Old  and  young  laugh, — all  the  city 
In  the  general  shout  concur, 

And  they  sing  the  well-known  ditty : 
"  Gaudeamur  igitur  I" 

When  those  dirty  monks  we're  catching, 
We  are  overwhelmed  with  fleas ; 

Hutten  thus  was  always  scratching, 
And  was  never  at  lus  ease. 

**  Alea  jacta  est !"  however 
Was  the  brave  knight's  battle  shout, 

Smiting  down,  with  deathstroke  clever, 
Both  the  priests  and  rabble  rout. 

Ex-nightwatchman,  now  be  wiser  I 
Feel'st  thou  not  thy  bosom  glow  ? 

Wake  to  action  on  the  Isar, 

And  thy  sickly  spleen  o'erthrow. 

Call  thy  long  legs  transcendental 

Into  fall  and  active  play  ; 
Vulgar  be  the  monks  or  gentle. 

If  they're  monks,  then  strike  away  1 

He  however  sigh'd,  and  wringing 
Both  his  hands  he  thus  replied : 

My  long  legs,  so  apt  at  springing, 
Are  with  Europe  stupified. 

And  my  corns  are  twitching  sadly, 
Tight  the  German  shoes  I've  on ; 

Where  the  shoe  is  pinching  badly 
Know  I  now, — so  pray  begone  1 

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BOMANGEEO.  449 

MYTHOLOGY. 

"V7T3S I  Europa  must  knock  under, — 
X     Who  could  stand  against  a  bull  V 
Danae  we'll  forgive ;  no  wonder 
Golden  rain  made  her  a  fool  I 

Sem'le  was  a  victim  real, 

For  she  innocently  thought 
That  a  heavenly  cloud  ideal 

Could  not  injure  her  in  aught. 

But  poor  Leda's  tale  notorious  ' 

Beally  stirs  up  all  our  spleen  ; 
Vanquished  by  a  swan  inglorious, 

Wh&i  a  goose  must  she  have  been ! 

IN  MATILDA'S  ALBUM. 

ON  these  mill'd  rags — a  change  mysterious ! — 
I  with  a  goose-quill  must  rehearse 
Partly  in  jest,  and  pwrtly  serious, 

Some  foolish  nonsense  turn'd  to  verse. 

I,  who  am  wont  my  thoughts  to  utter 

Upon  thy  rosy  lips  so  fsdr 
With  kisses  that  like  bright  flames  splutter 

Up  from  my  bosom's  inmost  lair ! 

0  fashion's  rage  !     If  I'm  a  poet, 

E'en  by  my  wife  I'm  plagued  at  times 

Until  (and  other  minstrels  know  it) 
I  in  her  album  scrawl  some  rhymes. 

TO  THE  YOUNG. 

HEED  not  the  confusion,  resist  the  illusion 
Of  golden  apples  that  lie  in  thy  way  ! 
The  swords  are  clashing,  the  arrows  are  flashing, 
But  they  cannot  long  the  hero  delay. 

A  daring  beginning  is  halfway  to  winning, 
An  Alexander  once  conquer'd  the  earth  ! 

Restrain  each  soft  feeling !  the  queens  are  all  kneeliiig 
In  the  tent,  to  reward  thy  victorious  worth. 

Surmounting  each  burden,  we  win  as  our  guerdon 
The  bed  of  Darius  of  old,  and  his  crown ; 

0  deadly  seduction !     0  blissful  destruction! 
To  die  thus  in  triumph  in  Babylon  town ! 

2  o 

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450  Heine's  poems. 

the  unbelieveb. 

THOU  wilt  repose  within  mine  arms  I 
With  rapturous  emotion 
My  bosom  heaves  and  throbs  and  thrills 
At  this  delicious  notion. 

Thou  wilt  repose  within  mine  arms, 
Whilst  with  thy  fair  gold  tresses 

I  sport,  and  thy  dear  darling  head 
My  shoulder  gently  presses ! 

Thou  wilt  repose  within  mine  arms ! 

To  truth  will  turn  my  vision, 
And  here  on  earth  shall  I  enjoy 

The  highest  bliss  elysian. 

St.  Thomas !     Scarce  can  I  believe 
The  fact,  my  doubts  will  linger 

Until  upon  my  rapture's  wounds 
I  lay  my  eager  finger. 

WHITHER  NOW? 

\ir HITHER  now ?  my  stupid  foot 
▼  T  Fain  to  Germany  would  guide  me  ; 
But  my  reason  shakes  its  head 
Wisely,  seeming  thus  to  chide  me : 

"  Ended  is  the  war  indeed, 

"  But  they  still  keep  up  courts-martial. 
"  And  to  writing  things  esteemed 

*'  Shootable,  thou'rt  far  too  partial" 

That's  quite  true,  and  being  shot 
Has  for  me  no  great  attractions ; 

I'm  no  hero,  and  unskill'd 
In  pathetic  words  and  actions. 

Fain  to  England  would  I  go, 

Yiew'd  I  not  with  such  displeasure 

Englishmen  and  coals— their  smell 
Makes  me  sick  beyond  all  measure* 

To  America  methinks 

I  would  sail  the  broad  seas  over; 
To  that  place  of  freedom,  where 

All  alike  may  live  in  clover. 


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BOMANCEBO.  451 

Did  I  not  detest  a  land 

Where  tobacco's  'mongst  their  victnals, 
Where  they  never  use  spittoons. 

And  so  strangely  play  at  skittles. 

Bussia,  that  vast  empire  fair, 

Might  be  tolerably  pleasant, 
But  I  should  not  like  the  knout 

That's  their  usual  winter  present. 

Sadly  gaze  I  up  on  high, 

Where  the  countless  stars  are  gleaming, 
But  I  nowhere  can  discern 

Where  my  own  bright  star  is  beaming. 

Perhaps  in  heaven's  gold  labyrinth 

It  has  got  benighted  lately, 
As  I  on  this  bustling  earth 

Have  myself  been  wandering  greatly. 

AN  OLD  SONG. 

THOU  now  art  dead,  and  thou  knowest  it  not. 
The  light  of  thine  eyes  is  quench'd  and  forgot ; 
Thy  rosy  mouth  is  pallid  for  ever, 
And  thou  art  dead,  and  wilt  live  again  never. 

'Twas  in  a  dreary  midsummer  night, 
I  bore  thee  myseK  to  the  grave  outright ; 
The  nightingales  sang  their  soft  lamentations, 
And  after  us  follow'd  the  bright  constellations. 

As  through  the  forest  the  train  moved  along, 
They  made  it  resound  with  the  litany's  song ; 
The  firs,  in  their  mantles  of  mourning  veil'd  closely, 
The  prayers  for  the  dead  repeated  morosely. 

And  as  o'er  the  willowy  lake  we  flow 
The  elfins  were  dancing  full  in  our  view : 
They  suddenly  stopp'd  in  wondering  fashion, 
And  seem'd  to  regard  us  with  looks  of  compassion. 

And  when  we  had  reach'd  the  grave,  full  soon 
From  out  of  the  heavens  descended  the  moon, 
And  preach'd  a  sermon,  'midst  tears  and  condoling 
While  in  the  distance  the  bells  were  tollir^. 


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452       /  Heine's  poems. 

READY  MONEY. 

LOVE,  before  she  granted  &yoiix% 
One  day  told  the  god  Apollo 
She  on  guarantees  insisted, 

For  l£e  times  were  false  and  hollow. 

Laughingly  the  god  made  answer : 
"  Yes,  tiie  times  are  altered  truly, 

"  And  thou  speakest  like  a  usurer 
•*  Who  on  pawn  lends  money  duly. 

"  Well,  then,  I've  a  lyre,  one  only, — 
"  Tis  of  gold,  a  good  and  rare  one ; 

**  Pr3rthee  say  how  many  kisses 

"  Thou  wilt  lend  upon  it,  fair  one  ?" 

THE  OLD  ROSE. 

SHE  for  whom  my  heart  once  beat 
Was  a  rosebud  fair  and  tender ; 
Yet  it  ever  grew  more  sweet. 

Bursting  into  full-blown  splendour. 

'Twas  the  loveliest  that  could  be, 
And  to  pluck  it  I  bethought  me ; 

But  it  stung  me  piquantly 

With  its  thorns,  and  prudence  taught  ma. 

Now,  when  withered,  torn,  and  maim'd. 

By  the  wind  and  tempests  shattered, 
"  Dearest  Henry"  I*m  proclaim*d. 

And  I'm  foUow'd,  sought,  and  flatter'd, 
Henry  here  and  Henry  there 

Calleth  she  with  ceaseless  din  now ; 
If  a  thorn  is  anywhere, 

'Tis  upon  the  fair  one's  chin  now. 

0  how  hard  the  bristles  grow 

On  the  chin's  warts  of  my  beauty! 

Either  to  a  convent  go, 

Or  to  shave  will  be  thy  duty. 

AUTO-DA-Flfi. 

SEE  these  violets,  dusty  tresses. 
And  this  faded  ribbon  blue, 
Long  forgotten  cherish'd  trifles, 
And  these  half- torn  billets-doux, — 


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nOMANOERO.  453 

All,  with  angry  look  and  gesture 

In  the  blazing  fire  I  throw ; 
Sadly  crackle  up  these  relics 

Of  my  happiness  and  woe. 

Vows  of  love,  and  fond  decdiying 

Broken  oaths  all  upwards  fly 
In  the  chimney,  while  in  secret 

Cupid  laughs  maliciously. 

Dreamily  beside  the  fireplace 

Sit  I,  while  the  sparkles  bright 
Glow  in  silence  midst  the  ashes, — 

So  farewell  I  good  night  I  good  night 

LAZABUS, 
1.  THE  WAY  OF  THE  WORLD. 


H 


E  who  has  already  much, 


Finds  his  wealth  increasing  faster  ; 
Who  but  little,  is  of  aU 

Soon  bereft  by  some  disaster. 

But  if  thou  hast  nothing.  Mend, 
Go  and  hang  thyself  this  minute ; 

Only  they  whoVe  aught  on  earth 
Have  a  claim  for  living  in  it. 

2.  RETROSPECT. 

I'VE  snuff  d  at  every  smell  that  has  birth 
In  this  delightful  kitchen  of  earth ; 
Each  thing  that  the  world  contains  that's  delicious 
Have  I  enjoy'd  like  a  hero  ambitious  ; 
I've  drunk  my  coffee,  and  eaten  with  zest, 
And  many  a  charming  doll  caressed, 
Worn  silken  waistcoats  and  handsome  coats, 
Ajid  had  my  pockets  well  lined  with  notes ; 
The  high  horse,  like  Gellert  the  poet,  I  rode. 
Had  house  and  castle  all  ^-la-mode. 
On  fortune's  verdant  meadow  I  lay. 
While  on  me  the  sun  gleam'd  brightly  all  day ; 
A  wreath  of  laurel  my  brow  embraced, 
And  through  my  brain  sweet  visions  raced. 
Sweet  visions  of  endless  May  and  flowers — 
How  happily  fleeted  then  the  hours, 


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454  Heine's  poems. 

So  dim  and  hazy,  so  full  of  repose, — 

My  mouth  was  fiird  with  whatever  I  chose 

And  angels  came,  and  ont  of  their  pockets 

The  champagne  bottles  flew  like  rockets, — 

Bright  visions  were  these, — soap-bubbles,  alas  I 

They  burst, — and  I  lie  on  the  humid  grass ; 

My  limbs  are  now  rheumatic  and  lame, 

My  inmost  spirit  is  fill'd  with  shame. 

Alas !  each  pleasure  and  gratification 

I  bought  at  the  price  of  bitter  vexation ; 

I'm  steep'd  in  bitterness  up  to  the  chin. 

The  bugs  have  terribly  bitten  my  skin ; 

Oppress' d  by  care  and  gloomy  sorrow 

I  needs  must  lie,  and  I  needs  must  borrow 

From  wealthy  rascals,  and  slatterns  vile, 

I  even  believe  that  I  begg'd  for  a  while. 

And  now  I  would  finish  this  wearisome  race, 

And  find  in  the  grave  a  resting-place. 

Farewell  I  In  yon  heavens,  good  Christian  brother, 

Once  more  we  may  hope  to  meet  with  each  other. 

3.  RE8UERECTI0N. 

THE  trumpet's  wild  echo  fills  the  skies 
As  though  it  summoned  to  battle ; 
From  out  of  their  graves  the  dead  arise, 

Their  limbs  they  wriggle  and  rattle. 
Each  thing  that  has  legs  prepares  for  the  race, 

The  spectres  white  are  all  driven 
To  Jehoshaphat,  the  gathering-place, 

Where  judgment  is  now  to  be  given. 
There  sits,  as  Head  of  the  Court,  the  Lord, 

By  all  his  apostles  surrounded  ; 
Assessors  are  they, — each  judgment,  each  word 

On  love  and  wisdom  is  founded. 
No  face  is  disguised  in  all  that  array 

For  every  mask  is  seen  falling 
In  the  radiant  light  of  the  judgment  day, 

At  the  sound  of  the  trumpet  enthralliiig. 
At  Jehoshaphat,  in  the  valley  at  last 

The  whole  of  the  troop  is  united. 
And  since  the  defendants'  number's  so  vast, 

I've  the  summary  only  recited : 


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BOMANCKRO.  455 

The  goats  to  tho  left,  and  the  sheep  to  the  right,— 

The  parting  is  quickly  effected ; 
For  the  pious  good  sheep  heaven's  mansions  of  light. 

And  hell  for  the  goats  is  selected. 

4.  THE  DYING  ONE. 

FLYING  after  bliss  and  light, 
Thou  retum*st  in  piteous  plight; 
German  truth  and  German  shirt 
Strangers  draggle  through  the  dirt. 

Pale  as  death  hast  thou  become, 
But  take  comfort,  thou'rt  at  home  ; 
Warm  as  by  the  household  hearth 
Lie  we  under  German  earth. 

Many  others,  who  fell  lame, 
Home  again,  alas !  ne'er  came, 
Though  they  yearningly  implored,— 
0  have  pity,  gracious  Lord ! 

5.  RASCALITY. 

RICH  people  only  can  be  won 
By  open,  barefaced  flattery ; 
Money  is  flat,  my  worthy  son, 
And  needs  must  flatly  flatter'd  be. 

The  box  of  incense  swing  with  zeal 
Before  all  worshipped  golden  calves ; 

In  dust  and  mire  widi  meekness  kneel. 
And,  above  all,  ne'er  praise  by  halves. 

The  price  of  bread  this  year  is  high, 
Fine  words  we  lavish  all  in  vain ; 

Mecaenas'  dog  to  praise,  then,  try. 
And  earn  a  bellyful  again. 

6.  RETROSPECT. 

THE  pearl  for  the  first,  and  the  case  for  the  second,— 
O  William  Wisetzki,  thy  days  wore  soon  reckoned. 
But  the  Kitten,  the  Kitten  was  saved.* 

♦  This  poem  recounts  the  untimely  fate  of  a  playmate,  who 
was  drowned  when  trying  to  save  a  Jdtten.  See  Heine's  Eeisc' 
hilder^  chapter  vi. 


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456  m&iNis's  POEMS. 

The  beam  that  he  clung  to,  that  stretched  o'er  the  cnrrent 
Beneath  him  broke  down,  and  he  Bank  in  the  torrent. 
But  the  Kitten,  the  Kitten  was  saved. 

We  followed  the  corpse  of  this  darling  of  ours, 
They  buried- him  under  a  grave  of  May  flowers, 
But  the  Kitten,  the  Kitten  was  saved. 

O  prudent  wert  thou,  thus  early  in  striving 
To  'scape  from  life's  storms,  and  in  harbour  arriving, — 
But  the  Kitten,  the  Elitten  was  saved. 

Happy  thou,  that  thus  early  thy  danger  was  over ; 
Before  thou  wert  ill,  thou  thy  health  didst  recover, — 
But  the  Kitten,  the  Kitten  was  saved. 

j?^or  many  a  year  have  I  thought,  child  so  cherish'd, 
With  envy  and  grief  how  thou  early  hast  perish'd, — 
But  the  Batten,  the  Kitten  was  saved. 

7.  mPERFECTION. 

NOTHING  is  perfect  in  this  world  of  ours, 
The  thorn  grows  with  the  rose,  that  queen  of 
flowers ; 
Methinks  the  angels,  who  for  our  protection 
Dwell  in  the  skies,  are  stain'd  with  imperfection. 

The  tulip  has  no  scent.     The  saying  is : 
Honour  once  stole  a  sucking-pig,  old  quiz ; 
Had  not  Lucretia  stabb'd  herself,  she  may  be 
Would  have  in  time  brought  forth  a  thumping  baby. 

The  haughty  peacock  has  but  ugly  feet ; 
A  woman  may  be  witty  and  discreet. 
And  yet,  like  Voltaire's  Henriade,  may  weary. 
Or  be,  like  Klopstock's  famed  Messias,  dreary. 

The  best  of  cows  no  Spanish  knows,  I  ween, 
Massmann  no  Latin.     Much  too  smooth  are  e'en 
The  marble  buttocks  of  Canova's  Venus ; 
Too  flat  is  Massmann's  nose  (but  this  between  us). 

In  pretty  songs  are  hidden  wretched  rhymes. 
As  bees*  stings  in  the  honey  lurk  at  times; 
Of  vulnerably  heel  the  son  of  Thetis, 
And  Alexandre  Dumas  is  quite  a  Metis. 


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ROMANCKRO.  457 

The  fairest  star  that  in  the  heavens  has  birth, 
When  it  has  caught  a  cold,  straight  falls  to  ^trth ; 
Prime  cider  of  the  barrel  bears  the  traces, 
And  many  a  spot  the  sun's  bright  face  defaces. 

And  thou,  much  honoured  Madam,  even  thou 
Faultless  art  not,  nor  free  from  failings  now. 
"  What,  then,  is  wanting?"  askest  thou  and  starest, — 
A  bosom,  and  a  soul  within  it,  fairest  I 

8.  PIOUS  WARNING. 
TTTHEN  thou  dost  quit  this  mortal  abode, 
T  T      Immortal  spirit,  beware  thee 
Lest  dangers  seek  to  ensnare  thee ; 
Through  death  and  night  conducteth  the  road. 

The  soldiers  of  God  at  the  golden  door 

Of  the  city  of  light  are  collected ; 

Here  actions  and  deeds  are  respected, 
Mere  name  and  station  avail  no  more. 

The  pilgrim  leaves  at  the  portal  behind 

His  shoes  so  heavy  and  dusty ; 

O  enter  with  confidence  trusty, 
Sofi;  slippers,  sweet  music,  and  rest  thoult  find. 

9.  THE  COOLED-DOWN  ONE. 

WHEN  we  are  dead,  we  long  must  lie 
Within  the  tomb ;  distressed  am  I, 
Yes,  sad  am  I  that  resurrection 
Delays  so  long  to  give  perfection. 

Once  more,  before  the  light  of  life 
Is  quench'd,  before  this  weary  strife 
Is  o'er,  fSun  would  I,  ere  I  perish, 
Have  woman's  love,  to  bless  and  cherish. 

Some  fair  one  I  would  now  invite 
With  eyes  as  soft  as  moonbeams'  light ; 
No  more  I  relish  the  advances 
Of  wild  brunettes  with  burning  glanocR. 

Young  men,  exulting  in  their  youth, 
Prefer  tumultuous  love  in  truth  ; 
With  them  excitement's  all  the  fSashion,^ 
And  soul-enthralling  mutual  passion. 


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458  HBIKE*8  POEMS. 

No  longer  young,  bereft  of  power. 
As  I,  alas !  am  at  this  hour, 
I  fain  once  more  would  love  in  quiet, 
And  happy  be, — without  a  riot. 

10.  SOLOMON. 

THE   drums,    trumps,   comets   at  length    sink    to 
slumber ; 
By  Solomon's  couch,  as  he  lieth  sleeping, 
Full-girded  angels  the  watch  are  keeping. 

On  either  side  six  thousand  in  number. 

The  monarch  protect  they  from  cares  while  dreaming. 
And  as  he  frowns  in  his  slumbers  nightly. 
From  out  of  their  sheaths  straight  draw  they  lightly 

Twelve  thousand  swords,  all  fiercely  gleaming. 

But  presently  back  in  their  sheaths  are  falling 
The  angels*  swords.     The  brow  of  the  sleeper 
Grows  smooth,  his  slumber  is  softer  and  deeper. 

And  soon  his  lips  are  gently  calling : 

'*  O  Sulamith,  thou  whom  so  dearly  I  cherish  ! 

'*  O'er  countries  and  kingdoms  I  rule,  great  and 

glorious, 
/*  Of  Israel  and  Judah  the  monarch  victorious, 

^  But  if  thonlt  not  love  me,  I  wither  and  perish." 

11.  LOST  WISHES. 

SIMILAE  in  disposition, 
Ijike  a  brother  link'd  to  brother. 
We  unconsciously  were  ever 

Growing  fonder  of  each  other. 
Each  one  knew  the  other's  meaning. 

Just  as  if  we  were  omniscient ; 
Words,  in  fact,  we  found  superfluous, 

And  a  look  was  quite  sufficient. 
How  I  long'd  to  have  thee  near  me, 

Bevelling  in  peace  and  plenty. 
As  my  staunch  and  valiant  comrade 

In  a  dolce  far  niente ! 
Always  to  remain  beside  thee 

Was  the  aim  of  each  endeavour ; 
Everything  that  gave  thee  pleasiure. 

To  accomplish  sought  I  ever. 


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BOMANGERO.  459 

I  enjoy'd  what  thou  didst  relish, 
Neither  would  I  touch  the  dishes 

Thou  didst  hate,  and  even  smoking 
I  commenced,  to  meet  thy  wishes. 

Many  a  funny  Polish  story 

That  thy  merriment  excited, 
In  a  strange  and  Jewish  accent 

To  repeat  I  then  delighted. 

Yes,  then  long'd  I  to  approach  thee, 

Leave  my  foreign  habitation, 
And  beside  thy  fortune's  fireplace 

Take  for  evermore  my  station. 

Golden  wishes  I  mere  soap  bubbles  I 
Like  my  life  they  all  have  vanished ; 

On  the  ground  I  now  am  lying, 

Crushed  for  ever,  hopeless,  banish'd. 

Fare  ye  well,  ye  golden  wishes 

Where  my  darSng  hopes  once  centred  I 

Ah !  the  blow  was  far  too  deadly 
That  my  inmost  heart  has  entered. 

12.  THE  ANNIVERSABY. 

NOT  one  mass  will  e'er  be  chanted, 
Not  one  Hebrew  prayer  be  mutter'd, 
When  the  day  I  died  retumeth, — 
Nothing  will  be  sung  or  utter'd. 

Yet  upon  that  day,  it  may  be. 

If  die  weather  has  not  chill'd  her, 
On  a  visit  to  Montmartre 

With  Pauline  will  go  Matilda. 

With  a  wreath  of  immortelles  she'll 

Deck  my  grave  in  foreign  fashion, 
Sighing  say  '^ pauvre  homme  I  '*  and  sadly 

Drop  a  tear  of  fond  compassion. 

I  shall  then  too  high  be  dwelling, 

And,  alas  I  no  chair  have  ready 
For  my  darling's  use  to  offer, 

As  she  walks  with  feet  unsteady. 


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460  Heine's  poems. 

Sweet,  stont  little  one,  return  not 

Home  on  foot,  I  must  implore  thee ; 
At  the  barrier  gate  is  stancUng 

A  fiacre  all  ready  for  thea 

18.  MEETING  AGAIN. 

ONE  summer  eve,  in  the  woodbine  bower 
We  sat  once  more  at  the  window  lonely ; 
The  moon  arose  with  life-giying  power, 

But  wo  appear'd  two  spectres  only. 
Twelve  years  had  pass'd  since  the  last  occasion 

When  we  on  this  spot  had  sat  together  ; 
Each  tender  glow,  each  loving  persuasion 

Had  meanwhile  been  quench'd  in  life's  rough  weather 
I  silently  sat.     The  woman,  however, 

Just  like  her  sex,  amongst  love's  ashes 
Must  needs  be  raking,  but  vain  her  endeavour 

To  kindle  again  its  long-quench'd  flashes. 
And  she  recounted  how  she  had  contended 

With  evil  thoughts,  the  story  disclosing 
How  hardly  she  once  her  virtue  defended, — 

I  stupidly  listened  to  all  her  prosing. 
When  homeward  I  rode,  the  trees  beside  me 

Like  spirits  beneath  the  moon's  rays  flitted ; 
Sad  voices  call'd,  but  onward  I  hied  me. 

Yes,  I  and  the  dead,  who  my  side  ne'er  quitted. 

14.  MBS.  OABE. 
■flf  HEN  fortune  on  me  shed  her  ray, 
T  T     The  gnats  around  me  danced  aU  day, 
Plenty  of  friends  then  cherish'd  me, 
And  all,  in  fashion  brotherly, 

My  viands  with  me  tasted. 

And  my  last  penny  wasted. 
Fortune  has  fled,  and  void  is  my  purse, 
My  friends  have  left  for  better  for  worse, 
Extinguish'd  is  each  sunny  ray. 
Around  me  the  gnats  no  longer  play ; 

My  friends  and  the  gnats  together 

Have  gone  with  the  simny  weather. 
Beside  my  bed  in  the  winter  night 
Old  Care  as  my  nurse  sits  bolt  uprighi; 


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BOMANGERO.  461 

She  wears  a  habit  that^s  white  enough, 
A  bonnet  black,  and  takes  her  snuff. 

The  box  is  harshly  creaking, 

As  the  won^an  a  pinch  is  seeking. 

I  often  dream  that  the  happy  time 
Of  bliss  has  retum'd,  and  May's  young  prima, 
And  friendship,  and  all  the  gnats  as  well, — 
When  creaks  the  snuffbox, — and,  sad  to  tell. 
The  bubble  is  straightway  breaking, 
While  the  nurse  her  snuff  is  taking. 

15.  TO  THE  ANGELS. 

TmS  is  dread  Thanatos  indeed  I 
He  comes  upon  his  pale-white  steed ; 
I  hear  its  tread,  I  hear  its  trot, 
The  dusky  horseman  spares  me  not ; 
He  tears  me  from  Matilda's  fond  embraces,—- 
This  thought  of  woe  all  other  thoughts  effaces. 

She  was  at  once  my  child,  my  wife. 

And  when  I  quit  this  mortal  life 

An  orphan'd  widow  will  she  be  I 

I  leave  alone  on  earth's  wide  sea 
The  wife,  the  child,  who,  trusting  to  my  guiding 
Slept  on  my  bosom,  careless  and  confiding. 

Ye  angels  in  yon  heavens  so  fair 

Eeceive  my  sobs,  receive  my  prayer  I 

When  1  am  buried,  from  above 

Protect  the  woman  that  I  love ! 
Be  shield  and  guardian  to  your  own  reflection, 
Grant  my  poor  child  Matilda  your  protection ! 

By  all  the  tears  e'er  shed  by  you 
Over  men's  woes  in  pity  true, — 
By  that  dread  word  that  priests  alone 
Kiow,  and  ne'er  breathe  without  a  groan. 
By  all  your  beauty,  gentleness,  perfection, 
Te  angels,  grant  Matilda  your  protection ! 

16.  IN  OCTOBER  1849. 

THE  weather  now  is  calm  and  mild. 
And  hush'd  once  more  the  tempest's  vcioe  is, 
And  Germany,  that  o'ergrown  child, 
Once  more  in  its  :>ld  Christmas  trees  rejoioae. 


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i62  Heine's  poems. 

Domestic  joys  we  now  pursue, 

All  things  beyond  are  false  and  hollow, 

And  to  the  house's  gable  too. 
Where    once  he    built   his  nest,   comes   eoncDnri? 
swallow. 

Forest  and  stream  rest  peacefully. 

With  the  soft  moonlight  o*er  them  playing ; 

But,  hark,  a  crack !     A  shot  may't  be  ? 

It  is  perchance  some  friend  whom  they  are  slaying. 

Perchance  with  weapons  in  his  hand. 

Some  madcap  they  have  overtaken; 
(All  do  not  flight  well  understand 

Like  Horace,  who  so  nimbly  saved  his  bacon). 

Crack,  Crack  1     A  fete,  may  I  presume, 

Or  fireworks  in  our  Goethe's  honour  ? 
Or  Sontag  rising  from  the  tomb 

Greeted  by  rockets  showering  down  upon  her  ? 

And  Francis  Liszt  appears  again  ! 

He  lives,  he  lies  not  dead  and  gory 
On  some  Hungarian  battle-plain, 

Eussian  and  Croat  have  not  quench'd  his  glory. 

Freedom's  last  bulwark  was  o'erthrown, 

And  Hungary  to  death  is  bleedings- 
Francis,  o\vc  Ejiight,  escaped  alone. 

His  sword  a  quiet  life  at  home  is  leading. 

Francis  still  lives ;  when  old  and  gray 

Of  the  Hungarian  war  devoutly 
Hell  tell  his  grandsons  :  "  Thus  I  lay, 

"  And  thus  my  trusty  blade  I  wielded  stoutly  I" 

Hearing  the  name  of  Hungary, 
My  German  waistcoat  grows  too  narrow ; 

Beneath  it  foams  a  raging  sea, 

The  trumpet's  clang  seems  thrilling  through  my 
marrow. 

Once  more  across  my  memory  throng 

The  hero-legend's  strains  enthralling, 
The  wild  and  iron  martial  song. 

The  Nibelunge's  overthrow  appalling. 


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KOMANCEBO.  463 

'Tis  Btill  the  same  heroic  lot, 

'Tis  still  the  same  old  noble  stories ; 
The  names  are  changed,  the  natures  not, — 

*Tis  still  the  same  praiseworthy  hero-glcries. 

And  the  same  issue  'tis  once  more ; 

However  proudly  flaunts  the  banner, 
The  hero,  as  in  days  of  yore, 

Yields  to  brute  strength,  but  in  a  glorious  manner 

This  time  the  oxen  and  the  bear 

In  firm  alliance  are  united ; 
Thou  Ml'st ;  but,  Magyar,  ne'er  despair. 

Still  more  have  all  our  German  hopes  been  blighted. 

While  very  decent  beasts  are  they 

Who  have  in  fight  become  thy  masters. 

We  have,  alas  I  become  the  prey 

Of  wolves,  swine,  dogs, — so  great  are  our  disasters. 

They  howl,  grunt,  bark, — the  victor's  smell 

Is  such,  I  fain  would  do  without  it ; — 
But,  Poet,  hush ! — it  were  as  well, 

Seeing  thou'rt  ill,  to  say  no  more  about  it. 

17.  EVIL  DREAMS. 

IN  vision  once  more  young  and  happy,  paced  I 
Near  the  old  country  house  that  used  to  stand 
Hard  by  the  mountain ;  down  the  pathway  raced  I, 
Yes,  raced  with  dear  Ottilia,  hand  in  hand. 

How  graceful  was  her  figure  1     She  enchanted 

Wifii  the  sweet  magic  of  her  sea-green  eyes ; 
On  her  small  feet  how  firmly  was  she  planted, 
'     A  form  where  elegance  with  vigour  vies ! 

Her  voice's  tone,  how  true  and  how  confiding  I 
Her  spirit's  inmost  depth  one  seems  to  see ; 

Wisdom  her  every  word  is  ever  guiding, 
Her  mouth's  as  like  a  rosebud  as  can  be. 

It  is  not  pangs  of  love  that  now  steal  o'er  me, 
I  wander  not,  my  reason's  in  command  ; 

Yet  strangely  am  I  soften'd,  as  before  me 

She  stands ;  with  trembling  warmth  I  kiss  her  baud 


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4t>4  heinb's  poems. 

When  I  a  lily  from  the  stem  had  broken, 

I  gave  it  her,  and  then  these  words  addres8*d ; 

*'  Ottilia,  be  my  wife  by  this  dear  token, 
**  That  I  may  be  as  good  as  thee,  and  blest" 

The  answer  that' she  gave,  it  reach'd  nae  never. 
For  presently  I  woke, — and  now  lie  here 

In  my  sick  chamber,  weak  and  ill  as  ever — 
As  I  have  hopeless  lain  for  many  a  year. 

18.  rr  GOES  OUT. 

THE  curtain  falls,  as  ends  the  play. 
And  all  the  audience  go  away ; 
And  did  the  piece  give  satisfaction  ? 
Methinks  they  found  it  of  attraction. 
A  much-respected  public  then 

Its  poet  thankfully  commended ; 
But  now  the  house  is  hush'd  again, 
And  lights  and  merriment  are  ended. 

But  hark  to  that  dull  heavy  clang 

Hard  by  the  empty  stage's  middle ! 
It  was  perchance  the  bursting  twang 

Of  the  worn  string  of  some  old  fiddle. 
With  rustling  noise  across  the  pit 
Some  nasty  rats  like  shadows  flit, 

And  rancid  oil  all  places  smell  of. 
And  the  last  lamp,  with  groans  and  sighfi 
Despairing,  then  goes  out  and  dies. — 

My  soul  was  this  poor  light  I  tell  of. 

19.  THE  WILL, 

NOW  that  life  is  nearly  spent. 
Here's  my  will  and  testament, 
Giving  every  foe  a  present, 

As  a  Christian  flnds  it  pleasant : 

Let  these  gentry  fall  of  merit 

Have  my  sickness  as  their  guerdon. 
All  that  makes  my  life  a  burden,-— 

All  my  wretched  pangs  inherit 

I  bequeath  you  all  the  colic 
Which  my  belly  tweaks  in  frolic, — 
Strangury  and  these  perfidious 
Prussian  piles  so  sharp  and  hideota. 

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ROXANCEBO.  466 

Unto  yoii  my  cramps  be  given, 
Pains  in  joints,  and  salivation. 
Pains  in  back,  and  inflammation, — 

Every  one  the  gift  of  heaven. 

Let  this  codicil  then  follow : — 

Lord  I  that  wretched  herd  demolish. 
And  their  very  name  abolish. 

As  they  in  their  vileness  wallow 

20.  ENFANT  PERDU. 

IT'OELOEN  posts  leading,  thirty  long  years  fought  I 
Stoutly  and  well  on  freedom's  battle  plain ; 
Hopeless  of  triumph,  never  hoped  or  thought  I 
Safe  and  uninjured  home  to  see  again. 

I  watch'd  both  day  and  night,  slept  not  a  tittle, 
As  when  I  camp'd  amongst  my  friends  of  yore  ; 

(And  if  I  felt  inclined  to  doze  a  little, 
T  soon  was  waken'd  by  my  neighbour's  snore.) 

In  those  long  nights  ennui  would  oft  assail  me. 
And  fear  as  well, — ('tis  fools  who  never  fear ;) 

To  scare  them,  I  delighted  to  r^ale  me 
With  whistling  songs  all  full  of  gibe  and  jeer. 

Yes,  watchfully  I  stood,  my  weapon  grasping, — 
If  a  suspicious  looking  fool  drew  nigh, 

I  took  a  careful  aim,  and  laid  him  gasping    , 
With  a  hot  bullet  in  his  paunch  or  thi^ ; 

But  by-and-by,  if  I  may  so  express  it, 

This  clumsy  fool,  whom  I  so  much  deride. 

Proves  the  best  shot ;  and  now,  I  must  confess  it, 
My  blood  pours  forth,  my  wounds  are  gaping  wide, 

A  post  is  vacant !  All  my  wounds  are  gaping — 
One  falls,  the  others  follow  in  his  wake ; 

Unvanquish'd  ML  I, — ^from  my  hands  escaping 
My  anna  break  not,  my  heojrt  alone  doth  break. 


2  H 

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166  heike's  poebis. 


BOOK  nL—HEBBEW  MELODIES. 

0  LET  the  days  of  thy  life  pcuee  not 

Without  taisting  life's  bUsses ; 
And  if  thou'rt  sheltered  from  the  shot. 

Let  it  fly,  for  it  misses. 

If  fortune  should  ever  be  passing  thy  way. 

To  grasp  her,  forth  sally ; 
Don't  Duild  on  the  summit  thy  cottage,  I  pray. 

But  down  in  the  valley. 


PRINCESS  SABBATH. 

r  Arabia's  books  of  stories 
Bead  we  of  enchanted  princes, 
Who  from  time  to  time  recovered 
Their  once  handsome  pristine  features ; 

Or  the  whilome  hairy  monster 
To  a  king's  son  is  converted, 
Dress'd  in  gay  and  glittering  garments, 
And  the  flute  divinely  playing. 

Yet  the  magic  time  expires, 
And  once  more  and  of  a  sudden 
We  behold  his  royal  highness 
Changed  into  a  shaggy  monster. 

Of  a  prince  of  such-like  fortune 
Sings  my  song.    His  name  is  Israel, 
And  a  witch's  art  has  changed  him 
To  the  figure  of  a  dog. 

As  a  dog,  with  doggish  notions, 
All  the  week  his  time  he  muddles 
Through  life's  filthiness  and  sweepings. 
To  the  scavengers'  derision. 

But  upon  each  Friday  evening, 
Just  at  twilight,  the  enchantment 
Ceases  suddenly, — the  dog 
Once  more  is  a  human  being. 


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BOMANCERD. 

As  a  man,  with  human  feelings, 
With  his  head  and  breast  raised  proudly, 
Dress'd  in  festival  attire, 
His  paternal  halls  he  enters. 

"  Hail,  all  hail,  ye  halls  beloved 

**  Of  my  gracious  regal  father  1 

**  Tents  of  Jacob,  your  all-holy 

'*  Entrance  posts  my  mouth  thus  kisses  !** 

Through  the  house  mysteriously 
Goes  a  whispering  and  buzzing, 
And  the  unseen  master  of  it 
Shuddering  breathes  amid  the  silence, — 

Silence,  save  the  seneschal 

S^'ulgo  Synagogue- Attendant) 
ere  and  there  with  vigour  springing. 
As  the  lamps  he  seeks  to  kindle. 

Golden  lights  so  comfort-giving, 
How  they  glitter,  how  they  glimmer  1 
Proudly  also  flare  the  tapers 
On  the  rails  of  the  Almemor. 

At  the  shrine  wherein  the  Thora 
Is  preserved,  and  which  is  cover'd 
With  the  costly  silken  covering 
That  with  precious  jewels  sparkles, — 

There  beside  his  post,  already 
Stands  prepared  the  parish  minstrel. 
Dandy  little  man,  who  shoulders 
£Us  black  doak  coquettishly. 

His  white  hand  to  show  the  better. 
At  his  neck  he  works,  his  finger 
Pressing  strangely  to  his  temple. 
And  his  thumb  against  his  throat. 

To  himself  then  softly  trills  he, 
Till  at  length  his  voice  he  raises 
Joyfally,  and  loudly  sings  he : 
"  Lecho  Daudi  Likras  Eallel 

•*  Lecho  Daudi  Likras  Kalle — 

"  Loved  one,  come !  the  bride  already 

"  Waiteth  for  thee,  to  uncover 

••  To  thy  £»ce  her  blushing  featoresr 


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468  Heine's  foexs. 

This  most  charming  marriage  dittj 
Was  composed  by  the  illustrious 
Far  and  wide  known  Minnesinger 
Don  Jehuda  ben  Halevy. 
In  the  song  was  celebrated 
The  espousals  of  Prince  Israel 
With  the  lovely  Princess  Sabbath, 
Whom  they  call  the  silent  princess. 
Pearl  and  flower  of  perfect  beauty 
Is  the  Princess.    Fairer  never 
Was  the  famous  queen  of  Sheba, 
Solomon's  old  bosom-friend, 
Ethiopian  vain  blue-stocking, 
Who  'with  her  esjprit  would  dazzle, 
And  with  all  her  clever  riddles 
Was,  I  fear,  extremely  tedious. 
But  our  Princess  Sabbath,  who  was 
Peace  itself  personified, 
Held  in  utter  detestation 
AU  debates  and  wit-encounters. 
Equally  abhorr'd  she  noisy 
And  declamatory  passion, — 
All  that  pathos  which  with  flowing 
And  dishevell'd  hair  storms  wildly. 
Modestly  the  silent  princess 
In  her  hood  conceals  hei  tresses ; 
Soft  as  the  gazelle's  her  looks  are, 
Slender  as  an  Addas  blooms  she. 
She  allows  her  lover  all  things 
Save  this  one, — tobacco-smoHng : 
"  Loved  one  1  smoking  is  forbidden, 
•*  For  to-day  the  Sabbath  is. 
"  But  at  noon,  in  compensation, 
'*  Thou  a  steaming  dish  shalt  taste  of, 
"  Which  is  perfectly  delicious — 
'^  Thou  shall  eat  to-day  some  Schalet  I' 
**,  Schalet,  beauteous  spark  immortal, 
"  Daughter  of  Elysium  T* 
Thus  would  SchiUer's  song  have  sung  it. 
Had  he  ever  tasted  Schalet. 
A  parody  on  the  beginning  of  Schiller's  "  Hymn  to  Joy 


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BOMANGEBO.  469 

Bcbalet  is  the  food  of  heayen, 
Which  the  Lord  Himself  taught  Moses 
How  to  cook,  when  on  that  visit 
To  the  summit  of  Mount  Sinai, 

Where  the  Lord  Almighty  also 
Every  good  religious  doctrine 
And  the  holy  ten  commandments 
Published  in  a  storm  of  lightning. 

Bchalet  is  the  pure  ambrosia 

fThat  the  food  of  heaven  composes — 

Is  the  bread  of  Paradise ; 

And  compared  with  food  so  glorious, 

The  ambrosia  of  the  spurious 
Heathen  gods  whom  Greece  once  woiahipp  i 
And  were  naught  but  muffled  devils, 
Was  but  wretched  devil's  dung. 

When  the  prince  this  food  hath  tasted, 
Gleams  his  eye  as  if  trandfigured, 
And  his  waistcoat  he  unbuttons. 
And  he  speaks  with  smiles  of  rapture : 

'*  Hear  I  not  the  Jordan  murmuring  ? 
'*  Is  it  not  the  gushing  fountains 
*<  In  the  pahny  vale  of  Beth-El, 
*^  Where  the  camels  have  their  station  ? 

**  Hear  I  not  the  sheep-bells  ringing  ? 
"  Is  it  not  the  well-fed  wethers 
"  Whom  the  herdsman  drives  at  evening 
^  Down  from  Gilead's  lofty  mountain  V* 

Tet  the  beauteous  day  fades  q^uicMy ; 
As  with  long  and  shadowy  legs 
Hastens  on  the  fell  enchantment's 
Evil  hour,  the  prince  sighs  sadly. 

Feeling  as  though  with  his  bosom 
Icy  witches'  fingers  grappled ; 
He*s  pervaded  by  the  fear  of 
Canine  metamorphosis. 

To  the  prince  then  hands  the  princefls 
Her  own  golden  box  of  spikenwrd ; 
Long  he  smells,  once  more  desiring 
To  Snd  comfort  in  sweet  odours. 


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470  heike'b  poems. 

Next  the  parting  drink  the  princess 
Gives  the  prince — He  hastily 
Drinks,  and  in  the  goblet  only 
Some  few  drops  are  left  nntasted. 

With  them  sprinkles  he  the  table, 
Then  he  takes  a  little  waxlight, 
And  he  dips  it  in  the  moisture 
Till  it  crackles  and  goes  out. 

JEHUDA  BEN  HALEVY. 
A  Fbagment. 
1. 
**  XF,  Jerusalem,  I  ever 

A  "  Should  forget  thee,  let  my  tongue 
*  To  my  mouth's  roof  cleave,  let  also 
**  My  right  hand  forget  her  cunning — " 

Words  and  melody  are  v^hirling 
In  my  head  to-day  unceasing, 
And  methinks  I  hear  sweet  voices 
Singing  psalms,  sweet  human  voices. 

Often  to  the  light  come  also 
Beards  of  shadowy-long  proportions  ; 
Say,  ye  phantoms,  which  amongst  you 
Is  Jehuda  ben  Halevy  ? 

But  they  quickly  hustle  by  me ; 
Spirits  ever  shun  with  terror 
Exhortations  of  the  living — 
But  I  recognized  him  well. 

Well  I  knew  him  by  his  pallid. 
Haughty,  high,  and  thoughtful  forehead « 
By  his  eyes  so  sweetly  staring, 
Viewing  me  with  piercing  sorrow. 

But  I  recognized  him  mostly 
By  the  enigmatic  smile  which 
O'er  his  fair  rhymed  lips  was  playing, 
Such  as  none  but  poets  boast  of. 

Years  come  on  and  years  pass  swiftly : 
Since  Jehuda  ben  Halevy 
Had  his  birth,  have  seven  hundred 
Years  and  fifty  fleeted  o'er  us. 


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KOMANOERO.  471 

At  Toledo  in  Castile  lie 
For  the  first  time  saw  the  light, 
And  the  golden  Tagus  lulled  him 
In  his  cradle  with  its  music. 

His  strict  father  the  unfolding 
Of  his  intellect  full  early 
Cared  for,  and  began  his  lessons 
With  the  book  of  God,  the  Thora. 

With  his  son  he  read  this  volume 
In  the'  original,  whose  beauteous 
Picturesque  and  hieroglyphic 
Old  Chaldean  quarto  pages 

Spring  from  out  the  childish  ages 
Of  our  world,  and  for  that  reason 
Smile  so  trustingly  and  sweetly 
On  each  childlike  disposition. 

And  this  genuine  ancient  text 
By  the  boy  was  likewise  chanted 
In  the  ancient  and  established 
Sing-song  fashion,  known  as  Tropp. 

And  melodiously  he  gurgled 
Those  fat  oily  gutturals ; 
Like  a  very  bird  he  warbled 
That  fine  quaver,  the  Schalscheleth. 

And  the  Targnm  Onkelos, 
Which  is  written  in  the  idiom, 
The  low-Hebrew  sounding  idiom 
That  we  call  the  Aramaean, 

And  that  to  the  prophet's  language 
Has  about  the  same  relation 
As  the  Swabian  to  the  German, — 
In  this  bastard  Hebrew  likewise 

Was  the  youth  betimes  instructed. 
And  the  knowledge  thus  acquired 
Proved  extremely  useful  to  him 
In  the  study  of  the  Talmud. 

Yes,  full  early  did  his  father 
L«jad  him  onward  to  the  Talmud, 
And  he  then  unfolded  to  him 
The  Halacha,  that  iUustrioiw 


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J72  heinb'b  poeks. 

Fighting  school,  where  the  expertest 
Dialectio  athletes  both  of 
Babylon  and  Pmnpeditha 
Carry  on  their  mental  combats. 

Here  the  boy  oonld  gain  instmctioii 
In  the  arts,  too,  of  polemics ; 
Later,  in  the  book  Oosari 
Was  his  mastership  established. 

Yet  the  heavens  pour  down  upon  ns 
Lights  of  two  distinct  descriptions : 
Glaring  daylight  of  the  son, 
And  the  moonlight's  softer  lustre. 

Thus  two  different  lights  the  Talmud 
Also  sheds,  and  is  divided 
In  Halacha  and  Hagada. — 
Now  the  first*s  a  fighting  school, 

But  the  latter,  the  Hagada, 
I  should  rather  call  a  garden, 
Yes,  a  garden,  most  fantastic, 
Comparable  to  that  other, 

Which  in  days  of  yore  was  planted 
In  the  town  of  Babylon, — 
Great  Semiramis's  garden, 
That  eighth  wonder  of  the  world.  * 

'Tis  said  queen  Semiramis, 
Who  had,  when  a  child,  been  brought  up 
By  the  birds,  and  had  contracted 
Many  a  bird's  peculiar  custom, 

On  the  mere  flat  ground  would  never 
Promenade,  as  human  creatures 
Mostly  do,  and  so  she  planted 
In  the  air  a  hanging  garden. 

High  upon  colossal  pillars 
Pabus  and  cypresses  were  standing. 
Golden  oranges,  fsdr  flow'r-beds, 
Marble  statues,  gushing  fountainB, — 

Firmly,  skilfully  united 
By  unnumbered  hanging  bridges 
Which  appeared  like  climbing  plants. 
And  whereon  the  birds  were  rocking,— 

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BOMAKCERO.  473 

Solemn  birds,  large,  many-colonr'd, 
All  deep  thinkeiB,  never  singing, 
While  around  them  finches  flutter'd, 
Keeping  up  a  merry  twitter, — 

All  things  here  were  blest,  and  teeming 
With  a  pure  balsamic  fragrance, 
Which  was  free  from  all  offensive 
Earthly  smells  and  hatefrd  odours. 

The  Hagada  is  a  garden 
That  this  airy  whim  resembles, 
And  the  youthftil  Talmud  scholar, 
When  his  heart  was  overpower'd 

And  was  deafen'd  by  the  squabbles 
Of  the'  Halacha,  by  disputes 
All  about  the  fatal  egg 
Laid  one  feast  day  by  a  pullet, — 

Or  about  some  other  question 
Of  the  same  importance,  straightway 
Fled  the  boy  to  find  refreshment 
In  the  blossoming  Hagada 

Where  the  charming  olden  stories, 
Tales  of  angels,  famous  legends, 
Silent  histories  of  martyrs. 
Festal  songs,  and  words  of  wisdom, 

Hyperboles,  far-fetch'd  it  may  be. 
But  impress*d  with  deep  conviction, 
FuU  of  glowing  faith, — all  glitter'd 
Bloom'd  and  sprung  in  such  abundance. 

And  the  stripling's  noble  bosom 
Was  pervaded  by  the  savage 
But  adventure-breathing  sweetness. 
By  the  wondrous  blissful  anguish 

And  the  fabulous  wild  terrors 
Of  that  blissful  secret  world, 
Of  that  mighty  revelation, 
Known  to  us  as  Poesy. 

And  the  art  of  Poesy, 
Radiant  knowledge,  understandings 
Which  we  call  the  art  poetic, 
Open'd  on  the  boy's  mind  also. 

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474  HEINE'S   P0EM8. 

And  Jehuda  ben  Halevy 

Was  not  merely  skilled  in  reading. 

But  in  poetry  a  master, 

And  himself  a  first-rate  poet. 

Yes,  he  was  a  first-rate  poet, 
Star  and  torch  of  his  own  age, 
Light  and  beacon  of  his  people, 
Yes,  a  very  wondrous  mighty 

Fiery  pillar  of  all  song, 
That  preceded  Israel's  mournful 
Caravan  as  it  was  marching 
Through  the  desert  of  sad  exile. 

Pure  and  true  alike,  and  spotless 
Was  his  song,  as  was  his  spirit ; 
When  this  spirit  was  created 
By  its  Maker,  self-contented. 

He  embraced  the  lovely  spirit. 
And  that  kiss's  beauteous  echo 
Thrills  through  all  the  poet's  numberSi 
Which  are  hallo w'd  by  this  grace. 

As  in  life,  in  numbers  also 
Grace  is  greatest  good  of  all ; 
He  who  has  it,  ne'er  transgresses 
In  his  prose  or  in  his  verses. 

Genius  call  we  such  a  poet 
Of  the  mighty  grace  of  Qod ; 
He  is  undisputed  monarch 
Of  the  boundless  realms  of  fancy. 

He  to  God  alone  accounteth, 
Not  to  man,  and,  as  in  lifetime, 
So  in  art  the  mob  have  power 
To  destroy,  but  not  to  judge  us. 


**  By  the  streams  of  Babylon 
**  Sat  we  down  and  wept,  we  hang^ 
"  Our  sad  harps  upon  the  willows — ** 
Know'st  thou  not  the  olden  song  ? 


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BOMANCERO.  47£ 

EnoVst  thou  not  the  olden  tunc, 
Which  begins  with  elegiac 
Crying,  humming  like  a  kettle 
That  upon  the  hearth  is  boiling  ? 

Long  has  it  been  boiling  in  me, 
Thousand  years.     A  gloomy  anguish  I 
And  my  wounds  are  lick'd  by  time, 
As  Job's  boils  by  dogs  were  licked. 

Thank  thee,  dog,  for  thy  saliva, — 
Though  it  can  but  cool  and  soften — 
Death  alone  can  ever  heal  me, 
But,  alas,  I  am  immortal ! 

Years  come  round  and  years  then  vanish- 
Busily  the  spool  is  humming 
As  it  in  the  loom  is  moving, — 
What  it  weaves,  no  weaver  knoweth. 

Years  come  round  and  years  then  vanish, 
Human  tears  are  dripping,  running 
On  the  earth,  and  then  the  earth 
Sucks  them  in  with  eager  silence. 

Seething  mad  I     The  cover  leaps  up — 

"  Happy  he  whose  daring  hand 

"  Taketh  up  thy  little  ones, 

<'  Dashing  them  against  the  stones." 

Grod  be  praised  I  the  seething  slowly 
In  the  pot  evaporates, 
Then  is  mute.    My  spleen  is  soften'd. 
My  west-eastern  darksome  spleen. 

And  my  Pegasus  is  neighing 
Once  more  gaily,  and  the  nightmare 
Seems  to  shake  with  vigour  off  him, 
And  his  wise  eyes  thus  are  asking : 

Are  we  riding  back  to  Spain, 
To  the  little  Tahnudist  there, 
Who  was  such  a  first-rate  poet, — 
To  Jehuda  ben  Halevy  ? 

Yes,  he  was  a  first-rate  poet. 
In  the  realm  of  dreams  sole  ruler. 
With  the  spirit-monarch's  crown, 
By  the  grace  of  Qod  a  poel^ 


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176  hedob's  poems. 

Who  in  all  his  sacred  metres, 
In  his  madrigals,  terzinas, 
Canzonets,  and  strange  ghasolas 
Ponr'd  ont  all  the'  abundant  fire 

Of  his  noble  god-kiss'd  spirit  t 
Of  a  truth  this  troubadour 
Was  upon  a  par  with  all  the 
Best  lute-players  of  Provence, 

Of  Poitou  and  of  Guienne, 
Eoussillon  and  every  other 
Charming  orange-growing  region 
Of  gallant  old  Christendom. 

Charming  orange-growing  regions 
Of  gallant  old  Christendom  I 
How  they  glitter,  smell,  and  tingle 
In  the  twilight  of  remembrance ! 

Beauteous  w(»rld  of  nightingales! 
Where  we  only  in  the  place  of 
The  true  God,  the  false  God  worshipp  I 
Of  the  Muses  and  of  love. 

Clergy,  bearing  wreaths  of  roses 
On  their  bald  pates,  sang  the  psakns 
In  the  charming  langue  d'oc ; 
Laity,  all  gallant  knights. 

On  their  high  steeds  proudly  trotting, 
Verse  and  rhyme  were  ever  making 
To  the  honour  of  the  ladies 
Whom  their  hearts  to  serve  delighted. 

There's  no  love  without  a  lady. 
Therefore  to  a  Minnesinger 
Was  a  lady  just  as  needful 
As  to  bread-and-butter,  butter. 

And  the  hero,  whom  we  sing  o^ 
Our  Jehuda  ben  Halevy, 
Also  had  his  heart's  fur  lady ; 
But  she  was  of  special  kind. 

She  no  Laura  was,  whose  eyes, 
Mortal  constellations,  kindled 
On  Good  Friday  the  notorious 
Fire  wiihin  the  fsuned  Cathedral; 


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ROMANCERO.  47'! 

She  was  not  a  chatelaine 
Who,  attired  in  youthful  graces, 
Took  the  chair  at  tournaments, 
And  the  laurel  wreath  presented 

Casuist  in  the  laws  of  kisses 
She  was  not,  no  doctrinaire, 
Who  within  the  learned  college 
Of  a  court  of  love  gave  lectures. 

She  the  Eabbi  was  in  love  with 
Was  a  poor  and  mournful  loved  one, 
Woeful  image  of  destruction, 
And  her  name — Jerusalem  I 

In  his  early  days  of  childhood 
She  his  one  sole  love  was  always ; 
E'en  the  word  Jerusalem 
Made  his  youthful  spirit  quiver. 

Purple  ^ames  were  ever  standing 
On  the^boy*s  cheek,  and  he  hearken'd 
When  a  pilgrim  to  Toledo 
Came  from  out  the  far  east  country. 

And  recounted  how  deserted 
And  uncleanly  was  the  city 
Where  upon  tiie  ground  the  traces 
Of  the  prophets'  feet  still  glisten'd ; 

Where  the  air  is  still  perfumed 
By  the'  undying  breath  of  God — 
"  0  the  mournful  sight !"  a  pilgrim 
Once  exclaim'd,  whose  beard  was  floating 

White  as  silver,  notwithstanding 
That  the  hair  which  form'd  its  end 
Once  again  grew  black,  appearing 
As  if  getting  young  again. 

And  a  very  wondrous  pilgrim 

Might  he  be,  his  eyes  were  peering 

As  through  centuries  of  sorrow, 

And  he  sigh'd :  "  Jerusalem  I 

"  She,  the  crowded  holy  city, 

•'  Is  converted  to  a  des^, 

"  Where  wood-devils,  werewolves,  jackals 

*'  Their  accursM  home  have  made. 


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178  HEINB'S  POEMS. 

**  Serpents,  birds  of  night,  are  dwelling 

**  In  its  weather-beaten  ruins ; 

"  From  the  window's  airy  bow 

'*  Peeps  the  fox  with  mnch  contentment. 

•*  Here  and  there  a  ragged  fellow 
•*  Comes  sometimes  from  out  the  desert, 
'*  And  his  hunch-back'd  camel  feedeth 
'^  In  the  long  grass  growing  round  it. 

**  On  the  noble  heights  of  Zion, 
**  Where  stood  up  the  golden  fortress 
"  Whose  great  majesty  bore  witness 
**  To  the  mighty  monarch's  glory, — 

"  There,  with  noisome  weeds  encumber  d, 
"  Nought  now  lies  but  gray  old  ruins, 
**  Gazing  with  euch  looks  of  sorrow 
**  One  must  hjicy  they  are  weeping. 

^^  And  'tis  said  they  wept  in  earnest, 
^  Once  in  each  year,  on  the  ninAi  day 
"  Of  the  jnonth's  that  known  as  Ab — 
"  With  my  own  eyes,  full  of  weeping, 

"  I  the  clammy  drops  have  witness'd 
*'  Down  the  hu*ge  stones  slowly  trickling, 
**  And  have  heard  the  broken  columns 
*'  Of  the  temple  sadly  moaning." 

Such-like  pious  pilgrim-sayings 
Waken'd  in  the  youthful  bosom 
Of  Jehuda  ben  Halevy 
Yearnings  for  Jerusalem. 

Poet's  yearnings !   As  foreboding, 
Visionary,  sad,  as  those 
In  the  Chateau  Blay  experienced 
Whilome  by  the  noble  Vidam, 

Messer  G^offroy  Eudello, 
When  the  knights,  returning  homeward 
From  the  Eastern  land,  asserted 
Loudly,  as  they  clash'd  their  goblets, 

That  the  paragon  of  graces, 
And  the  flower  and  pearl  of  women. 
Was  the  beauteous  Melisanda, 
Margravine  of  Tripoli 


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BOMANCEBO.  479 

Each  one  knows  that  for  this  ladj 
Bayed  the  troubadour  thenceforward ; 
Her  alone  he  sang,  and  shortly 
Chateau  Blay  no  more  could  hold  him ; 

And  he  hastened  thence.    At  Cotte 
Took  he  ship,  but  on  the  ocean 
He  fell  ill,  and  sick  and  dying 
He  arrived  at  Tripoli 

Heire  at  length,  on  Melisanda 
He,  too,  gazed  with  eyes  all-loving, 
Which  that  self-same  honr  were  cover'd 
By  the  darksome  shades  of  death. 

Singing  his  last  song  of  love, 
He  expired  before  the  feet 
Of  his  lady  Melisanda, 
Margravine  of  Tripoli.* 

Wonderful  was  the  resemblance 
In  the  late  of  these  two  poets  I 
Save  that  in  old  age  the  former 
His  great  pilgrimage  commenced. 

And  Jehnda  ben  Halevy 
At  his  mistress'  feet  expired, 
And  his  dying  head,  it  rested 
On  Jerusalem's  dear  knees 


WHEN  the  fight  at  Arabella 
Had  been  won,  great  Alexander 
Placed  Darius'  land  and  people. 
Court  and  harem,  horses,  women. 

Elephants,  and  daric  coins, 
Crown  and  sceptre,  golden  lumber — 
Placed  them  all  inside  his  spacious 
Macedonian  pantaloons. 

In  the  tent  of  great  Darius, 
Who  himself  had  fled,  because  he 
Fear'd  he  also  might  be  placed  there, 
The  young  hero  found  a  casket. 

*  8eeal80thiBftor7inBookLofthe*'Boiiianoeio,"p.  111. 


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480  Heine's  poems. 

'Twas  a  little  golden  box, 
Richly  ornamented  over 
With  incmsted  stones  and  oameofi, 
And  with  miniature  devices. 

Now  this  casket,  in  itself 

Of  inestimable  value, 

Served  to  hold  the  priceless  treasmeis 

Of  the  monarch's  body-jewels. 

All  the  latt^  Alexander 
On  his  brave  commanders  lavish'd. 
Smiling  at  the  thought  of  men 
Childlike  loving  colour'd  pebbles. 

One  fair  valuable  gem  he 
To  his  mother  dear  presented ; 
'Twas  the  signet  ring  of  Cyrus, 
Tum'd  into  a  brooch  henceforward. 

To  his  famous  old  preceptor 
Aristotle  he  presented 
A  fine  onyx  for  his  splendid 
Cabinet  of  natural  history. 

In  the  casket  were  some  pearls  too, 
Forming  quite  a  wondrous  string, 
Which  were  once  to  Queen  Atossa 
Given  by  the  false  knave  Smerdis ; 

But  the  pearls  were  all  quite  real. 

And  the  merry  victor  gave  them   , 

To  a  pretty  dancer  whom  he 

Brought  from  Corinth,  named  Miss  Thaih 

In  her  hair  the  latter  wore  them, 
In  bacchantic  fashion  streaming, 
On  that  night  when  she  was  dsmcing 
At  Persepolis,  and  wildly 

In  the  regal  castle  hurl'd  her 
Impious  torch,  till,  loudly  crackling, 
Soon  the  flames  obtained  the  mastery, 
And  the  fortress  laid  in  ruins. 

On  the  death  of  beauteous  Thais 
Who  of  some  bad  Babylonian 
Illness  died  at  Babylon, 
All  her  pearls  were  sold  by  auction 


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BOHANCEBO.  481 

At  the  public  anction-rooms  there ; 
Purchased  by  a  priest  from  Memphis, 
He  to  Egypt  took  them  with  him, 
Where  they  on  the  toilet  table 

Of  fair  Cleopatra  glistened  ; 

She  the  finest  pearl  amongst  them 

Crush'd  and  mix'd  with  wine  and  swallow' d. 

Her  friend  Antony  to  banter. 

With  the  final  Ommiad  monarch 
Came  the  siring  of  pearls  to  Spain, 
And. they  twined  around  the  turbcoi 
Worn  at  Cord'vft  by  the  Caliph. 

Abderam  the  Third  he  wore  them 
As  his  breast-knot  at  the  tourney 
Where  he  pierced  through  thirty  goldea 
Bings,  and  fair  Zuleima's  bosom. 

When  the  Moorish  race  was  vanquished, 
Then  the  Christians  gain'd  possession 
Of  the  pearls,  which  rank'd  thenceforward 
As  crown-jewels  of  Castile. 

Their  most  Cath'lic  Majesties, 
Queens  of  Spain,  were  wont  to  wear  them 
On  all  court  and  state  occasions. 
At  all  bullfights,  grand  processions. 

And  at  each  auto  da  fd, 

When  they  took  their  pleasure,  sitting 

At  the  balcony,  in  sniffing 

Up  the  smell  of  burnt  old  Jews. 

Later  still,  old  Mendizabel, 
Satan's  grandson,  pawn'd  these  jewela. 
Vainly  hoping  thus  to  meet  the 
Deficit  in  the  finances. 

At  the  Tuileries  the  jewels 
Finally  appeared  again. 
Glittering  on  the  neck  of  Madame 
Salomon,  the  Baroness. 

With  the  fjEor  pearls  thus  it  happened. — 
Less  adventurous  the  fortune 
Of  the  casket,  Alexander 
Keeping  it  for  his  own  use. 

3  T 

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482  Heine's  poems. 

He  the  songs  enclosed  within  it 
Of  ambrosia-scented  Homer, 
His  great  fay'rite,  and  the  casket 
All  night  long  was  wont  to  stand 

At  his  bed's  head ;  when  the  monarch 
Slept,  the  heroes'  airy  figures 
Came  &om  out  it,  o'er  his  visions 
Creeping  in  fantastic  fashion. 

Other  times  and  other  birds  too — 
I  myself  have  erst  delighted 
In  the  stories  of  the  actions 
Of  Pelides,  of  Odysseus. 

All  then  seem'd  so  sunny-golden 
And  so  purple  to  my  spirit, 
Vine-leaves  twined  around  my  forehead, 
And  the  trumpets  flourish'd  loudly. 

Hush,  no  more !     All  broken  lieth 
Now  my  haughty  victor-chariot. 
And  the  panthers,  who  once  drew  it, 
Now  are  dead,  as  are  the  women 

Who,  to  sound  of  drum  and  cymbal, 
Danced  around,  and  I  myself 
Writhe  upon  the  ground  in  anguish. 
Weak  and  crippled — hush,  no  more ! 

Hush,  no  more !  we  now  are  speaking 
Of  the  casket  of  Darius, 
And  within  myself  thus  thought  I : 
Should  I  e'er  possess  the  casket. 

And  not  be  obliged  to  change  it 
Into  cash,  for  want  of  money, 
I  would  then  enclose  within  it 
All  the  poems  of  our  Babbi, — 

All  Jchuda  ben  Halevy's 
Festal  songs  and  lamentations. 
And  Ghaselas,  the  description 
Of  his  pilgrimage — the  whole  I 

Would  have  written  on  the  cleanest 
Parchment  by  the  best  of  scribes, 
And  the  manuscript  deposit 
In  the  little  golden  casket. 


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BOICANCERO.  483 

This  slionld  stand  upon  the  table 
Near  my  bed,  and  then,  whenever 
Friends  appeared  and  were  astonished 
At  the  beauty  of  the  trinket, — 

At  the  wondrous  bas-reliefs, 
Small  in  size,  and  yet  so  perfect 
Notwithstanding, — at  the  jewels 
Of  such  size  incrusted  on  it, — 

I  should  smilingly  address  them : 
That  is  but  the  vulgar  covering 
That  contains  a  nobler  treasure — 
In  this  casket  there  are  lying 

Diamonds,  whose  light  doth  mirror 
And  reflect  the  light  of  heaven, 
Rubies  glowing  as  the  heart's  blood. 
Turquoises  of  spotless  beauty. 

And  fair  emeralds  of  promise. 
Likewise  pearls  of  greater  value 
Than  the  pearls  to  Queen  Atossa 
Given  by  the  false  knave  Smerdis, 

And  that  afterwards  were  worn  by 
All  the  notabilities 

Who  this  mundane  earth  have  dwelt  ia, 
Thais  first,  then  Cleopatra, 

Priests  of  Isis,  Moorish  princes, 
And  the  queens  of  old  Hispania, 
And  at  last  the  worthy  Madame 
Salomon,  the  Baroness. — 

For  those  pearls  of  world-wide  glory 
After  all  are  but  the  mucus 
Of  a  poor  unhappy  oyster 
Lying  sickly  in  the  ocean ; 

But  the  pearls  within  this  casket 
Are  the  offspring  of  a  beauteous 
Human  spirit,  fur  far  deeper 
Than  the  ocean's  deepest  depths, — 

For  they  are  the  pearly  tears 
Of  Jehuda  ben  Halevy, 
That  he  over  the  destruction 
Of  Jerusalem  let  £ftlL 


184  HEINE'S  P0EU6 

Pearly  tears,  which,  join'd  together 
By  the  golden  threads  of  rhytiim, 
As  a  song  from  poesy's 
Qolden  smithy  have  proceeded. 

And  this  song  of  pearly  tears 
Is  the  famous  lamentati<m 
That  is  sung  in  all  the  scattered 
And  far-distant  tents  of  Jacob 

On  the  ninth  day  of  the  month  Ab, 
That  sad  anniyersary 
Of  Jerusalem's  destruction 
^  By  the  Emperor  Vespasian. 

Yes,  it  is  the  song  of  Zion 
That  Jehuda  ben  Halevy 
Sang  when  dying  on  the  holy 
Buins  of  JerusaTem. 

Barefoot  and  in  lowly  garments 
Sat  he  there  upon  the  fragment 
Of  a  pillar  that  had  fallen, 
.    Till  upon  his  breast  there  fell 

Like  a  gray  old  wood  his  hair, 
Shading  over  in  strange  fashion 
His  afflicted  pallid  features, 
With  his  eyes  so  lite  a  spectre's. 

In  this  manner  sat  he,  singing. 
In  appearance  like  a  minstrel 
From  the  times  of  old,  like  ancient 
Jeremiah,  grave-arisen. 

Soon  the  birds  around  the  ruins 
By  his  numbers'  moumfal  cadence 
All  were  tamed,  and  e'en  the  vulture 
Drew  near  list'ning,  almost  pitying,--*- 

But  an  impious  Saracen 
Came  one  day  in  that  direction, 
On  his  chai^er  in  his  stirrups 
Balancing,  his  bright  lance  wielding. 

And  the  breast  of  our  poor  singer 
With  this  deadly  spear  transfix'd  he, 
And  then  gallop'd  off  instanter 
Wing'd  as  though  a  shadowy  figure. 

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BOMANGERO.  485 

Calmly  flow'd  the  Eabbi's  life-blood, 
Calmly  to  its  termination 
Sang  he  his  sweet  song, — ^hia  dying 
Sigh  was  still — Jerusalem  1 

It  is  said  in  olden  legend 
That  the  Saracen  was  really 
Not  a  wicked  cruel  mortal. 
But  an  angel  in  disguise, 

Sent  from  the  bright  realms  of  heaven 
To  remove  God's  favourite 
From  the  earth,  and  to  advance  him 
Painlessly  to  those  blest  regions. 

There,  'tis  said,  there  waited  for  him 
A  reception  highly  flatt'ring 
In  its  nature  to  the  poet, 
Quite  a  heavenly  surprise. 

Solemnly  with  strains  of  music 
Came  the'  angelic  choir  to  meet  him, 
And  instead  of  hymns,  he  heard  them 
Singing  his  own  lovely  verses, 

Synagoguish  Wedding-Carmen, 
Hymeneal  Sabbath  numbers, 
With  their  well-known  and  exulting 
Melodies — what  notes  enthralling  1 

While  some  angels  play'd  the  hautboy, 
Others  play'd  upon  the  fiddle ; 
Others  handled  the  bass-viol, 
Others  beat  the  drum  and  cymbal. 

Sweetly  all  the  music  sounded. 
Sweetly  through  the  far-extending 
Vaults  of  heaven  these  strains  re-echoed 
Lecho  Daudi  Likras  Ealle ! 


MY  good  wife  is  not  contented 
With  the  chapter  just  concluded. 
And  especially  the  portion 
Speaking  of  Darius*  casket. 

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486  HEINS'S  POEMS. 

Almost  bitterly  obseryes  she. 
That  a  husband  with  pretensions 
To  religion,  into  money 
Straightway  would  convert  the  casket. 

That  he  with  it  might  be  able 
For  his  poor  and  lawful  spouse 
That  nice  Cashmere  shawl  to  purchase 
That  she  stands  so  much  in  need  of. 

That  Jehudff  ben  Halevy 
Would,  she  fancies,  with  sufficient 
Honour  be  preserved,  if  guarded 
In  a  pretty  box  of  pasteboard, 

Deck'd  with  Chinese  elegant 
Arabesques,  like  those  enchanting 
Sweetmeat-boxes  of  Marquis 
In  the  Passage  Panorama. 

"  Very  strange  it  is," — she  added,— 
"  That  I  never  heard  the  name  of 
"  This  remarkable  old  poet, 
**  This  Jehuda  ben  Halevy.'* 

Darling  little  wife,  I  answer'd, 
Your  delightful  ignorance 
But  too  well  the  gaps  discloses 
In  the  education  given 

In  the  boarding  schools  of  Paris, 
Where  the  girls,  the  future  mothers 
Of  a  proud  and  freebom  nation. 
Learn  the  elements  of  knowledge. 

AH  about  the  dry  old  mummies, 
And  embalmed  Egyptian  Pharaohs, 
Merovingian  shadowy  monarchs, 
With  perukes  devoid  of  powder, 

And  the  pig-tail'd  kings  of  China, 
Lords  of  porcelain  and  pagodas, — 
This  they  know  by  heart  and  fully, 
Clever  girls, — ^but,  O,  good  heavenn 

If  yK)u  ask  for  any  great  names 
From  the  glorious  golden  ages 
Of  Arabian-ancient-Spanish  , 
Jewish  schoolg  of  poetry, — 


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BOMANGEBO.  487 

If  you  ask  for  those  three  worthies, 
For  Jehuda  ben  Halevy, 
For  great  Solomon  Grabirol, 
Or  for  Moses  Iben  Esra, 

If  you  ask  for  these  or  suchlike, 
Then  the  children  stare  upon  us 
With  a  look  of  stupid  wonder, 
And  in  fact  seem  quite  dumb-founded. 

Let  me  then  advise  you,  dearest. 
These  neglected  points  to  study, 
And  to  take  to  learning  Hebrew 
Leaving  theatres  and  concerts. 
When  a  few  years  to  these  studies 
Have  been  given,  you'll  be  able 
In  the*  original  to  read  them, 
Iben  Esra  and  Gabirol, 

And  Halevy  in  addition, 
That  triumvirate  poetic. 
Who  evoked  the  sweetest  music 
From  the  instrument  of  David. 

Alcharisi,  who.  111  wager, 

Is  to  you  unknown,  although  he 

A  Voltairian  was,  six  hundred 

Years  before  Voltaire's  time,  spoke  thus  : 

**  In  his  thoughts  excels  Gabirol, 
"  And  the  thmker  most  he  pleases ; 
'^  Iben  Esra  shines  in  art,  and 
''  Is  the  fav'rite  of  the  artist. 

"  But  Jehuda  ben  Halevy 
''  Is  in  both  a  perfect  master, 
''  And  at  once  a  famous  poet 
"  And  a  universal  fav'rite." 

Iben  Esra  was  a  Mend, 

And  I  rather  think,  a  cousin 

Of  Jehuda  ben  Halevy, 

Who  in  his  famed  book  of  travels 

Bitterly  complains  how  vainly 
He  had  sought  through  all  Granada 
For  his  friend,  and  only  found  there 
His  friend's  brother,  the  physician. 


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488 


Babbi  Meyer,  poet  likewise, 
And  the  father  of  the  beauty 
Who  in  Iben  Esra's  bosom 
Kindled  such  a  hopeless  passion. 

That  he  might  forget  his  niece,  h« 
Took  in  hand  his  pilgrim's  staff, 
Like  so  many  of  his  colleagaes, 
Living  restlessly  and  homeless. 

Tow'rd  Jerusalem  he  wander'd, 
When  some  Tartars  fell  npon  him. 
Fastened  him  upon  a  steed's  back, 
And  to  their  wild  deserts  took  hhou. 

Duties  there  devolved  npon  him 
Quite  unworthy  of  a  Babbi, 
Still  less  fitted  for  a  poet — 
He  was  made  to  milk  the  cows. 

Once,  as  he  beneath  the  belly 
Of  a  cow  was  sitting  squatting, 
Fing'ring  hastily  her  udder, 
Whi].e  the  milk  the  tub  was  filling, — 

A  position  quite  unworthy 
Of  a  Rabbi,'  of  a  poet, — 
Melancholy  came  across  him, 
And  to  sing  a  song  began  he. 

And  he  sang  so  well  and  sweetly, 
That  the  Ehan,  the  horde's  old  chicflain. 
Who  was  passing  by,  was  melted, 
And  he  gave  the  slave  his  freedom. 

And  he  likewise  gave  him  presents, 
Grave  a  fox-skin,  and  a  lengthy 
Saracenic  mandoline, 
And  some  money  for  his  journey. 

Poets'  fate !  an  evil  star  'tis, 
Which  the  offspring  of  Apollo 
Worried  unto  death,  and  even 
Did  not  spare  their  noble  father. 

When  he,  after  Daphne  lurking. 
In  the  fair  nymph's  snowy  body'ii 
Stead,  embraced  the  laurel  only.  — 
He,  the  great  divine  Schlemihl  I 


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BOMAKCEBO.  489 

Tes,  the  glorious  Delphic  god  is 
A  Schleimhl,  and  e'en  the  laurel 
That  so  proudly  crowns  his  forehead 
Is  a  sign  of  his  Schlemihldom. 

What  the  word  Schlemihl  betokens 
Well  we  know.    Long  since  Chamisso 
Bights  of  German  citizenship 
Gain'd  it  (of  the  word  I'm  speaking). 

But  its  origin  has  ever, 
Like  the  holy  Nile's  far  sources, 
Been  unknown.     Upon  this  subject 
Many  a  night  have  I  been  poring. 

Many  a  year  ago  I  travell'd 

To  Berlm,  to  see  Chamisso 

On  this  point,  and  from  the  dean  sought 

Information  of  SchlemihL 

But  he  could  not  satisfy  me, 
And  referr'd  me  on  to  Hitzig, 
Who  had  made  the  first  suggestion 
Of  the  family  name  of  Peter 

Shadowless.     I  straightway  hired 
The  first  cab,  and  quickly  hastei^d 
To  the  magistrate  Herr  Hitzig, 
Who  was  formerly  call'd  Itzig. 

When  he  still  was  known  as  Itzig, 
In  a  vision  saw  he  written 
His  own  name  high  in  the  heavens. 
And  in  front  the  letter  H. 

**  What's  the  meaning  of  this  H  ?" 
Ask'd  he  of  himself.     "  Herr  Itzig 
"  Or  the  Holy  Itzig  ?    Holy 
*•  Is  a  pretty  title.    Not,  though, 

*'  Suited  for  Berlin."     At  length  he. 
Tired  of  thinking,  took  the  name  of 
Hitzig,  and  his  best  friends  only 
Knew  that  Hitzig  stood  for  Holy. 

«  Holy  Hitzig !"  said  I  therefore 
When  I  saw  him,  '*  have  the  goodness 
*'  To  explain  the  derivation 
"  Of  the  word  Schlemihl,  I  pray  you." 


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190  Heine's  poems. 

Many  circmnbendibiises 
Took  the  holy  one — he  could  not 
BecoUect, — and  made  excuses 
In  succession  like  a  Christian, 

Till  at  length  I  burst  the  buttons 
In  the  breeches  of  my  patience, 
And  began  to  swear  so  fiercely, 
In  such  very  impious  fashion, 

That  the  worthy  pietist, 
Pale  as  death,  with  trembling  knees. 
Forthwith  gratified  my  wishes, 
And  the  following  story  told  me : 

"  In  the  Bible  it  is  written 
"  How,  while  wandering  in  the  desert, 
"  Israel  oft  committed  whoredom 
^'  With  the  daughters  fair  of  Canaan. 

'*  Then  it  came  to  pass  that  Fhinehas 
"  Chanced  to  see  the  noble  Zimri 
•*  Thus  engaged  in  an  intrigue 
"  With  a  Canaanitish  woman. 

"  Straightway  in  his  fury  seized  he 
*^  On  hiis  spear,  and  put  to  death 
**  Zimri  on  the  very  spot. — Thus 
"  In  the  Bible  'tis  recounted. 

"  But,  according  to  an  oral 
**  Old  tradition  'mongst  the  people, 
"  *Twas  not  Zimri  that  was  really 
"  Stricken  by  the  spear  of  Phinehas ; 

"  But  the  latter,  blind  with  fury, 
"  In  the  sinner's  place,  by  ill-luck 
**  Chanced  to  kill  a  guiltless  person, 
"  Named  Schlemihl  ben  Zuri  Schadday."- 

He,  then,  this  Schlemihl  the  First, 
Was  the  ancestor  of  all  the 
Race  Schlemihl  Jan.     We're  descended 
From  Schlemihl  ben  Zuri  Schadday. 

Certainly  no  wondrous  actions 
Are  preserved  of  his ;  we  only 
Know  his  name,  and  in  addition 
Enow  that  he  was  a  Schlemihl* 


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EOMANOERO.  491 

But  a  pedigree  is  valued 

Not  accordiiig  to  its  fruits,  but 

Its  antiquity  alone — 

Ours  three  thousand  years  can  reckon. 

Years  come  round,  and  years  then  vanish — 
Full  three  thousand  years  have  fleeted 
Since  the  death  of  our  forefather 
This  Schlemihl  ben  Zuri  Schadday. 

Fhinehas,  too,  has  long  been  dead, 
But  his  spear  is  in  existence. 
And  incessantly  we  hear  it 
Whizzing  through  the  air  above  us. 

And  the  noblest  hearts  it  pierces — 

Both  Jehuda  ben  Halevy, 

Also  Moses  Iben  Esra, 

And  it  likewise  struck  Grabirol, 

Tes,  Gabirol,  that  truehearted 
God-devoted  Minnesinger, 
That  sweet  nightingale,  who  sang  to 
God  instead  of  to  a  rose, — 

That  sweet  nightingale  who  caroll'd 
Tenderly  his  loving  numbers 
In  the  darkness  of  the  Gt)thic 
Medieval  night  of  earth  I 

Undismayed  and  caring  nothing 

For  grimaces  or  for  spirits, 

Or  the  chaos  of  delirium 

And  of  death  those  ages  haunting. 

Our  sweet  nightingale  thought  only 
Of  the  Godlike  One  he  loved  so, 
Unto  Whom  he  sobb*d  his  love. 
Whom  his  hymns  were  glorifying. 

Thirty  springs  Gabirol  witnessed 

On  this  earth,  but  loud-tongued  Fama 

Trumpeted  abroad  the  glory 

Of  his  name  through  every  country. 

Now  at  Cordova,  his  home,  he 
Had  a  Moor  as  nextdoor  neighbour. 
Who  wrote  verses,  like  the  other, 
And  the  poet's  glory  envied. 

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492  heinb's  poemb. 

When  he  heard  the  poet  singing, 

Then  the  Moor's  bile  straight  flow'd  OTor, 

And  the  sweetness  of  the  songs  was 

Bitter  wormwood  to  this  base  one. 

He  enticed  his  hated  rival 

To  his  house  one  night,  and  slew  him 

There,  and  then  the  body  buried 

In  the  garden  in  its  rear. 

But  behold !  from  out  the  spot 

Where  the  body  had  been  hidden, 

Presently  there  grew  a  fig-tree 

Of  the  most  enchanting  beauty. 

All  its  fruit  was  long  in  figure, 

And  of  strange  and  spicy  sweetness ; 

He  who  tasted  it,  sank  into 

Quite  a  dreamy  state  of  rapture. 

Ifongst  the  people  on  the  subject 

Much  was  said  aloud  or  whisper'd, 

Till  at  length  the  rumour  came  to 

The  illustrious  Oaliph*s  ears. 

He  with  his  own  tongue  first  tasted 

This  strange  fig-phenomenon, 

And  then  formed  a  strict  commission 

Of  inquiry  on  the  matter. 

Summarily  they  proceeded ; 

On  the  owner  of  the  tree's  soles 

Sixty  strokes  of  the  bamboo  they 

Gave,  and  then  his  crime  confess'd  ha 

Thereupon  they  tore  the  tree  up 

By  its  roots  from  out  the  ground, 

Aid  the  body  of  the  murder'd 

Man  Gabirol  was  discovered. 

He  was  buried  with  due  honour, 

And  lamented  by  his  brethren ; 

And  the  selfsame  day  they  also 

Hang'd  the  Moor  at  Cordova. 

DISPUTATION. 

IN  the  Aula  at  Toledo 
Loudly  are  the  trumpets  blowing ; 
To  the  spiritual  tourney, 
Gaily  dress'd,  the  crowd  are  going. 

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KOMANCERO.  493 

This  is  no  mere  worldly  combat. 
Not  one  arm  of  steel  here  glances ; 

Sharply  pointed  and  scholastic 
Words  are  here  the  only  lances. 

Gallant  Paladins  here  fight  not, 

Ladies'  honest  fame  defending ; 
Cai)uchins  and  Jewish  Eabbis 

Are  the  knights  who're  here  contending. 

In  the  place  of  helmets  are  they 
Scull  caps  and  capouches  wearing ; 

Scapular  and  Arbecanfeaa 

Are  the  armour  they  are  bearing. 

Which  God  is  the  one  true  God  ? 

He,  the  Hebrew  stem  and  glorious 
Unity,  whom  Babbi  Juda 

Of  Navarre  would  see  victorious  ? 

Or  the  triune  God,  whom  Christians 

Hold  in  love  and  veneration, 
As  whose  champion  Friar  Jose, 

The  Franciscan,  takes  his  station  ? 

By  the  might  of  weighty  reasons. 

And  the  logic  taught  at  college. 
And  quotations  from  the  authors 

Whose  repute  one  must  acknowledge, 

Either  champion  ad  cihmrdum 

His  opponent  would  bring  duly, 
And  the  pure  divinity 

Of  his  own  God  point  out  truly. 

'Tis  laid  down  that  he  whose  foeman 

Manages  his  cause  to  smotibcr, 
Should  be  bound  to  take  upon  him 

The  religion  of  the  other, 

And  the  Jew  be  duly  christen'd, — 
This  was  the  express  provision, — 

On  the  other  hand  the  Christian 
Bear  the  rite  of  circumcision. 

Each  one  of  the  doughty  champions 

Has  eleven  comrades  by  him. 
All  to  share  his  fate  determined, 

And  for  weal  or  woe  keep  nigh  liimi 


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494  Heine's  poems. 

Wliile  the  monks  who  back  the  friar 
With  assuranoe  fnll  and  steady 

Hold  the  holy-water  vessels 

For  the  rite  of  christening  ready, 

Swinging  sprinkling-brooms  and  censers. 
Whence  the  incense  smoke  is  rising, — 

All  their  adversaries  briskly 

Whet  their  knives  for  circomoising. 

By  the  lists  within  the  hall  stand. 
Beady  for  the  fray,  both  forces, 

And  the  crowd  await  the  signal, 
Eager  for  the  knights'  discourses. 

'Neath  a  golden  canopy, 

While  their  courtiers  duly  flatter, 

Both  the  king  and  queen  are  sitting ; 
Quite  a  child  appears  the  latter. 

With  a  small  French  nose,  her  features 
Are  in  roguishness  not  wanting. 

And  the  ever  laughing  rubies 

Of  her  month  are  quite  enchanting. 

Fragile  fair  inconstant  flower, — 

May  the  grace  of  Qod  be  with  her  I — 

From  the  merry  town  of  Paris 
She  has  been  transplanted  hither. 

To  the  country  where  the  Spanish 
Old  grandees'  stiff  manners  gall  her ; 
^  ^  Whilome  known  as  Blanche  de  Bourbon, 

,  <  Donna  Blanca  now  they  call  her. 

And  the  monarch's  name  is  Pedro, 
With  the  nickname  of  The  Cruel ; 

But  to-day,  in  gentle  mood,  he 
Looks  as  if  he  ne'er  could  do  ill. 

With  the  nobles  of  his  court  he 

Enters  into  conversation. 
And  both  Jew  and  Moor  addresses 

With  a  courteous  salutation. 

For  these  sons  of  circumcision 

Are  the  monarch's  favourite  creatures ; 

They  command  his  troops,  and  also 
In  finances  are  his  teachers. 


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ROMANCERO.  495 

Suddenly  the  druius  'gin  beating, 
And  the  trumpets'  bray  announces 

That  the  conflict  is  beginning, 

Where  each  knight  the  other  trouncea 

The  Franciscan  monk  commenoes, 

Bursting  into  furious  passion, 
And  his  voice,  now  harsh,  now  growling. 

Blusters  in  a  curious  fashion. 

•  

Father,  Son,  and  Holy  Spirit 

In  one  sentence  he  comprises. 
And  the  seed  accurst  of  Jacob 

In  the  Eabbi  exorcises. 

For  in  suchlike  controversies 

Little  devils  oft  are  hidden 
In  the  Jews,  and  give  them  sharpness* 

Wit,  and  arguments  when  bidden. 

Having  thus  expell'd  the  devil 

By  his  mighty  exorcism, 
Comes  the  monk,  dogmatically. 

Quoting  from  the  catechism. 

He  recounts  how  in  the  Godhead 

Persons  three  are  comprehended. 
Who,  whenever  they  so  will  it, 

Into  one  are  straightway  blended. 

'Tis  a  mystery  unfolded 

But  to  those  who,  in  due  season. 
Have  escaped  &om  out  the  prison 

And  the  chains  of  human  reason. 

He  recounts  how  God  was  bom  at 

Bethlehem,  of  a  tenderhearted 
Virgin,  whose  divine  unsullied 

Innocency  ne'er  departed. 

How  they  laid  the  Lord  Almighty 

In  a  lowly  stable  manger. 
Where  the  calf  and  heifer  meekly 

Stood  around  the  newborn  stranger. 

He  recounts,  too,  how  the  Lord 
From  King  Herod's  minions  flying, 

Went  to  Egypt,  how  still  later 

Death's  sharp  pangs  he  suffer'd,  dying 


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196  HEINE  B  F0R1C8. 

In  the  time  of  Pontius  Pilate, 

Who  sobscribed  his  condemnation. 

Urged  on  by  the  Jews  and  cruel 
Pharisees*  confederation. 

He  recounts,  too,  how  the  Lord, 
_  Bursting  from  the  tomb's  dark  prison 

On  the  third  day,  into  heaven 
Had  in  glorious  triumph  risen ; 

How,  when  'tis  the  proper  time,  he 
Would  return  to  ear^  in  splendour, 

At  Jehoshaphat,  to  judge  there 
Every  quick  and  dead  offender. 

•*  Tremble,  Jews  I"  ezclaim'd  the  friar, 
**  At  the  God  whom  ye  tormented 

"  Cruelly  with  thorns  and  scourges, 
*'  To  whose  death  ye  all  consentc^i. 

"  Jews,  ye  were  his  murderers !  nation 
*'  Of  vindictive  fierce  behaviour ! 

"  Him  who  comes  to  free  you,  still  ye 
"  Slay, — ye  murder  him,  the  Saviour. 

"  Jews,  the  carrion  where  the  demons 
**  Coming  from  the  lower  regions 

"  Dwell,  your  bodies  are  the  barracks 
*•  Of  the  devil's  wicked  legions. 

"  Thomas  of  Aquinas  says  so, 
''  He  is  famed  in  Christian  story, 

**  Call'd  the  mighty  ox  of  learning, 
"  Orthodoxy's  light  and  glory. 

**  Villain  race  of  Jews !  you're  nought  but 
"  Wolves,  hyenas,  jackals  hateful, 

"  Church-yard  prowlers,  who  deem  only 
*'  Flesh  of  corpses  to  be  grateful. 

**  Jews,  O  Jews  I  you're  hogs  and  monkeySj 
*'  Monsters  cruel  and  pe^dious, 

"  Whom  they  call  rhinoceroses, 
"  Crocodiles  and  vampires  hideous. 

**  Ye  are  ravens,  owls,  and  screechowls, 
*^  Bats  and  miserable  lapwings, 

••  Gallows'-birds  and  cockatrices, 
«<  Very  scum  of  all  that  flap  wings  ! 


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BOMANGEBO.  497 

"  Ye  are  yipers,  ye  are  blindworms, 
'*  Battlesnakes,  disgustmg  adders, 
**  Poisonons  toads — Christ  soon  will  surely 
**  Tread  you  out  like  empty  bladders  I 

"  Or,  accursM  people,  would  ye 

*^  Save  your  souls  so  wretched  rather  ? 

*^  Flee  the  synagogues  of  evil, 
*'  Seek  the  bosom  of  your  Father. 

"  Flee  to  love's  bright  radiant  churches, 

"  Where  the  well  of  mercy  bubbles 
"  For  your  sakes  in  hallo  w'd  basins, — 

"  Hide  your  heads  there  from  your  troubles, 

**  Wash  away  the  ancient  Adam, 

^*  And  the  vices  that  deface  it ; 
**  From  your  hearts  the  stains  of  rancour 

*^  Wash,  and  grace  shall  then  replace  it. 

"  Hear  ye  not  the  Saviour  speaking  ? 

**  O  how  well  your  new  names  suit  you  ! 
**  Cleanse  yourselves  upon  Christ's  bosom 

*<  From  the  vermin  that  pollute  you. 

"  Yes,  our  God  is  very  love,  is 

*^  Like  a  lamb  that's  dearly  cherish'd, 

"  And  our  vices  to  atone  for, 

"  On  the  cross  with  meekness  perish'd. 

"  Yes,  our  God  is  very  love,  his 

^  Name  is  Jesus  Christ  the  blessed ; 

**  Of  his  patience  and  submission 
"  We  aspire  to  be  possess^ 

*'  Therefore  are  we  meek  and  gentle, 

'*  Courteous,  never  in  a  passion, 
^'  Fond  of  peace  and  charitable, 

*'  In  the  Lamb  the  Saviour's  fashion. 

'*  We  in  heaven  shall  be  hereafter 

**  Into  angels  blest  converted, 
*•  Wandering  there  in  bliss  with  lily 

^  Bloaaoma  in  our  hands  inserted.  1 

•*  In  the  place  of  cowls,  the  purest 

**  Bobes  shall  we  when  there  be  wearing,' 

**  Made  of  silk,  brocades,  and  muslin,  { 

**  Golden  lace  and  ribbons  flaring.  i 

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498  Heine's  poems. 


"  No  more  bald  pates  I  Bound  our  heads  there 
*'  Will  be  floating  golden  tresses ; 

"  While  our  hair  some  charming  virgin 
'*  Into  pretty  topknots  dresses. 

**  Winecups  will  be  there  presented 

**  Of  circumference  so  spacious, 
*^  That,  compared  with  them,  the  goblets 

*'  Made  on  earth  are  not  capacious. 

^^  On  the  other  hand,  much  smaller 

*'  Than  the  mouths  of  earthly  ladies 
^*  Will  the  mouth  be  of  each  woman 

*'  Who  in  heaven  our  solace  made  is. 
^'  Drinking,  kissing,  laughing  will  we 

'*  Pass  through  endless  ages  proudly, 
''  Singing  joyous  Hallelujahs, 

"  Kyrie  Eleyson  loudly." 

Thus  the  Christian  ended,  and  the 

Monks  believed  illumination. 
Pierced  each  heart,  and  so  prepared  for 

The  baptismal  operation. 

But  the  water-hating  Hebrews 

Shook  themselves  with  scornful  grinning, 
Babbi  Juda  of  Navarre  thus 

His  reply  meanwhile  beginning : 

•*  That  thou  for  thy  seed  mightst  dung 
**  My  poor  soul's  bare  field  devoutly, 

**  With  whole  dung-carts  of  abuse  thou 
*'  Hast  in  truth  befoul'd  me  stoutly. 

•*  Every  one  the  method  follows 

"  To  his  taste  best  calculated, 
'*  And  instead  of  being  angry, 

"  Thank  you,  I*m  propitiated. 

'*  Your  fine  tnnitarian  doctrine 
"  We  poor  Jews  can  never  swallow, 

**  Though  from  earliest  days  of  childhood 
**  Wont  the  rule  of  three  to  follow. 

*'  That  three  persons  in  your  CkKlhead, 
'*  And  no  more,  are  comprehended, 

^  Moderate  appears;  the  ancients 
"  On  six  thousand  gods  depended. 


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ROMANCERO.  499 

•  Qnite  miknown  to  me  the  God  is 

*•  Whom  you  call  the  Christ,  good  brother  ; 
**  Nor  have  I  e'er  had  the  honour 

"  To  have  met  his  virgin  mother* 
"  I  regret  that  some  twelve  hundred 

"  Years  back,  as  your  speech  confesses, 
*•  At  Jerusalem  he  suffered 

'*  Certain  disagreeblenesses. 

•*  That  the  Jews  in  truth  destroyed  him 
'*  Bests  upon  your  showing  solely, 

"  Seeing  the  delicti  corpus 

*'  On  the  third  day  vanished  wholly. 

•*  It  is  equally  uncertain 

"  Whether  he  was  a  connection 
"  Of  our  God,  who  had  no  children — 

**  In,  at  least,  our  recollection. 

"  Our  great  God,  like  some  poor  lambkin, 

*'  For  humanity  would  never 
**  Perish ;  for  such  philanthropic 

**  Actions  he  is  far  too  clever. 

"  Our  great  God  of  love  knows  nothing, 

"  Never  to  affection  yields  he, 
**  For  he  is  a  Grod  of  vengeance, 

*'  And  as  Grod  his  thunders  wields  he. 

*'  Nothing  can  his  wrathful  lightnings 
"  From  the  sinner  turn  or  soften, 

'*  And  the  latest  generations 
*^  For  the  fathers'  sins  pay  often. 

**  Our  great  God,  he  lives  for  ever 

"  In  his  heavenly  halls  in  glory» 
**  And,  compared  with  him,  eternal 

'^  Ages  are  but  transitory* 

**  Our  great  Gk)d,  he  is  a  hearty 

**  G^,  not  like  the  myths  that  fright  ns^ 

"  Pale  and  lean  as  any  wafer, 
'*  Or  the  shadows  by  Cocytus. 

**  Our  great  Gk)d  is  strong.  He  graspeth 
^'  Sun  and  moon  and  constellation  ; 

**  Thrones  are  crushed,  and  people  vuiisb 
^  When  he  frowns  in  indignatioB. 


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500  H£INE*8  POElfS. 

'*  And  bo  is  a  mighty  God. 

**  David  sings  :  We  cannot  measure 
<'  All  his  greatness,  earth's  his  footstool, 

'*  And  is  subject  to  his  pleasure. 

"  Our  great  God  loves  music  dearly, 
^'  Lute  and  song  to  him  are  grateful ; 

'*  But,  like  grunts  of  sucking  pigs,  he 
'*  Finds  the  sounds  of  churchbells  hateful* 

^  Great  Leviathan  the  fish  is 

'^  Who  beneath  the  ocean  strayeth, 

'*  And  with  him  the  Lord  Almighty 
'*  For  an  hour  each  morning  playeth. 

**  With  the'  exception  of  the  ninth  day 
**  Of  the  month  Ab,  that  sad  morrow, 

'*  When  they  burnt  his  holy  temple ; 
"  On  that  day  too  great's  his  sorrow. 

'  Just  one  hundred  miles  in  length  is 

"  The  Leviathan ;  each  fin  is 
^'  Big  as  Og  the  King  of  Basan, 

'*  And  his  tail  no  cedar  thin  is. 

"  Yet  his  flesh  resembles  turtle, 
"  And  its  flavour  is  perfection, 

**  And  the  Lord  will  ask  to  dinner 
**  On  the  day  of  resurrection 

"  All  his  own  elect,  the  righteous, 

*'  Those  whose  faith  was  firm  and  stable, 

"  And  this  fish,  the  Lord's  own  fSavourite, 
"  Will  be  set  upon  the  table, 

•    "  Partly  dress'd  with  garlic  white  sauce, 
*'  Pjrtly  stew'd  in  wine  and  toasted, 
"  Dress'd  with  raisins  and  with  spices, 
**  Much  resembling  matelotes  roasted. 

"  Little  slices  of  horseradish 

**  Will  the  white  sauce  much  embellish  ; 
"  So  make  ready,  Friar  Jose, 

'*  To  devour  the  fish  with  relish. 

"  And  the  raisin  sauce  I  spoke  of 
"  Makes  a  most  delicious  jelly, 

*  And  will  be  full  well  adapted, 
**  Friar  Jose,  to  thy  belly. 


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ROMANGEBO.  501 

"  What  God  cooks,  is  quite  perfection — 
"  Monk,  my  honest  counsel  follow, 

"  And  be  circumcised,  your  portion 
"  Of  Leviathan  to  swallow." — 

Thus  the  Eabbi  to  allure  him 

Spoke  with  inward  mirth  insulting. 

And  the  Jews,  with  pleasure  grunting, 
Brandish'd  all  their  knives  exulting, 

To  cut  off  the  forfeit  foreskins, 

Victors  after  all  the  fighting, 
Genuine  spolia  opima 

In  this  conflict  so  exciting. 

But  the  monks  to  their  religion 
Stuck,  despite  the  Jews*  derision. 

And  were  equally  reluctant 
To  submit  to  circumcision. 

Next  the  Catholic  converter 

Answer'd,  when  the  Jew  had  finished. 
His  abuse  again  repeating, 

Full  of  fury  undiminish'd. 

Then  the  Eabbi  with  a  cautious 
Ardour,  with  his  answer  followed ; 

Though  his  heart  was  boiling  over, 
All  his  rising  gall  he  swallow'd. 

He  appeals  unto  the  Mischna, 

Treatises  and  commentaries, 
And  with  extracts  from  the  Tausves- 

Jontof  his  quotations  varies. 

But  what  blasphemy  now  speaks  the 

Friar,  arguments  in  want  of  I 
He  exclaimed :  "  I  wish  the  devil 

**  Had  your  stupid  Tausves-Jontof  r* 

'*  This  surpasses  all,  good  heavens  1" 

Fearfully  tiie  Eabbi  screeches, 
And  his  patience  lasts  no  longer, 

Like  a  maniac's  soon  his  speech  is, 

'^  If  the  Tausve&- Jontof  8  nothing, 
"  What  is  left  ?     O  vile  detractor  I 

*  Lord,  avenge  this  foul  transgression  I 
''  Punish,  Lord,  this  malefactor  I 


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502  Heine's  poems. 

**  For  the  Tausves-Jontof,  God, 
**  Is  thyself  I     And  on  the  daring 

**  Tausves-Jontofs  base  denier 

"  Thou  must  vent  thy  wrath  unsparing* 

"  Let  the  earth  consume  him,  like  the 
**  Wicked  band  of  Cora,  quickly, 

'*  Who  their  plots  and  machinations 
"  Sow'd  against  thee,  Lord,  so  thickly. 

'^  Punish,  O  my  God,  his  baseness ! 

'*  Thunder  forth  thy  loudest  thunder ; 
**  Thou  with  pitch  and  brimstone  SodoDC 

'*  And  Gomorrha  didst  bring  under. 

**  Strike  these  Capuchins  with  vigour, 
'*  As  of  yore  thou  struckest  Pharaoh 

•*  Who  pursued  us,  as  well-laden 

'*  Flying  from  his  land  we  were,  Oh  I 

*'  Knights  a  hundred  thousand  follow'd 
"  This  proud  monarch  of  Mizrayim, 

•*  In  steel  armour,  with  bright  weapons 
"  In  their  terrible  Jadayim. 

**  Lord,  thy  right  hand  then  extending, 
'*  Pharaoh  and  his  host  were  smitten 

'*  In  the  Eed  Sea,  and  were  drown'd  there 
**  As  we  drown  a  conmion  kitten. 

"  Strike  these  Capuchins  with  vigour, 
'*  Show  the  wicked  wretches  clearly 

**  That  the  lightnings  of  thine  anger 
**  Are  not  smoke  and  bluster  merely. 

•*  Then  thy  triumph's  praise  and  glory 
**  I  will  sing  and  tell  of  proudly, 

"  And  moreover  will,  like  Miriam, 
**  Dance  and  play  the  timbrel  loudly,* 

Then  the  monk  with  equal  passion 
Answer'd  thus  the  furious  Eabbi : 

"  Villain,  may  the  Lord  destroy  thee, 
'*  Damnable,  accurst,  and  shabby ! 

**  I  can  well  defy  your  devils 
"  Whom  the  Evil  One  created, 

"  Lucifer  and  Beelzebub, 
'*  Astaroth  and  Belial  hated. 


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BOMAKGEBO.  503 

'*  I  can  well  defy  your  spirits, 

"  And  your  hellish  tricks  unhallow'd, 

"  For  in  me  is  Jesus  Christ,  since 
'*  I  his  body  blest  have  swallow'd. 

**  Christ  my  only  favourite  food  is, 

**  Than  Leviathan  more  savoury, 
"  With  its  boasted  garlic  white  sauce 

**  Cook'd  by  Satan,  full  of  knavery. 

"  Ah  I  instead  of  thus  disputing, 

**  I  would  sooner  roast  and  bake  you 

"  With  your  comrades  on  the  warmest 
"  Fimeral  pile,  the  devil  take  you  !" 

Thus  for  God  and  faith  the  tourney 

Goes  on  in  confusion  utter  ; 
But  in  vain  the  doughty  champions 

Screech  and  rail  and  storm  and  splutter. 

For  twelve  hours  the  fight  has  lasted. 

Neither  side  gives  signs  of  tiring, 
But  the  public  fast  grow  weary. 

And  the  ladies  are  perspiring. 

And  the  Court,  too,  grows  impatient. 
Ladies  make  with  yawns  suggestions ; 

To  the  lovely  queen  the  monarch 

Turns  and  asks  the  following  questions : 

"  Tell  me,  what  is  your  opinion  ? 

**  Which  is  right,  and  which  the  liar  ? 
"  Will  you  give  your  verdict  rather 

"  For  the  Eabbi  or  the  friar  ?" 

Donna  Blanca  gazes  on  him, 

Thoughtfully  her  hands  she  presses 

With  closed  fingers  on  her  forehead. 
And  the  monarch  thus  addresses : 

•*  Which  is  right,  I  cannot  tell  you, 

''  But  I  have  a  shrewd  suspicion 
**  That  the  Eabbi  and  the  monk  are 

**  Both  in  stinking  bad  oondition.** 


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504 


LATEST    POEMS. 

a858-4.) 


1.  PEAOE-YEARNING. 

OLET  thy  wounds  bloed  on,  and  let 
Thy  tears  for  ever  flow  unbidden — 
In  sorrow  revels  secret  joy, 

And  a  sweet  babn  in  tears  is  hidden. 

If  strangers'  hand  did  wound  thee  not, 
Thou  by  thyself  must  needs  be  wounded ; 

Thank  Grod  with  all  thy  heart,  if  tears 
To  wet  thy  cheek  have  e*er  abounded. 

The  noise  of  day  is  hush'd,  and  night 
In  long  dark  mantle  comes  from  heaven ; 

While  in  her  arms,  nor  fool  nor  dolt 
Can  break  the  rest  to  soothe  thee  given. 

Here  thou  art  safe  &om  music's  noise. 
And  from  the  piano's  hammer-hammer, 

From  the  grand  opera's  pompous  notes. 
And  the  bravura's  fearful  clamour. 

Here  thou  art  not  pursued,  nor  plagued 
By  endless  crowds  of  idle  smatt'rers ; 

Nor  by  the  genius  Giacomo,* 

And  all  the  clique  of  world-known  chatt'rer& 

O  grave,  thou  art  the  Paradise 

Of  ears  that  shun  the  rabble's  chorus ; 

Death's  good  indeed,  yet  better  'twere 
Our  loving  mothers  never  bore  ns.. 

2.  IN  MAY. 

THE  friends  whom  I  kiss'd  and  caress'd  of  yore 
Have  treated  me  now  with  cruelty  sore ; 
My  heart  is  &st  breaking.    The  sun,  though,  above 
With  smiles  is  hailing  the  sweet  month  of  lova 

♦  Meyerbeer. 

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LATEST   POEMS.  505 

Spring  blooms  around.     In  the  greenwood  is  heard 
The  echoing  song  of  each  happy  bird, 
And  flowers  and  girls  wear  a  maidenly  smile — 
O  beauteous  world,  I  hate  thee  the  while ; 

Yes,  Orcus'  sell  I  wellnigh  praise ; 
No  contrasts  vain  torment  there  our  days ; 
For  suffering  hearts  'tis  better  below, 
There  where  the  Stygian  night-waters  flow. 

Tliat  sad  and  melancholy  stream, 
And  the  Stymphalides*  dull  scream, 
The  Furies  singsong,  so  harsh  and  shrill, 
With  Cerberus'  bark  the  pauses  to  fill, — 

These  match  full  well  with  sorrow  and  pain. 
In  Proserpine's  accursM  domain, 
In  the  region  of  shadows,  the  valley  of  sighs, 
All  with  our  tears  doth  harmonize. 

But  here  above,  like  hateful  things. 

The  sun  and  the  rose  inflict  their  stings  ; 

I'm  mock'd  by  the  heavens  so  May-like  and  blua— 

O  beauteous  world,  I  hate  thee  anew  I 

3.  BODY  AND  SOUL. 

POOK  soul  doth  to  the  body  say  : 
I'll  never  leave  thee,  but  I'll  stay 
With  thee ;  yea,  1  with  thee  will  sink 
In  death  and  night,  destruction  drink. 
Thou  ever  wert  my  second  I, 
And  round  me  clungest  lovingly, 
As  though  a  dress  of  satin  bright, 
All  lined  throughout  with  ermine  white — 
Alas !  I've  come  to  nakedness, 
A  mere  abstraction,  bodiless, 
Reduced  a  blessed  nullity 
In  yon  bright  reabns  of  light  to  bo. 
In  the  cold  halls  of  heaven  up  yonder. 
Where  the  Immortals  silent  wander, 
And  gape  upon  me,  clatt'ring  by 
In  leaden  slippers  wearily. 
'Tis  quite  intolerable  ;  stay. 
Stay  with  me,  my  dear  body,  pray. 


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506  Heine's  poems. 

The  body  to  poor  soul  replied : 
Cheer  np,  be  not  dissatisfied  I 
We  peaoef ull J  must  learn  to  bear 
What  Fate  apportions  as  our  share. 
I  was  the  lamp's  wick ;  I  must  now 
Consume  away  ;  the  spirit,  thou, 
Wilt  be  selected  by-and-by 
To  sparkle  as  a  star  on  high 
Of  purest  radiance.     I'm  but  rags. 
Mere  stuff,  like  rotten  tinder  bags, 
Collapsing  fast,  and  nothing  worth, 
Becoming,  what  I  was,  mere  earth. 

Farewell  I  take  comfort,  cease  complaining ; 
Perchance  'tis  far  more  entertaining 
In  heaven  than  now  supposed  by  thee. 
If  thou  shouldst  e'er  the  great  bear  see 
(Not  Meyer-beer*)  in  those  bright  climes, 
Greet  him  &om  me  a  thousand  times. 

4.  RED  SLIPPERS. 

A  WICKED  cat,  grown  old  and  gray, 
That  she  was  a  shoemaker  chose  to  say, 
And  put  before  her  window  a  board 
Where  slippers  for  young  maidens  were  stored ; 
While  some  were  of  morocco  made, 
Others  of  satin  were  there  display'd ; 
Of  velvet  some,  with  edges  of  gold, 
And  figured  strings,  all  gay  to  behold. 
But  fairest  of  all  exposed  to  view 
Was  a  pair  of  slippers  of  scarlet  hue ; 
They  gave  full  many  a  lass  delight 
With  their  gorgeous  colours  and  splendour  bright 
A  young  and  snow-white  noble  mouse 
Who  chanced  to  pass  the  shoemaker's  house 
First  turn'd  to  look,  and  then  stood  still. 
And  then  peep'd  over  the  window  sill. 
At  length  she  said  :  *'  Good  day,  mother  cat : 
"  You've  pretty  red  slippers,  I  grant  you  that. 
*'  If  they're  not  dear,  I'm  ready  to  buy, 
**  So  tell  me  the  price,  if  it's  not  too  high." 

*  Tho  famous  compcMser,  whose  real  name  wa9  Beer. 

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LATEST  POEMS.  507 

"  My  good  young  lady,"  the  cat  replied, 

"  Pray  do  me  tlie  favour  to  step  inside, 

"  And  honour  my  house,  I  venture  to  pray, 

"  With  your  gracious  presence.    Allow  me  to  say 

*'  That  the  fairest  maidens  come  shopping  to  me, 

'*  And  duchesses  too,  of  high  degree. 

"  The  slippers  I'm  willing  full  cheap  to  sell, 

"  Yet  let  us  see  if  they'll  lit  you  well 

"  Pray  step  inside,  and  take  a  seat" — 

Thus  the  wily  cat  did  Msely  entreat, 

And  the  poor  white  thing  in  her  ignorance  then 

Fell  plump  in  the  snare  in  that  murderous  den. 

The  little  mouse  sat  down  on  a  chair, 

And  lifted  her  small  leg  up  in  the  air, 

In  order  to  try  how  the  red  shoes  fitted, 

A  picture  of  innocent  calm  to  he  pitied. 

When  sudden  the  wicked  cat  seized  her  fast, 

Her  murderous  talons  around  her  cast. 

And  bit  right  off  her  poor  little  head. 

"  My  dear  white  creature,*'  the  cat  then  said, 

"  My  sweet  little  mouse,  you're  as  dead  as  a  rat. 

**  The  scarlet  red  slippers  that  served  me  so  pat 

'*  I'll  kindly  place  on  the  top  of  your  tomb, 

"  And  when  is  heard,  on  the  last  day  of  doom, 

"  The  sound  of  the  trump,  O  mouse  so  white, 

"  From  out  of  your  grave  you'll  come  to  light, 

"  Like  all  the  rest,  and  then  you'll  be  able 

*'  To  wear  your  red  slippers."    Here  ends  my  fabla 


"^Ti  little  white  mice,  take  care  where  you  go, 
X    And  don't  be  seduced  by  worldly  show ; 
I  counsel  you  sooner  barefooted  to  walk, 
Than  buy  slippers  of  cats,  however  they  talk. 

5.  BABYLONIAN  SORROWS. 

I'M  summon'd  by  death.    I'd  fain,  my  love, 
Have  leffc  thee  behind  in  a  wood  to  rove, 
In  one  of  those  forests  of  firs  so  drear. 
Where  vultures  build,  and  wolves'  bowlings  we  hear. 
Whore  the  wild  sow  fearfully  grunts  evermore, 
The  lawful  spouse  of  the  light-grey  boar. 


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508  Heine's  poems. 

I'm  snmmon'd  by  death.    Twere  better  fiu 
If  I,  where  the  stormy  billows  are, 
Had  had  to  leave  thee,  my  wife,  my  child. 
And  straightway  the  northpole's  tempest  wild 
The  waters  had  flogg'd,  and  out  of  the  deep 
The  hideous  monsters  that  in  it  sleep. 
The  crocodile  fierce  and  the  shark,  had  come 
With  open  jaws,  and  around  thee  swum. 
Believe  me,  my  child,  Matilda,  my  wife, 
That  the  angry  sea,  in  its  wildest  strife. 
And  the  cruel  forest  less  dangers  give 
Than  the  city  where  we're  now  fated  to  live. 
Though  feaiful  the  wolf  and  the  vulture  may  be, 
The  shark,  and  the  monsters  dread  of  the  sea, 
Far  fiercer,  more  furious  beasts  have  their  birth 
In  Paris,  the  capital  proud  of  the  earth. 
Fair  Paris,  the  singing,  so  gay  in  her  revels, 
That  hell  to  the  angels,  that  heaven  to  devils. — 
That  thee  I  must  leave  in  this  dungeon  sad. 
This  drives  me  crazy,  this  drives  me  mad. 

With  scomfol  buzzing  around  my  bed 
The  black  flies  come  ;  on  my  nose  and  head 
They  perch  themselves — detestable  race  I 
Amongst  them  are  some  with  a  human  face. 
And  elephants'  trunks  (though  small  in  span) 
Like  the  god  Ganesa  in  Hindostan. 
In  my  brain  I  hear  noises  and  heavy  knocks, 
It  sounds  as  if  they  were  packing  a  box, 
And  my  reason  departs,  alas !  alas ! 
Ere  I  myself  from  this  earth  can  pass. 

6.  THE  SLAVE  SHIP. 

PAST  I. 

THE  supercargo  Mynher  Van  Eoek 
In  his  cabin  sits  adding  his  figures ; 
He  calculates  his  cargo's  amount. 

And  the  probable  gain  from  his  niggers. 

*'  My  gum  and  pepper  are  good :  the  stock 
"  Is  three  hundred  chests  of  all  sizes ; 

*'  I've  gold  dust  and  ivory  too  in  store, 
'*  But  the  black  ware  by  far  the  best  prize  is. 


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LATEST  POEMS.  509 

**  Six  hundred  niggers  I  bought  dirt-cheap 

"  Where  the  Senegal  river  is  flowing ; 
**  Their  flesh  is  Arm,  and  their  sinews  tough 

'*  As  the  finest  iron  going. 

'*  I  got  them  by  barter,  and  gave  in  exchange 
**  Glass  beads,  steel  goods,  and  some  brandy ; 

**  I  shall  make  at  least  eight  hundred  per  cent. 
**  With  but  half  of  them  living  and  handy. 

"  If  only  three  hundred  niggers  are  left, 

*'  When  I  get  to  Eio  Janeiro, 
"  I  shall  have  a  hundred  ducats  a  head 

"  From  the  house  of  Gk^nzales  Perreiro." — 

Here  all  of  a  sudden  Mynher  Van  Eoek 

Was  disturbed  in  his  meditation, 
For  Doctor  Van  Smissen  enter'd  in. 

The  vessel's  surgeon  by  station. 

His  figure  was  just  as  thin  as  a  lath, 

And  his  nose  had  warts  all  over ; 
"  WeU,  worthy  Doctor,"  exclaimed  Van  Koek, 

"  Are  my  niggers  still  living  in  clover  ?" 

The  Doctor  thank*d  him,  and  said  in  reply: 

^*  I've  come  with  a  tale  of  disaster ; 
'*  Throughout  the  night,  I'm  sorry  to  say, 

'^  The  deaths  have  grown  faster  and  faster. 

"  The  average  daily  number  is  two, 

'*  But  to-day  just  seven  have  died,  Sir, — 

"  Four  men  and  three  women ;  I  wrote  ^e  loss 
"  At  once  in  the  log  as  my  guide.  Sir. 

•*  I  closely  inspected  every  corpse, 

^'  For  these  rascals  have  often  a  notion 
**  To  feign  themselves  dead,  in  hopes  that  thoy 

(<  May  be  thrown  away  into  the  ocean. 

«*  I  took  the  irons  from  off  the  dead, 

"  And  according  to  usual  custom 
"  Next  morning  early  into  the  sea 

*«  I  bid  the  Miilors  thrust  'em. 

"  At  once  the  sharks  from  out  of  the  waves 

**  Shot  up  in  countless  legions ; 
•«  They  love  full  dearly  the  niggers'  flesh, 

"  My  boarders  are  they  in  tibese  regions. 

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510  Heine's  poems. 

**  They  have  follow'd  after  the  track  of  the  ship, 

'•  Since  we've  left  the  land  in  the  distance ; 
"  The  creatures  smell  the  scent  of  a  corpse 

"  With  ravenous  snuffling  persistence. 
•*  In  truth  'tis  a  capital  joke  to  see 

**  How  after  the  bodies  they  follow ; 
*^  One  takes  the  head,  another  a  leg, 

<*  While  the  rest  the  fragments  swallow. 
"  Then  round  the  ship  contented  they  roll, 

"  When  they've  finished  their  eating  and  crunching, 
**  And  stare  in  my  face,  as  if  they  sought 

'*  To  thank  me  for  their  luncheon." — 
Then  spake  Van  Koek,  as  he  sadly  sigh'd, 

When  the  Doctor  his  story  had  finish'd : 
"  How  to  lessen  the  evil  ?     In  what  way  best 

"  Can  the  rate  of  the  deaths  be  diminish'd  ?" 
The  Doctor  replied :  "  Many  niggers  have  died 

"  By  their  own  misconduct  stealthy ; 
**  Their  breath's  so  bad,  that  it  poisons  the  air 

"  In  the  ship,  and  makes  it  unhealthy. 
**  Through  lowness  of  spirits,  too,  many  have  died, 

"  And  ennui,  in  this  dreary  stillness ; 
'^  I  think  that  air  and  music  and  dance 

'*  Would  soon  remove  their  illness." — 
Then  cried  Van  Koek :  "  An  excellent  plan ! 

**  Dear  Doctor,  I  utter  no  slander, 
"  When  I  say  that  like  Aristotle  you're  wise, 

"  The  tutor  of  Alexander. 
"  The  Tulip-improvement  Society's  head 

"  In  the  town  of  Delft  may  be  clever, 
**  But  he  hasn't  one  half  of  your  brains,  I'm  sure,— 

"  Your  equal  I've  met  with  never. 
"  Then,  music,  music  I     The  niggers  all 

"  On  the  deck  I'll  see  dancing  and  kicking^ 
"  And  whosoever  won't  join  in  the  fun 

**  Shall  receive  in  reward  a  good  licking." 

FABT  n. 

ON  high,  from  the  heaven's  blue  canopy, 
Many  thousand  stars  are  gleaming, 
Like  the  eyes  of  fair  women,  so  large  and  clear^ 
And  with  looks  of  yearning  beaming. 

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LATEST  POEMS.  511 

T/hey're  looking  down  on  tlie  ocean  below, 
/  Whose  waves  in  the  distance  are  curling, 
Ijn  phosphorescent  blue  vapour  all  veil'd, 
j    While  the  billows  are  joyously  whirling. 

iNot  a  sail  on  the  slave-ship  is  fluttering  now, 

As  though  without  tackle  she's  lying ; 
But  lanthoms  are  glimmering  high  on  the  decks 

Where  the  dance  with  the  music  is  vying. 

The  cook  of  the  vessel  is  playing  the  flute. 

The  steersman's  playing  the  fiddle, 
The  trumpet  is  blown  by  the  Doctor  himself, 

And  a  lad  beats  the  drum  in  the  middle. 

A  hundred  niggers,  both  women  and  men. 

Are  yelling  and  whirling  and  leaping, 
As  though  they  were  mad  ;  and  at  every  spring 

Their  irons  the  tune  are  keeping. 

They  stamp  on  the  ground  in  uproarious  mirth, 

Ajid  many  a  swarthy  maiden 
Clasps  her  naked  partner  with  warmth,  while  at  times. 

The  air  with  their  groanings  is  laden. 

The  jailer  acts  as  maitre  dea  'plamra. 

And  dealing  his  lashes  so  fearful. 
The  weary  dancers  he  stimulates, 

And  bids  them  be  merry  and  cheerfiiL 

So  dideldumdei  and  schnedderedeng ! 

The  strange  unwonted  commotion 
Aroused  from  their  lazy  slumbers  below 

The  monsters  fierce  of  the  ocean. 

All-heavy  with  sleep,  the  sharks  swam  up, 

In  numbers  many  a  hundred ; 
They  stupidly  stared  at  the  ship  on  high 

With  amazement,  and  blindly  wondered. 

They  see  that  their  usual  breakfiEUst  time 

'Eba  not  come  as  soon  as  'tis  wanted. 
So  they  gape  and  ope  wide  their  throats,  their  jaws 

WiUi  teeth  like  saws  being  planted* 

And  dideldumdei  and  schnedderedeng  I 

There  seems  no  end  to  the  dances ; 
The  sharks  grow  impatient,  and  bite  themselves 

In  the  tail  with  their  teeth  like  lances. 


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512  Heine's  foems. 

I  presume  that  for  music  they've  got  no  taste. 

Like  many  an  ignoramus ;  % 

Trust  not  the  beast  that  music  loves  not,  '^ 

Says  Albion's  poet  famous.  | 

And  schnedderedeng  and  dideldumdei !  ) 

Not  one  of  the  dancers  seems  lazy ; 
At  the  foremast  stands  Mynher  Van  Koek, 

And  with  folded  hands  thus  prajs  he  : 

"  For  Christ's  dear  sake,  O  spare,  good  Lord,  v 

*'  The  lives  of  these  swarthy  sinners ;  \ 

**  If  theyVe  anger'd  thee  e'er,  thou  know'st  they're  as      \ 
dull 
*'  As  the  beasts  ihat  we  eat  for  our  dinners. 

'*  O  spare  their  lives,  for  Christ's  dear  sake, 

"  Who  died  for  our  salvation ; 
**  For  unless  I  have  left  me  three  hundred  head, 

"  There's  an  end  to  my  occupation." 

7.  AFFRONTENBURG. 

TIME  fleeteth,  yet  that  castle  old, 
With  all  its  battlements,  its  tower, 
And  simple  folk  that  in  it  dwelt, 
Appears  before  me  every  hour. 

I  ever  see  the  weathercock 

That  on  the  roof  tum'd  round  so  drily ; 
Each  person^  ere  he  spoke  a  word, 

Was  wont  to  190k  up  towards  it  slily. 

He  that  wpuld  talk,  first  learnt  the  wind. 

For  fear  the  ancient  grumbler  Boreas 
Might  turn  against  him  suddenly. 

Tormenting  him  with  blast  uproarious. 

In  truth,  the  wisest  held  their  tongues. 

For  in  that  place  an  echo  sported, 
Which,  when  it  answer'd  back  the  voice, 

Each  word  maliciously  distorted. 

Amidst  the  castle  garden  stood 

A  marble  fount,  with  sphinxes  Tound  it, 
For  ever  dry,  though  tears  enough 

Had  flow'd  inside  it,  to  have  djown'd  it 


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LATEST   POEMS.  513 

0  most  accursed  garden !     Ah, 

No  single  spot  was  in  thy  keeping 
Wherein  my  heart  had  not  been  sad, 

Wherein  my  eye  had  not  known  weeping* 

No  single  tree  did  it  contain 

Beneath  whose  shade  af^onts  injurioua 
Had  not  against  me  utter'd  been 

By  tongues  ironical  or  furious. 

The  toad  that  listen'd  in  the  grass 

Unto  the  rat  hath  all  confided, 
Who  told  his  aunt  the  viper  straight 

The  news  in  which  himself  he  prided. 

She  in  her  turn  told  cousin  frog, —    . 

And  in  this  manner  each  relation 
In  the  whole  filthy  race  soon  learnt 

My  dire  affronts  and  sad  vexation. 

The  garden  roses  were  full  fair, 

And  sweet  the  fragrance  that  they  scatter'd ; 
Yet  early  wither'd  they  and  died, 

By  a  mysterious  poison  shatter'd. 

And  next  the  nightingale  was  sick 

To  death, — that  songster  loved  and  cherish'd, 

That  sang  to  every  rose  her  song ; 

Through  her  own  poison's  taste  she  perish'd. 

O  most  accursed  garden  I     Yea, 
'   It  was  as  though  a  curse  oppressed  it ; 
Oft  was  I  seized  by  ghostly  fear, 

While  broad  clear  daylight  still  possessed  it 

The  green-eyed  spectre  on  me  grinn'd. 

Terror  with  fearful  mockery  vying, 
While  from  the  yew-trees  straightway  rose 

A  sound  of  groaning,  choking,  sighing. 

At  the  long  alley's  end  arose 

The  terrace  where  the  Baltic  Ocean 
At  time  of  flood  its  billows  dash'd 

Against  the  rocks  in  wild  commotion. 

There  sees  one  far  across  the  main. 

There  stood  I  oft,  in  wild  dreams  roaming ; 

The  breakers  fill'd  my  heart  as  well 

With  ceaseless  roaring,  raging,  foaming. 

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614  Heine's  k)em8. 

A  foaming,  raging,  roaring  'twas, 
As  powerless  as  the  billows  curling 

That  the  hard  rock  broke  monmfally, 

Proudly  as  they  their  shocks  were  hurling. 

With  envy  saw  I  ships  pass  by, 

Some  happier  country  seeking  gladly. 

While  I  am  in  this  caslle  chained 
With  bonds  accurst,  and  pining  sadly. 

8.  APPENDIX  TO  -LAZAEUS/* 
I. 

HOLY  parables  discarding, 
And  each  guess,  however  pious, 
To  these  awful  questions  plainly 
Seek  with  answers  to  supply  us : — 

Wherefore  bends  the  Just  One,  bleeding 
'Neath  the  cross's  weight  laborious, 

While  upon  his  steed  the  Wicked 
Eides  ail-proudly  and  victorious  ? 

Wherein  lies  the  fault  ?    It  is  not 
That  our  God  is  not  almighty  ? 

Or  hath  he  himself  offended  ? — 

Such  a  thought  seems  wild  and  flighty. 

Thus  are  we  for  ever  asking, 

Till  at  length  our  mouths  securely 

With  a  clod  of  earth  are  fasten'd,  — 
That  is  not  an  answer,  surely  ? 


MY  head  by  the  maiden  swarthy  but  fair 
Was  press'd  'gainst  her  bosom  with  yearning  j 
But,  alas !  to  grey  soon  tum'd  my  hair, 
Where  had  fallen  her  tears  so  burning. 

She  kiss'd  me  ill,  and  she  kiss'd  me  lame.. 

She  kiss'd  till  my  eyes  were  faded ; 
My  spinal  marrow  dried  up  became. 

By  her  mouth's  wild  sucking  pervaded. 

*  See  Book  II.  of  **  Bomanoeio.*' 

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LATEST  POEMS.  515 


My  body  is  now  a  corpse,  wherein 
My  spirit  is  fettered  closely ; 

'Tis  often  angry,  and  makes  a  din, 
And  storms  and  struggles  morosely. 

O  impotent  curses  I    Not  even  a  fly 
Can  be  kill'd  by  mere  execrations  ; 

Submit  to  thy  fate,  and  patiently  try 
To  bear  Heaven's  dispensations. 


HOW  slowly  time  is  crawling  on. 
That  serpent  terrible  and  creeping  I 
While  I,  alas  1  all-motionless, 

On  the  same  spot  am  ever  weeping. 

On  my  dark  cell  no  ray  of  hope 

Hath  shone,  no  sunbeam  e'er  hath  risen ; 

For  nothing  but  the  churchyard's  vault 
Shall  1  exchange  this  fatal  prison. 

Perchance  I  long  ago  did  die, 

Perchance  the  phantasies  which  nightly 

,  Hold  in  my  brain  their  shifting  dance 
Are  nought  but  ghostly  forms  unsightly. 

They  may  full  well  the  spectres  be 

Of  some  old  heathen  gods  or  devils ; 
They  gladly  choose  the  empty  skull 

Of  a  dead  poet  for  their  revels. 

Those  orgies  sweet  but  terrible. 
Those  nightly  ghost-acts,  full  of  warning. 

The  poet's  corpse-hand  ofttimes  seeks 
To  place  on  record  in  the  morning. 

IV. 

ONCE  saw  I  many  a  blooming  flower 
Upon  my  way,  but  slothfully 
Stoop'd  not  to  pluck  them  in  that  hour, 
And  or.  my  proud  steed  hasten'd  by. 

Now  when  I'm  near  to  death,  and  languish. 
Now  when  beneath  me  yawns  the  tomb, 

Ofk  in  my  thought,  with  bitter  anguish, 
Jtetums  ^e*  unheeded  flowers'  perfume. 

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516  hkine'8  poems. 

Put  most  of  all,  my  brain  is  burning 
With  a  bright  yellow  violet  feir ; 

Wild  beauty !     How  I  grieve  with  yearning, 
To  think  that  I  enjoy*d  thee  ne'er  I 

My  comfort  is :  Oblivion's  waters 
Have  not  yet  lost  their  olden  might 

The  dull  hearts  of  earth's  sons  and  daughters 
To  steep  in  Lethe*s  blissful  night. 


I  SAW  them  laughing,  smilitig  gladly, — 
I  saw  them  ruin'd  utterly ; 
I  heard  them  weeping,  dying  sadly, — 
And  yet  I  utter'd  not  a  sigh. 

Each  corpse  I  as  a  mourner  foUow'd, 
Yea,  to  the  churchyard  follow'd  I, 

And  then — with  appetite  I  swallow'd, 
My  noontide  meal,  I'll  not  deny. 

I  now  recall  that  band  long  perish'd, 
With  feelings  sadden'd  and  oppressed : 

Like  sudden  glowing  love  once  cherish'd 
They  strangely  storm  within  my  breast. 

And  most  'tis  Juliet's  tears  so  burning 
That  in  my  memory  spring  to  light ; 

My  sadness  turns  to  ceaseless  yearning, 
T  caU  upon  her  day  and  night. 

In  feverish  dreams,  with  soft  emotion 
The  faded  flower  oft  comes  again  ; 

Methinks  a  posthumous  devotion 
To  my  love's  glow  it  offers  then. 

O  gentle  phantom,  clasp  me  often 

With  strong  and  ever  stronger  power  ; 

Unto  my  lips  press  thine,  and  soften 
The  bitterness  of  this  last  hour. 


^pHOU  wast  a  maiden  fair,  so  good  and  kindly, 
X     So  neat,  so  cool — in  vain  I  waited  blindly 
Till  came  the  hour  wherein  thy  gentle  heart 
Would  ope,  and  inspiration  play  its  part. 


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Yea,  inspiration  for  those  lofty  things 
Which  prose  and  reason  deem  but  wanderings, 
But  yet  for  which  the  noble,  lovely,  good 
Upon  this  earth  rave,  suffer,  shed  their  blood. 

Upon  the  Ehine's  fair  strand,  where  vine^hills  smile, 
Once  in  glad  summer  days  we  roam'd  the  while ; 
Bright  laughed  the  sun,  sweet  incense  in  that  hour 
Streamed  from  the  beauteous  cup  of  every  flower. 

The  purple  pinks  and  roses  breath'd  in  turn 
Bed  kisses  on  us,  which  like  fire  did  bum ; 
Even  the  smallest  daisy's  faint  perfume 
Appeared  a  life  ideal  then  to  bloom. 

But  thou  didst  peacefully  beside  me  go, 

In  a  white  satin  dress,  demuie  and  slow. 

Like  some  girl's  portrait  limn'd  by  Netscher's  art, 

A  little  glacier  seem'd  to  be  thy  heart. 


AT  reason's  solemn  judgment-seat 
Thy  full  acquittal  hath  been  spoken ; 
The  ver^ct  says :  the  little  one 

By  word  or  deed  no  law  hath  broken. 

Yes,  dumb  and  motionless  thou  stood'st, 

While  madd'ning  flames  were  raging  through  me ; 

Thou  stirredst  not,  no  word  thou  spak'st, 
Yet  thou'lt  be  ever  guilty  to  me. 

Throughout  my  visions  every  night 

A  voice  accusing  ceaseth  never 
To  charge  thee  with  ill  will,  and  say 

That  thou  hast  ruin'd  me  for  ever* 

It  brings  its  proofs  and  witnesses, 

Its  musty  rolls  from  thought  long  banish'i 

And  yet  at  morning,  with  my  dream, 
Lo,  the  accuser  too  hath  vanish' d  ! 

Now  hath  it  in  my  inmost  heart, 

With  all  its  records,  refuge  taken — 
One  only  haunts  my  memory  still : 

That  I  am  ruin'd  and  forsaken. 


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518  Heine's  poems. 

vm 

THT  letter  was  a  flash  of  lightning, 
niuming  night  with  sudden  glow ; 
It  served  with  dazzling  force  to  show 
How  deep  my  misery  is,  how  Mght'ning. 

E'en  thou  compassion  then  didst  share, 
Who,  'mid  my  life's  sad  desolation, 
Stood'st,  like  the  sculptor's  mute  creation. 

As  cold  as  marble,  and  as  fair. 

O  God,  how  wretched  must  I  be  I 
For  into  speech  her  lips  are  waking, 
From  out  her  eyes  the  tears  are  breaking, 

The  stone  feels  for  me  tenderly. 

The  sight  hath  fill'd  me  with  confusion  ; 

Have  pity.  Lord,  though  thou  mayst  chasten, 
Thy  peace  bestow,  and  quickly  hasten 

This  fearful  tragedy's  conclusion. 


THE  true  sphynx's  form's  the  same  as 
Woman's ;  this  I  see  full  clearly ; 
And  the  paws  and  lion's  body 
Are  the  poet's  fancy  merely. 

Dark  as  death  is  still  the  riddle 

Of  this  true  sphynx.     E'en  the  clever 

Son  and  husband  of  Jocasta 

Such  a  hard  one  found  out  never. 

By  good  luck,  though,  woman  knows  not 
Her  own  riddle's  explanation ; 

If  the  answer  she  discover'd, 
Earth  would  fSsdl  from  its  foundation. 


THREE  women  sit  at  the  crossway  lonely. 
They're  thinking  and  spinning. 
They're  sighing  and  grinning ; 
Their  very  aspect  is  hideous  only. 

The  distaff  the  first  holds,  so  placid ; 

The  threads  she  setteth. 

And  each  one  wetteth ; 
So  her  hanging  lip  is  all  dry  and  flaccid. 

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I.ATBST  POEMS.  519 

The  spindle  the  second  one  dances 

In  a  circle  *tis  whirling, 

In  droll  feshion  twirling  ; 
The  old  woman's  eyes  shoot  blood-red  glances. 

The  third  Fate's  hands,  so  befitting, 

Hold  the  scissors  so  dreary. 

She  hums  Miserere, 
And  sharp  is  her  nose,  with  a  wart  on  it  sitting. 

O  hasten  thee  quickly,  and  sever 

My  life's  thread  so  sadd'ning, 

Escaping  this  madd'ning 
Turmoil  of  life's  distresses  for  ever  1 

XI. 

ISCOEN  the  heavenly  plains  above  me, 
In  the  blest  land  of  Paradise ; 
No  fairer  women  there  will  love  me 

Than  those  whom  here  on  earth  I  prize. 

No  angel  blest^  his  high  flight  winging, 

Could  there  replace  my  darling  wife ; 
To  sit  on  clouds,  whilst  psalms  I'm  singing, 

Would  small  enjoyment  give  to  life. 

O  Lord,  methinks  'twere  best  to  leave  me 

Upon  this  lower  world  to  dwell ; 
But  first  from  sufferings  reprieve  me, 

Some  money  granting  me  as  welL 

The  world,  I  know,  is  overflowing 

Witii  sin  and  misery ;  yet  I 
Have  learnt  full  well  the  art  of  going 

Along  its  pavement  quietly. 

liife's  bustle  cannot  now  annoy  me, 

For  'tis  but  seldom  that  I  roam  ; 
Beside  my  wife  I'd  fain  employ  mo 

In  slippers  and  loose-coat  at  home. 

Leave  me  with  her  I     When  she  is  prattling,  i 

My  soul  drinks  in  the  music  dear  j 

Of  that  sweet  voice,  so  gaily  rattling, — 

Her  look  so  faithful  is  and  clear  1  ■ 


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520  Heine's  poems. 

For  Health  alone  and  means  of  living, 
Lord,  ask  1 1     Let  me  stay  below 

For  many  a  day  its  blessings  giving, 
Beside  my  wife  in  statu  quo  I 

9.  THE  DRAGONFLY. 

THE  beauteous  dragonfly's  dancing 
By  the  waves  of  the  rivulet  glancing  ; 
She  dances  here  and  she  dances  there, 
The  glimmering,  glittering  flufcterer  fair. 

Full  many  a  beetle  with  loud  applause 
Admires  her  dress  of  azi:re  gaaze, 
Admires  her  body's  bright  splendour. 
And  also  her  figure  so  slender. 

Full  many  a  beetle,  to  his  cost, 

His  modicum  small  of  reason  lost ; 

Her  wooers  are  humming  of  love  and  truth, 

Brabant  and  Holland  pledging  forsooth. 

The  dragonfly  smiled  and  thus  spake  she  : 
''  Brabant  and  Holland  are  nought  to  me ; 
"  But  haste,  if  my  charms  you  admire, 
*'  And  fetch  me  a  sparklet  of  fire. 

**  The  cook  has  just  been  brought  to  bed, 
**  And  I  my  supper  must  cook  instead ; 
'*  The  coals  on  the  hearth  are  burnt  away,— 
"  So  fetch  me  a  sparklet  of  fire,  I  pray,'* 

Scarce  had  the  false  one  spoken  the  word. 
When  off  the  beetles  flew,  like  a  bird. 
They  seek  for  fire,  and  soon  they  find 
Their  home  in  the  wood's  left  far  behind. 

At  length  they  see  a  candle's  light 
In  garden-bower  burning  bright  ; 
And  then  with  amorous  senseless  aim. 
They  headlong  rush  in  the  candle's  flamo. 

The  candle's  flame  with  crackling  consumed 
The  beetles  and  their  fond  hearts  so  doom'd ; 
While  some  with  their  lives  did  expiation, 
Some  only  lost  wings  in  the  conflagration. 


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LATEST    POEMS.  521 

0  woe  to  the  beetle,  whose  wings  have  been 
Burnt  off!     In  a  foreign  land,  I  ween, 

He  must  crawl  on  the  ground  like  verioin  fell, 
With  humid  insects  that  nastily  smell. 

One's  bad  companions — he's  heard  to  say, — 
Are  the  worst  of  plagues,  in  exile's  day. 
We're  forced  to  converse  with  every  sort 
Of  noxious  creatures,  of  bugs  in  short, 

Who  treat  us  as  though  their  comrades  were  wo, 
Because  in  the  selfsame  mud  we  be. 
Of  this  complain'd  old  Virgil's  scholar, 
The  poet  of  exile  and  hell,  with  choler. 

1  think  with  grief  of  the  happier  time, 
When  I  in  my  glory's  well-winged  prime 
In  my  native  ether  was  playing, 

On  sunny  flowers  was  straying. 

From  rosy  calixes  food  I  drew, 

Was  thought  of  importance,  and  wheeling  flew 

With  butterflies  all  of  elegance  rare. 

And  with  the  cricket,  the  artist  fair. 

But  since  my  poor  wings  I  happen'd  to  bum, 
To  my  fatherland  now  I  ne'er  can  return ; 
I'm  tum'd  to  a  worm,  that  will  soon  expire, 
I'm  rotting  away  in  foreign  mire. 

O  would  that  I  had  never  met 
The  dragonfly,  that  azure  coquette. 
With  figure  so  fine  and  slender, 
The  fair  but  cruel  pretender  I 

10.  ASCENSION. 

THE  body  lay  on  the  bier  of  death, 
While  the  poor  soul,  when  gone  its  breath, 
Escaping  from  earth's  constant  riot, 
Was  on  its  way  to  heavenly  quiet 

Then  knocked  it  at  the  portal  high, 
And  spake  these  words  with  a  heavy  sigh : 
'^  Saint  Peter,  give  me  inside  a  place, 
^  I  am  so  tired  of  life's  hard  race. 


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522  HEINE  S  POEMS. 

**  On  silken  pillows  I  fain  would  rest 
"  In  heaven's  bright  realms,  and  play  my  oesl 
**  With  darling  angels  at  blindman's-ba£f, 
^'  Enjoying  repose  and  bliss  enough  I" 

A  clatter  of  slippers  ere  long  was  heard, 
A  bunch  of  keys  appeared  to  be  stirr*d, 
And  out  of  a  lattice,  the  entrance  near, 
Saint  Peter's  visage  was  seen  to  peer. 

He  spake :  "  The  vagabonds  come  again, 

•*  The  gipsies,  Poles,  and  their  beggarly  train, 

''  The  idlers  and  the  Hottentots— 

'*  They  come  alone  and  they  come  in  knots, 

**  And  fain  would  enter  on  heaven's  bright  rest, 

'^  And  there  be  angels,  and  there  be  blest. 

^'  Halloa,  halloa  I     For  gallows'  faces 

'*  Like  yours,  for  such  contemptible  races 

"  Were  never  created  the  halls  of  bliss, — 

**  Your  portion's  with  Satan,  far  off  from  this. 

**  Away,  away,  and  take  your  flight 

**  To  the  black  pool  of  endless  night." — 

The  old  man  thus  growl'd,  but  hadn't  the  heart 
To  continue  to  play  a  blustering  part. 
So  added  these  words,  its  spirits  to  cheer : 
*'  Poor  soul,  in  truth  thou  dost  not  appear 
"  To  that  base  troop  of  rogues  to  belong — 
**  Well,  well,  I'll  grant  thy  desire  so  strong, 
*'  Because  it  is  my  birthday  to-day, 
"  And  I  feel  just  now  in  a  merciful  way. 
"  But  meanwhile  tell  me  the  country  and  place 
"  From  whence  thou  comest ;  and  was  it  the  case 
'*  That  thou  wast  married  ?     It  happens  sometimes 
•  A  husband's  patience  atones  for  sdl  crimes  ; 
*<  A  husband  need  not  in  hell  to  be  stew'd, 
•'  Nor  need  we  him  from  heaven  exclude." 

The  soul  replied :  "  From  Prussia  T  came, 
"  My  native  town  is  Berlin  by  name, 
'*  There  ripples  the  Spree,  and  in  its  bed 
**  The  young  cadets  jump  heels  over  head ; 
•*  It  overflows  kindly,  when  rains  bngin— 
•*  A  beautiful  spot  is  indeed  Berlin  I 

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LATEST  POEKS.  523 

••  I  was  a  private  teacher  when  there, 

*'  And  much  philosophy  read  with  cai-o. 

*'  I  married  a  chanoinesse — strange  to  si,y, 

"  She  quarrelled  frightfully  every  day, 

•'  Especially  when  in  the  house  was  no  bread — 

**  'Twas  this  that  kill'd  me,  and  now  I  am  dead." 

Saint  Peter  cried  :  "  Alack,  alack  ! 

^'  Philosophy's  but  the  trade  of  a  quack. 

"  In  truth  it  is  a  puzzle  to  me 

"  Why  people  study  philosophy, 

"  It  is  such  tedious  and  profitless  stuff, 

"  And  is  moreover  godless  enough  ; 

'*  In  hunger  and  doubt  their  votaries  dwell, 

"  Till  Satan  carries  them  off  to  hell. 

*<  Well  thy  Xantippe  might  make  exclamations 

"  Against  the  thin  and  washy  potations 

*'  From  whence  upon  her,  with  comforting  gleam 

*'  No  eye  of  fat  could  ever  beam. 

"  But  now,  poor  soul,  pray  comforted  be ! 

*'  The  strictest  commands  are  given  to  me, 

"  'Tis  true,  that  each  who  whilst  he  did  live 

*'  To  philosophy  used  his  attention  to  give, 

"  Especially  to  the  godless  German, 

"  Should  be  driven  away  from  hence  like  vermin. 

"  Yet  *tis  my  birthday  to-day,  as  I 

*•  Have  said,  so  there  is  a  reason  why 

**  111  not  reject  thee,  but  ope  for  a  minute 

'*  The  gate  of  heaven — quick,  enter  within  it 

**  With  utmost  speed — 

"  Now  all  is  right ! 
"  The  whole  of  the  day,  from  mom's  first  light 
'*  Till  late  in  the  evening,  thou  canst  walk 
•*  Bound  heaven  at  will,  and  dreamily  stalk 
"  Along  its  jewel-paved  streets  so  fair  ; 
''  But  mind,  thou  must  not  meddle  when  there 
"  With  any  philosophy,  or  I  shall  be 
"  Soon  compromised  most  terribly. 
•*  When  angels  thou  hearest  singing,  assume 
"  A  face  of  rapture,  and  never  of  gloom ; 
**  But  if  an  archangel  sang  the  song, 
"  Be  full  of  inspiration  strong, 
**  And  say  that  Malibran  ne'er  pretended 
'*  To  have  a  soprano  so  rich  and  splendid ; 

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524  Heine's  poems. 

"  And  ever  applaud  each  tuneful  hymn 

**  Of  cherubim  and  oi  seraphim. 

**  Compare  them  all  with  Signer  Eubini, 

"  With  Mario  and  Tamburini, 

'*  Give  them  the  title  of  Excellencies, 

**  And  be  not  sparing  of  reverencies. 

**  The  singers  in  heaven,  as  well  as  on  earth, 

"  Have  all  loved  flattery  since  their  birth. 

**  The  world's  great  Chapel-master  on  high, 

*'  E'en. He  is  pleased  when  they  glorify 

**  His  works,  and  delighteth  to  hear  ador*d 

**  The  wonders  of  God,  the  mighty  Lord, 

•*  And  when  a  psalm  to  His  glory  and  praise 

"  In  thickest  incense  clouds  they  raise. 

**  Forget  me  not.     Whenever  to  thee 

"  The  glory  of  heaven  causes  ennui, 

*'  Then  hither  come,  and  at  cards  we'll  play. 

**  All  games  alike  are  in  my  way, 

**  From  doubledummy  to  faro  I'll  go, — 

**  We'll  also  drink.     But,  apropos, 

**  If  thou  should'st  meet,  when  going  from  hence, 

"  The  Lord,  and  He  should  ask  thee  from  whence 

'*  Thou  com'st,  let  no  word  of  Berlin  be  said, 

**  But  say,  from  Vienna  or  Munich  instead." 

11.  THE  AFFIANCED  ONES. 

THOU  weep'st,  and  on  me  look'st,  believing 
That  thou  art  for  my  anguish  grieving — 
Thou  know'st  not,  wife,  that  'tis  for  theo 
The  tear  escapes  thee,  not  for  me. 

O  tell  me  if  it  be  not  true 

That  o'er  thy  spirit  sometimes  grew 

The  blest  foreboding,  showing  thee 

That  we  were  join'd  by  fate's  decree  ? 

United,  bliss  was  ours  below. 

But  sever'd,  nought  is  ours  but  woe. 

In  the  great  book  'tis  written  clearly 
That  we  should  love  each  other  dearly. 
Thy  place  should  be  upon  my  breast, 
Here  first  awoke  self  knowledge  blest; 
From  out  the  realm  of  plants,  with  power 
*Twas  mine  to  free,  to  kiss  thee,  flower  I— 

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LATEST  POEMS.  525 

Baise  thee  to  me,  to  highest  life, 
'Twas  mine  to  give  thee  soul,  my  wife. 

Now,  when  reveal'd  the  riddles  stand, 
When  in  the  hour-glass  is  the  sand 
Run  out,  weep  not.  'tis  ordered  so — 
Alone  thou'lt  wither,  when  I  go ; 
Thoult  wither,  ere  thou  yet  hast  bloom'd. 
Ere  thou  hast  glow'd,  be  quench'd  and  doom'd ; 
Thoult  die  and  be  the  prey  of  death 
Ere  thou  hast  learnt  to  draw  thy  breath. 

I  know  it  now.     By  heaven,  'tis  thou 
Whom  I  have  loved.     How  bitter  now, 
The  moment  we  are  join'd  for  ever. 
To  find  the  hour  when  we  must  sever. 
The  welcome  meanwhile  must  give  way 
To  sad  farewell.     We  part  to-day 
For  evermore,  for  'tis  not  given 
To  us  to  meet  again  in  heaven. 
Beauty  to  dust  will  fall  at  last, 
Thou'lt  pass  away,  and  crumble  fest. 
The  poets'  fate  will  happier  be, 
Death  cannot  kill  them  utterly. 
Annihilation  strikes  us  ne'er, 
We  live  in  poesy's  land  so  fair, 
In  Avalon,  where  fairies  dwell — 
Dear  corpse,  for  ever  fare  thee  well ! 

12.  THE  PHILANTHROPIST. 

THERE  once  was  a  brother  and  sister. 
The  sister  was  poor,  the  brother  was  riah. 
The  poor  one  said  to  the  rich  one : 
*'  Give  me  a  piece  of  bread." 

The  rich  one  said  to  the  poor  one : 
**  Leave  me  to-day  in  peace, 
"  While  I  give  my  yearly  b  .nquet 
"  To  the  lords  of  the  Council  all. 

**  The  first  doth  turtlesoup  relish, 
*•  The  second  doth  pineapples  eat, 
*•  The  third  is  fond  of  pheasant 
"  And  Perigord  truffles  toa 

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526  Heine's  poems. 

''  The  fourth  eats  nought  but  seafisht 
^'  The  fifth  in  sahnon  delights, 
'*  The  sixth  of  each  dish  eateth, 
"  And  drinketh  even  more." 

The  poor  rejected  sister 
Went  hungry  back  to  her  house ; 
She  threw  herself  on  her  straw-bed. 
And  deeply  sighed  and  died. 
We  all  alike  must  perish  I 
The  scythe  of  death  at  last 
Mowed  down  the  wealthy  brother, 
As  it  the  sister  had  mown. 

And  when  the  wealthy  brother 
His  end  approaching  saw, 
He  sent  for  his  notary  quickly. 
And  straightway  made  his  will. 

With  legacies  large  and  lib'ral 
The  clergy  he  endow'd. 
The  schools,  and  the  great  museum 
Of  zoological  things. 

And  noble  sums  moreover 
The  great  testator  bequeath'd 
To  the  deaf  and  dumb  asylum 
And  Jewish  Conversion  fund, 

A  handsome  bell  bestow'd  he 
On  the  new  Saint  Stephen's  tower ; 
It  weighs  five  hundred  centners, 
Of  first-rate  metal  too. 

It  is  a  bell  enormous, 
And  soxmds  both  early  and  late ; 
It  soimds  to  the  praise  and  glory 
Of  that  most  excellent  man. 

It  tells,  with  its  tongue  of  iron. 
Of  all  the  good  he  has  done 
To  the  town  and  his  fellow-townsmott. 
Whatever  might  be  their  faith. 

Thou  great  benefactor  of  mortals 
In  death  as  well  as  in  life 
The  great  bell's  ever  proclaiming 
Each  benefaction  of  thine  t 


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LATEST   POEMS.  527 

The  faneral  next  with  all  honour 
And  pomp  was  solemnized. 
The  people  crowded  to  see  it 
And  reverently  gazed. 

Upon  a  coal-black  carriage, 
Jjike  a  vast  canopy 
Adom'd  with  black  ostrich  feathers. 
The  splendid  coffin  lay. 

Trick'd  out  with  plates  of  silver, 
And  silver  embroidery  fine, 
Upon  the  black  groimd  the  silver 
The  grandest  effect  produced. 

The  carriage  was  drawn  by  six  horses, 
In  coal-black  trappings  disguised. 
That  fell,  like  funeral  mantles, 
Down  even  to  their  hoofs. 

Behind  the  cofifin  were  crowded 

The  servants  in  liveries  black. 

Their  snow-white  handkerchiefs  holding 

Before  their  sorrowing  face. 

The  people  of  rank  in  the  city, 
In  long  procession  form'd 
Of  black  and  showy  coaches, 
Totter*d  along  behind. 

In  this  grand  fun'ral  procession, 
Bemember,  were  also  found 
The  noble  lords  of  the  Council, 
And  yet  they  were  not  complete. 

The  one  was  missing,  whose  fancy 
Was  pheasant  and  truffles  to  eat ; 
An  attack  of  indigestion 
ELad  lately  carried  him  o& 

13.  THE  WHIMS  OP  THE  AMOROUS. 

(A  true  story,  repeated  after  old  doouments  and  reprodnoed  in 
excellent  rhyme.) 

UPON  the  hedge  the  beetle  sits  sadly, 
He  has  fallen  in  love  with  a  lady-fly  madly. 

O  fly  of  my  soul,  'tis  thou  alone 

Art  the  wife  I  have  chosen  to  be  my  own. 

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528  HEIKIt'8  POEMB. 

O  marry  me,  and  be  not  cold, 

For  I  have  a  belly  of  glistening  gold. 

My  back  is  a  mass  of  glory  and  show, 
There  rabies  glitter,  there  emeralds  glow^ 

0  would  that  I  were  a  fool  just  now ! 
I*d  never  marry  a  beetle,  I  vow. 

1  care  not  for  emeralds,  rubies,  or  gold, 
I  know  that  no  happiness  riches  enfold. 

'Tis  tow'rd  the  ideal  my  thought  soars  high, 
For  I  am  in  truth  a  haughty  fly. — 

The  beetle  flew  off,  with  a  heart  like  to  breakj 
The  fly  went  away,  a  bath  to  taka 

O  what  has  become  of  my  maid,  the  bee, 
That  she  when  l*m  washing  may  wait  on  me. 

That  she  may  stroke  my  soft  hair  outside, 
For  I  am  now  a  beetle's  bride. 

In  truth,  a  splendid  party  111  give. 
For  handsomer  beetle  never  did  live. 

His  back  is  a  mass  of  glory  and  show, 
There  rubies  glitter,  there  emeralds  glow. 

His  bcUy  is  golden,  and  noble  each  feature ; 
With  envy  will  burst  full  many  a  creature. 

Make  haste,  Miss  Bee,  and  dress  my  hair, 
And  lace  my  waist,  use  perfumes  rare. 

With  otto  of  roses  rub  me  o*er. 

And  lavender  oil  on  my  feet  then  pour, 

That  I  mayn't  stink  or  nastily  smell, 

When  I  in  my  bridegroom's  arms  shall  dwell 

Already  are  flitting  the  dragonflies  blue, 
As  maids  of  honour  to  wait  on  me  too. 

Into  my  bridal  garland  they'll  twine 
The  blossoms  white  of  the  orange  so  fine. 

Full  many  musicians  are  asked  to  the  place, 
And  singers  as  well,  of  the  grasshopper  race. 

The  bittern,  drone,  hornet,  and  gadfly  all  come, 
To  blow  on  the  trumpet,  and  beat  the  drum- 
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JiATEST   POEMS.  529 

They're  all  to  strike  up  for  the  glad  wedding  feast — 

The  gay-wingM  guests,  from  greatest  to  least, 

Are  coming  in  families  dapper  and  brisk, 

The  commoner  insects  amongst  them  frisk. 

The  grasshoppers,  wasps,  and  the  aunts,  and  the  cousina 

Are  coming,  whilst  trumpets  are  blowing  by  dozens. 

The  pastor,  the  mole,  in  black  dignified  state, 

Has  also  arriyed,  and  the  hour  grows  late. 

The  bells  are  all  sounding  ding-dong,  ding-a-dong — 

But  where's  my  dear  bridegroom  lingering  so  long  ? 

Ding  doug,  ding-adong,  sound  the  bells  all  the  day. 

The  bridegroom  however  has  flown  far  away. 

The  bells  are  all  sounding  ding-dong,  ding-a-dong— 

But  Where's  my  dear  bridegroom  lingering  so  long  ? 

The  bridegroom  has  meanwhile  taken  his  seat 

On  a  distfUQt  dunghill,  enjoying  the  heat. 

Seven  years  there  sits  he,  until  his  forgotten 

Poor  bride  has  long  been  dead  and  rotten. 

14.  MIML 
"  T'M  no  modest  city  creature 

X    "  By  the  hearth  demurely  spinning^ 
'^  But  a  free  cat  on  the  roof, 

'*  In  the  air,  with  manners  winning. 

*'  When  in  summer  nights  I'm  musing 

"  On  the  roof,  in  grateful  coolness^ 
<^  Music  in  me  purrs,  I  sing 

"  From  my  heart's  overpowering  fulness.** 

Thus  she  speaks,  and  from  her  bosom 
Wild  and  wedding-songs  stream  thickly. 

And  the  melody  allures 
All  the  cats  unmarried  quickly. 

Purring,  mewing,  thither  hasten 

All  tiie  young  cats,  plain  or  brindled. 
And  with  Mimi  join  in  chorus. 

Full  of  love,  with  passion  kindled. 

They  are  no  mere  virtuosos 

Who  profane,  for  sordid  wages, 
Music,  but  of  harmony 

Are  apostles  truQ.  and  sages.  ^        . 

2.»dbyL.oogie 


530  heinb's  poncs. 

They  no  instmments  tuse  ever, 
£ku^  is  his  6wil  flute  and  viol ; 

All  their  noBes  trumpets  are, 
Bellies,  drums,  and  no  denial. 

They  in  chorus  raise  their  yoices, 
In  one  general  intermezzo, 

Playing  fi^es,  as  if  by  Bach, 
Or  by  Guide  of  Arezzo. 


Wild  the  symphonies  they're  wngitig^ 

Like  capriccios  of  Beethoven,  i 

Or  of  Berlioz,  who's  excell'd  I 

By  their  strains  so  interwoven*  ! 

Wonderful  their  music's  might  is !  | 

Magic  notes  without  an  equal  I  ' 

E'en  tiie  heavens  they  shake,  the  stars  i 

All  turn  pallid  in  the  sequel.  ' 

When  the  magic  notes  she  heareth. 

And  the  wondrous  tones  delightfdl. 
Then  Selene  hides  her  face 

With  a  veil  of  clouds  so  frightful.  | 

But  the  nightingale  with  envy —  i 

Scandalous  old  prima  donna —  ' 

Turns  her  nose  up,  snuffs,  and  scorns  u 

Mimi's  voice,  to  her  dishonour.  I 

Never  mind  !     She'll  go  on  singing  i 

Spite  the  envy  of  Signora, 
Till  on  the  horizon's  seen, 

Smiling  rosily,  Aurora.  . 

15.  GOOD  ADVICE. 

CEASE  thy  blushes  and  thy  sorrow^ 
Boldly  woo,  and  not  aside,  | 

Civil  they  will  be  to-morrow, 

And  thou  thus  wilt  win  thy  bride* 

'Tis  the  fiddle  makes  the  revel, — 

Give,  then,  the  musicians  gold ; 
Though  thou  wish  them  at  the  devil. 

Kiss  thy  aunts-in-law,  though  old. 


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LATEST  POEMS.  531 

Give  a  prince  his  meed  of  laurel, 

Of  a  woman  speak  not  ill ; 
With  thy  sausages  don't  quarrel 

When  thou  luist  a  sow  to  kill. 
If  the  church  to  thee  is  hateful. 

All  the  more  attend  its  shrine ; 
To  the  parson  be  thou  grateful, 

Send  him,  too,  a  flask  of  wine. 
If  an  itching  chance  to  teaze  thee, 

Like  a  man  of  honour,  scratch; 
If  thy  shoe  be  tight  and  squeeze  thee, 

Slippers  get  with  all  despatch. 
If  thy  soup  has  too  much  seasoning. 

Be  not  in  an  angry  mood  ; 
Smiling  say,  insiiead  of  reasoning : 

"  Sweet  wife,  all  thou  cook'st  is  good.** 
If  thy  wife  a  wish  expresses 

For  a  shawl,  straight  buy  her  two ; 
Buy  her  golden  brooches,  dresses. 

Lace  and  jewels  not  a  few. 
If  thoult  give  this  plan  a  trial. 

Then,  my  friend,  thoult  surely  gain 
Heaven  to  bless  thy  self-denial. 

And  on  earth  to  peace  attain. 

16.  EEMINISCENCES  OF  HAMMONU.* 

OEPHAN  children  two  and  two. 
Wandering  gladly  on  we  view, 
All  of  them  blue  coats  are  wearing. 
All  of  them  red  cheeks  are  bearing-— 
0  the  pretty  orphan  children  I 
All  are  moved  when  thus  they  prattle^ 
And  the  money  boxes  rattle ; 
Liberal  alms  upon  them  flow. 
That  their  secret  sires  bestow, — 
0  the  pretty  orphan  children  I 
Women  of  a  feeling  heart 
Many  a  poor  child  kiss  apart. 
Kiss  his  driv*Uing  nose  (not  pleasant), 
Give  him  sweetmeats  as  a  present — 
0  the  pretty  orphan  childron  I 

*  The  tutelar  goddess  of  Hamburg.    See  Heine's  **  Geriiia!iy/  t 


632  Heine's  poems. 

One,  with  timid  face  but  willing, 
Throws  into  the  box  a  shilling, — 
For  he  has  a  heart, — then  gaily 
Follows  he  his  business  daiiy-^ 
0  the  pretty  orphan  children  I 

One  a  golden  lonis-d'or 
Next  bestows,  but  not  before 
Heavenward  looking,  hoping  blindly 
That  the  Lord  will  view  him  kindly— 
0  the  pretty  orphan  children  I 

Porters,  coopers,  working  men, 
Servants,  ms^e  to-day  again 
Holiday,  and  drain  their  glasses. 
Drinking  to  these  lads  and  lasses— 
0  the  pretty  orphan  children ! 

Tutelar  Hammonia 

Follows  them  incognita ; 

As  she  moves,  her  form  gigantic 

Sways  about,  in  manner  frantic — 

O  the  pretty  orphan  children ! 

In  the  green  field  where  they  went 
Music  fills  the  loffcy  tent, 
Ck)ver'd  o'er  with  flag  and  banner ; 
There  are  fed  in  sumptuous  manner 
All  these  pretty  orphan  children. 

There  in  lengthy  rows  they  sit, 

Eating  many  a  nice  tit-bit, 

Tarts  and  cakes  and  sweet  things  crunching, 

While  like  little  mice  they're  munching, — 

All  these  pretty  orphan  children. 

Now  my  thoughts  to  dwell  begin 
On  an  orphan-house  wherein 
There  no  feasting  is  or  gladness, 
Where  lament  in  ceaseless  sadness, 
Millions  of  poor  orphan  children. 

There  no  uniforms  are  seen, 
Many  want  their  dinner  e'en ; 
No  two  walk  together  yonder. 
Lonely,  sorrowfully  wandei 
Many  million  orphan  children.    ^ 

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LATEST  POEMS.  533 


i7.  THE  ROBBERS. 


WHILE  Laura's  arm,  with  tender  feeling, 
Embraced  me  on  tbe  couch,  the  fox 
Her  worthy  husband  from  my  box 
My  banknotes  quietly  was  stealing. 

My  pockets  now  have  got  no  cash  in  I 
Was  Laura's  kiss  a  simple  lie  ? 
^  Ahl  what  is  truth  ?     In  days  gone  by 

Thus  Pilate  ask'd,  his  hands  while  washing. 

This  eyil  world,  decay'd  and  rotten, 
I  soon  shall  ne'er  again  behold ; 
I  see  that  he  who  has  no  gold 

Will  very  soon  be  quite  forgotten. 

For  you,  pure  souls,  whose  habitation 
In  yonder  realms  of  light  I  see. 
My  bosom  yearns.    No  wants  have  yo. 

So  stealing  is  not  yoilr  vocation. 

18.  THE  YOUNG  OATS'  CLUB  FOR  POETRY-MUSIO 

THE  philharmonic  young  cats'  dub 
Upon  the  roof  was  collected 
To-night,  but  not  for  sensual  joys, 
No  wrong  could  there  be  detected. 

No  summer  night's  wedding  dream  there  was  dreamt, 
(  No  song  of  love  did  they  utter 

In  the  winter  season,  in  frost  and  snow, 
For  frozen  was  every  gutter. 

A  newborn  spirit  hath  recently 

Come  over  the  whole  cat-nation, 
But  chiefly  the  young,  and  the  young  cat  feels 

More  earnest  with  inspiration. 

The  frivolous  generation  of  old 

Is  extinct,  and  a  newborn  yearning, 
A  pussy-springtime  of  poetiy 

In  art  and  in  life  they're  learning. 

The  philharmonic  young  cats*  dub 

Is  now  returning  to  artless 
And  primitive  music,  and  naivete. 

From  modem  fftshions  all  hearUeet. 


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534  Heine's  poemsl 

It  seeks  iu  music  for  poeirj, 

Boolades  with  the  quavers  omitted ; 

It  seeks  for  poetry,  music-void. 
For  Yoice  and  instrument  fitted. 

It  seeks  for  genius's  sovereign  sway, 

Which  often  bungles  truly, 
Tet  oft  in  art  unconsciously 

Attains  the  highest  stage  duly. 

It  honours  the  genius  which  prefers 
Dame  Nature  to  keep  at  a  distance, 

And  will  not  show  off  its  learning, — in  fatii 
Its  learning  not  having  existence. 

This  is  the  programme  of  our  cat  club, 

And  with  these  intentions  elated, 
It  holds  its  first  winter  concert  to-night 

On  the  roof,  as  before  I  have  stated. 

Yet  sad  was  the  execution,  alas ! 

Of  this  great  idea  so  splendid ; 
I'm  sorry,  my  dear  friend  Berlioz, 

That  by  thee  it  wasn't  attended. 

It  was  a  charivari,  as  though 

With  brandy  elated  greatly. 
Three  dozen  pipers  struck  up  the  tune 

That  the  poor  cow  died  of  lately. 

It  was  an  utter  medley,  as  though 

In  Noah's  ark  were  beginning 
The  whole  of  the  beasts  in  unison 

The  Deluge  to  tell  of  in  singing, 

O  what  a  croaking,  snarling,  and  noise  t 

O  what  a  mewing  and  yelling  I 
And  even  the  chimneys  all  join'd  in. 

The  wonderM  chorus  swelling. 

And  loudest  of  all  was  heard  a  voice 
Which  sounded  languid  and  shrieking 

As  Sontag's  voice  becaone  at  the  last, 
When  utterly  broken  and  squeaking. 

The  whimsical  concert !  Methinks  that  they 
A  grand  Te  Demn  were  chanting, 

To  honour  the  triumph  o'er  reason  obtain'd 
By  commonest  frenzy  and  canting* 

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LATEST  POEOId.  535 

Perchance  moreover  the  young  cats'  club 

The  opera  grand  were  essaying 
That  the  greatest  pianist  of  Hungary* 

Composed  for  Charenton's  playing. 

It  was  not  till  the  break  of  day 

That  an  end  was  put  to  the  party ; 
A  cook  was  in  consequence  brought  to  bed 

Who  before  had  seem'd  well  and  hearty. 

The  lying-in  woman  lost  her  wits, 

Her  memory,  too,  was  affected. 
And  who  was  the  father  of  her  child 

No  longer  she  recollected. 

Say,  was  it  Peter  ?  Say,  was  it  Paul  ? 

Say  who  is  the  father,  Eliza  I 
**  O  Liszt,  thou  heavenly  cat  1"  she  said. 

And  simper'd  and  look'd  the  wiser. 

19.  HANS  LACK-LAND. 

FABEWELL,  my  wife,  said  Lack-Land  Hans, 
A  lofty  object  elates  me ; 
Far  different  goats  I  now  must  shoot, 
Far  different  game  awaits  me. 

m  leave  thee  behind  my  hunting  horn, 

Thou  canst  in  my  absence  daily. 
Play  merrily  on  it,  for  thou  hast  learnt 

To  blow  on  the  post-horn  gaily. 

m  also  leave  thee  behind  my  hound. 

To  be  the  castle's  defender ; 
My  German  folk,  like  futhf ul  dogs. 

Will  guard  me  and  never  surrender. 

They  offer  me  the  imperial  throne, 

Their  affection  is  almost  provo^ng 
My  image  is  graven  on  every  heart. 

And  every  pipe  they  are  smoking. 

Ye  Germans  are  a  wonderful  race. 

So  simple  and  yet  so  clever ; 
One  forgets  that  gunpowder,  but  for  yoOi 

Had  been  discovered  never. 

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536  Heine's  fokmb 

Your  emperop,— no,  your  father  I'll  be, 
^'our  welfjBxe  shall  be  my  sole  glory — 

0  blissful  thought !  it  makes  me  as  proud 
As  the  Gracchi's  mother  in  story. 

Ill  govern  my  people  by  feeling  alone, 
And  not  by  ihe  light  of  mere  reason ; 

1  never  could  bear  diplomacy, 
And  politics  hate  like  treason, 

A  huntsman  am  I,  and  Nature's  own  child. 
Who  had  in  the  forest  my  training, 

With  chamois  and  snipe  and  roebuck  and  boar,-— 
A  foe  to  all  nonsense  and  feigning. 

By  proclamations  I  never  enticed, 

No  printed  pamphlet  invented ; 
I  say :  '*  My  people,  the  salmon's  all  gone, 

"  With  cod  for  to-day  be  contented. 

"  If  I  don't  please  you  as  Emperor,  take 
''  The  first  donkey  that  comes  about  you ; 

**  I  had,  when  I  lived  in  the  Tyrol,  no  lack, 
**  I've  plenty  to  eat  without  you." 

Thus  speak  I,  but  now,  my  wife,  farewell, 

I  must  end  my  long  discourses ; 
My  father-in-law's  postilion's  outside, 

Awaiting  me  with  the  horses. 

Quick,  hand  me  over  my  travelling  cap, 
With  the  ribbon  all  black-red-golden; 

Thou'lt  see  me  soon  with  the  diadem, 
In  the  dress  imperial  and  olden. 

Thou'lt  see  me  in  the  Pluvial  too, 

The  purple  robe  so  glorious. 
The  gift  of  the  Saracen  Sultan  erst 

To  Otto,  the  CaBsar  victorious. 

Beneath,  I  shall  wear  the  Dalmatian  drefi% 
Whereon,  in  each  species  of  jewel, 

A  train  of  lions  and  camels  is  work'd, 
And  fabulous  monsters  and  cruel. 

Upon  my  breast  the  stole  I  shall  wear, 

Significantly  blended 
With  eagles  black  on  a  yellow  ground,-— 

The  garment  is  really  splendid. 


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LATEST  POEMS*  537 

Farewell  I  Posterity  shall  say 

I  reign'd  with  honest  intentioD. —  . 

Who  knows  ?    Posterity  perchance 
My  name  will  never  mention. 

20.  RECOLLECTIONS  FROM  KRAHWINKEL'S  DAYS 
OF  TERROR. 

AlT'E,  mayor  and  senate  of  the  town, 

▼  T   The  following  orders  now  lay  down 
To  all  who  love  their  city  truly, 
Enjoining  them  to  keep  them  duly. 

'Tis  foreigners  and  strangers  most 
Who  their  rebellious  spirit  boast ; 
Thank  God,  such  rogues  (to  put  it  fairly) 
The  children  of  the  soil  are  rarely. 

The  Atheists  likewise  are  concem'd ; 
For  he  by  whom  his  Gk)d  is  spum'd 
Is  sure  at  last  to  hold  detested 
All  those  on  earth  with  power  invested. 

Christian  and  Jew,  at  close  of  day, 
Must  shut  their  shops  without  delay ; 
**  Obey  your  rulers"  should  be  ever 
Both  Jew  and  Christian's  first  endeavour. 

No  person  shall  be  seen  at  night 

In  any  street  without  a  light ; 

Where  three  or  more  in  groups  are  standing, 

Let  them  at  once  b^n  disbanding. 

Each  one  must  bring  his  weapons  all. 
And  lay  them  down  in  the  guildhall ; 
And  every  kind  of  ammunition 
Is  subject  to  the  same  condition. 

He  who  in  any  public  spot 
Ventures  to  reason,  shall  be  shot ; 
He  who  by  gestures  dares  to  reason 
Shall  pay  the  penalty  of  treason. 

Confide  in  the  anthorities. 

So  gracious,  but  withal  so  wise. 

Who  rule  the  fortunes  of  the  city, 

And  hold  your  tongues,  or  more's  the  pity. 


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538  BXINB*8  POEMS. 

21.  THE  AUDESNOE. 

(An  old  ¥Me,) 

"  TTiL  let  not  my  cHildren,  like  Fharaoh,  bo  drown'd 
X  ^^  In  the  Nile's  deep  turbulent  water; 

**  Nor  am  I  a  tyrant,  like  Herod  of  old, 
*'  No  patron  of  children's  slaughter. 

"  I  will,  as  my  gracious  Saviour  did, 

''  Find  the  sight  of  the  children  pleasant ; 

''  So  suffer  the  children  to  come,  and  first 
'*  The  big  one,  the  Swabian  peasant." 

Thus  spake  the  monarch ;  the  chamberlain  ran. 

And  retum'd,  introducing  slowly 
The  stalwart  duld  £rom  Swabia's  land, 

Wbo  made  a  reverence  lowly. 

Thus  spake  the  king  :  ''  A  Swabian  art  thou  P 
"  There's  no  disgrace  in  that  surely."^ 

"  Quite  right !  I  was  bom  in  Swabia's  land," 
Beplied  the  Swabian  demurely. 

*^  Art  thou  from  the  seven  Swabians  sprung  ?" 
Afik'd  the  other. — "  In  truth  I'm  descended 

"  From  one  of  them  only,"  the  Swabian  replied, 
**  And  not  from  the  whole  of  them  blended." 

The  king  then  ask'd :  ''  Are  dumplings  this  year 

"  In  Swabia  as  usual  eaten  ?" — 
'^  I'm  obliged  for  the  question,"  the  Swabian  rejoin'd, 

''  They  are  not  easily  beaten." 

*^  And  do  ye  stiU  boast  big  men  ?"  next  said 

The  monarch. — "  Why,  just  at  present 
''  The  big  ones  are  scarce,  but  in  their  place 

<<  We've  &t  ones,"  answer'd  the  peasant* 

•*  Has  Menzel,"  added  the  king,  "  received 

"  On  his  ear  many  boxes  lately  ?" 
*^  I'm  obliged  for  the  question,"  the  Swabian  said, 

<<  The  former  ones  pimish'd  him  greatly." 

The  king  then  said,  "  Thou'rt  not  such  a  fool, 
'*  My  friend,  as  thou  fain  wouldst  persuade  me." 

^  That's  because  I  was  changed  in  my  cradle,"  said  he, 
''  By  the  cobolds,  who  different  made  me." 


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lATEST  POEMS.  539 

The  king  then  spake :  "  The  Swabians  are  wont 

'*  To  love  their  fiEitherland  dearly ; 
"  So  why  hast  then  left  thy  natiye  home  ? 

"  Explain  the  reason  clearly." 

The  Swabian  replied :  **  Each  day  I  had  nought 

"  But  turnips  and  sour-crout  ever ; 
'*  And  had  my  mother  but  cook'd  me  meat, 

**  I  had  left  my  fatherland  never."    . 

"  One  wish  I  will  grant  thee,"  the  monarch  then  said — 

Then  the  Swabian  in  deep  supplication 
Knelt  down  and  exclaim'd :  "  O,  Sire,  pray  grant 

"  Their  freedom  once  more  to  the  nation. 

*'  Freeborn  is  man,  and  Nature  ne'er  meant 

''  That  he  as  a  slave  should  perish ; 
"  O,  Sire,  restore  to  the  German  folk 

'*  The  rights  that  they  manfully  cherish  l" 

The  monarch  in  deep  amazement  stood. 

The  scene  was  really  enthraUing ; 
With  his  sleeve  the  Swabian  wiped  from  his  eye 

The  tear  that  was  wellnigh  falling. 

At  last  said  the  king :  *'  In  truth  a  fine  dream  t 
**  Farewell,  and  pray  learn  more  discretion ; 

'^  And  as  a  somnambulist  plainly  thou  art, 
'*  Of  thy  person  1*11  give  the  possession 

*'  To  two  trusty  gendarmes,  whose  duty  'twill  bo 

**  To  see  thee  safe  over  the  border — 
'*  Farewell  I  I  must  hasten  to  join  the  parade, 

**  The  drums  are  beating  to  order." 

And  so  this  affecting  audience  came 

To  a  most  affecting  conclusion. 
But  from  that  moment  the  monarch  allow'd 

No  more  of  his  children's  intrusion.* 

22.  KOBES  L 

IN  eighteen  hundred  and  forty-eight. 
When  passions  men's  minds  were  heating, 
The  German  nation's  parliament 
At  Frankfort  held  its  meeting. 

*  The  hero  of  this  story  is  the  well-known  Swabian  poe4 
QeotgQ  Herwegh. 

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540  HEINE*S  POEM& 

Jtust  at  this  time,  in  the  Senate^house 

Appeared  the  white  lady  ghcNstlj, 
The  spectre  that  heralds  the  coming  of  woe,— 

They  call  her  the  Housekeeper  mostly. 

By  night  they  say  in  the  Senate-house 
She  is  wont  to  make  her  appearance, 

Whenever  the  Gtermans  their  foolish  tricks  play 
With  extra  perseverance. 

I  saw  her  myself  at  the  selfsame  time 
As  she  roam'd  in  the  hours  of  slumber 

Through  the  silent  chambers,  wherein  were  piled 
The  middle  ages'  old  lumber. 

She  held  the  lamp  and  a  bunch  of  keys 

In  her  hands  so  pale  and  sickly ; 
She  open'd  the  presses  against  the  walls. 

And  the  chests  strew'd  around  her  thickly. 

There  lie  the  imperial  insignia  all, 

There  lies  the  bull  all-golden. 
The  sceptre,  the  regal  apple,  the  crown, 

And  more  of  such  fiEuicies  olden. 

There  lie  the  ancient  imperial  robes. 

The  purple  frippery  faded, 
The  German  kingdom's  wardrobe  in  fact, 

Now  rusted  and  rot-pervaded. 

The  Housekeeper  mournfully  shakes  her  head 
At  the  sight,  then  with  deep  displeasure 

She  suddenly  cries  at  the  top  of  her  voice : 
"  The  whole  of  them  stink  beyond  measure ! 

**  The  whole  of  them  stink  with  mice's  dung 
^'  And  rotten  and  mouldy's  the  ermine ; 

•*  And  aU  the  gaudy  trumpery  work 
"  Is  swarming  with  noxious  vermin. 

*'  In  truth,  on  this  splendid  ermine  dress, 

'*  Once  used  at  the  coronation, 
**  The  cats  of  the  Senate-house  district  are  wont 

"  To  lie,  as  their  lying-in  station. 

**  'Tis  useless  to  clean  them ;  I  pity  the  fate 

"  Of  the  Emperor  next  elected ; 
**  By  the  fleas  in  his  coronation  robe 

'*  His  health  will  be  surely  affected. 

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LATEST   POEMS.  541 

*^  And  know  ye,  that  all  the  people  must  scratclii 

"  Whenever  the  Emperor  itches — 
"  0  Grermans,  I  dread  the  princely  fleas 

**  Who  swallow  np  much  of  your  riches. 

"  Yet  what  is  the  ise  of  monarch  and  fleas  ? 

*'  For  rusty  are  now  and  all  rotten 
"  The  olden  costumes — By  modem  days 

''  Are  the  ancient  dresses  forgotten. 

"  The  German  poet  at  KyflTiauser  said 

'*  To  Barbarossa  quite  truly : 
"  *  I  find  that  we  want  no  Emperor  now, 

"  *  When  I  weigh  the  matter  duly.' 

"  But  if,  spite  of  all,  ye  an  empire  must  have, 

*'  With  an  Emperor  reigning  o*er  ye, 
**  My  worthy  Germans,  don't  suffer  yourselves 

**  To  be  snared  by  genius  or  glory. 

"  Choose  one  of  the  people  your  monarch  to  bo, 

**  All  sons  of  the  nobles  reject  ye ; 
'^  Select  not  the  lion,  select  not  the  fox, 

"  The  dullest  of  sheep  elect  ye. 

*^  Elect  as  your  Monarch  Colonia's  son, 

**  The  crown  to  dull  Kobes  awarding ; 
'*  The  genius  of  Dulness  well-nigh  is  he, 

"  His  people  he'll  ne'er  be  defrauding. 

**  A  log  is  ever  the  best  of  kings, 

"  As  Esop  has  shown  in  the  fable ; 
"  He  cannot  devour  us  poor  frogs  up, 

"As  the  stork  with  his  long  bill  is  able. 

'*  Be  sure  that  Kobes  no  tyrant  will  be, 

*'  No  Holof ernes  or  Nero ; 
*'  He  boasts  no  terrible  antique  heart, 

"  A  soft  modem  heart  has  our  hero. 

**  Though  vulgar  pride  might  scorn  such  a  hearty 

"  Yet  in  the  arms  of  the  helot 
♦*  Of  work  the  unfortunate  threw  himself, 

*'  Becoming  a  regular  zealot. 

"  The  men  of  the  journeymen's  Bwrschensehafi 

"  As  president  Kobes  elected ; 
**  He  shared  with  them  their  last  piece  of  bread, 

*•  They  held  him  vastly  respected. 

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542  Heine's  poe3«b. 

*<  Tbey  boasted  that  he  in  all  his  life 

*^  Had  never  been  at  college, 
**  And  out  of  his  head  composed  his  books 

''  By  the  light  of  intuitive  knowledge. 

'^  Yes,  his  consummate  ignorance 

'*  Was  the  fruit  of  his  own  endeavour ; 
*'  With  foreign  wisdom  and  training  he 

^'  Had  injured  his*  intellect  never. 

*'  From  abstract  philosophy's  influence  he 
'^  Kept  likewise  his  thoughts  and  his  spirit 

•'  Entirely  free. — Himself  he  remain'd ! 
"  Yes,  Eobes  has  really  his  merit ! 

"  The  tear  of  the  usual  stereotype  form 

'*  In  his  beautiful  eye  is  gleaming, 
"  And  from  his  lips  incessantly 

*'  The  grossest  stupidity's  streaming, 

*'  He  prates  and  he  grins,  and  he  grins  and  prates, 
*•  His  words  with  long  ears  are  provided ; 

**  A  pregnant  woman  who  heard  him  speak. 
**  Gave  birth  to  a  donkey  decided. 

**  With  scribbling  books  and  knitting  he's  wont 

"  His  idle  hours  to  flavour ; 
^*  The  stockings  that  he  with  his  own  hands  knit 

'*  Have  met  with  particular  favour. 

"  To  devote  himself  wholly  to  knitting  he's  begg'd 

"  By  Apollo  and  all  the  Muses ; 
*'  They're  frighten'd  whenever  they  see  that  his  hand 

'•  A  goose-quill  laboriously  uses. 

"  His  knitting  recals  the  olden  time 

"  Of  the  Funken,* — ^who  all  stood  knitting 

**  While  mounting  guard, — these  men  of  Cologne 
**  No  means  of  amusement  omitting. 

**  If  Kobes  is  Emp'ror,  hell  surely  recal 

*'  To  life  these  Funken  deserving ; 
**  The  valiant  band  will  surround  his  throne, 

"  As  the  guard  imperial  serving. 

*  Funken  (or  Sparks)  was  the  name  given  to  the  soldiers  of 
Cologne  before  the  Bevolution,  who  used  to  knit  when  on  guard. 

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LATEST  POEMS.  543 

"  He  well  might  be  glad  to  go  at  their  head, 

"  And  march  over  France's  borders, 
"  And  Alsace,  Lorraine,  and  Burgundy  fair 

"  Bring  under  Germany's  orders. 

''  Yet  be  not  afraid,  at  home  he'll  remain^ 

''  Intent  on  a  scheme  long  suspended, 
**  A  lofty  idea,  the  completion,  in  fact, 

**  Of  Cologne  Cathedral  so  splendii 

'*  But  when  the  Cathedral's  quite  complete, 

**  Then  Kobes  will  get  in  a  passion, 
"  And  sword  in  hand,  will  bring  the  French 

^*  To  account  in  a  regular  fashion. 

"  Hell  take  Alsace  and  Lorraine  away 
**  (By  France  from  the  empire  estreated) ; 

'*  To  Burgundy,  too,  he'll  triumphantly  go, 
**  When  once  the  Cathedral's  complete. 

"  Ye  Germans,  pray  lose  not  your  senses  quite, 
"  If  an  Emperor's  needed,  I'll  name  him ; 

**  The  Carnival  King  of  Cologne  let  it  be, 
^'  As  Kobes  the  First  now  proclaim  him ! 

**  The  fools  of  the  Carnival  rout  at  Cologne, 
"  With  caps  and  bells  ringing  and  mocking, 

**  Shall  be  his  ministers  of  state, 
"  His  scutcheon  a  knitted  stocking. 

*^  Let  Drickes  be  Chancellor,  calling  himself 
*  "  Count  Drickes  of  Drickeshausen, 
**  And  Marizebill  the  Mistress  of  State, 
"  With  the  Emperor  fondly  carousing.* 

•*  Within  his  good  sacred  town  of  Cologne 

*'  Will  be  Kobes's  habitation ; 
♦*  And  when  the  Cologners  hear  the  glad  news, 

*^  They'll  have  an  illiunination. 

**  The  bells,  the  iron  dogs  of  the  air, 

**  Into  joyous  barks  will  be  breaking, 
**  And  the  three  holy  kings  from  the  limd  of  the  East 

*^  In  their  chapel  will  soon  be  awaking. 

*  Drickes  and  Marixebill  are  popular  masks  at  the  Oamiyul 
ftt  Gologne. 


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544  Heine's  poems. 

'  TLey*ll  step  outside  with  their  clattering  boneSg 
''  All  dancing  with  rapture  and  springing ; 

**  I  hear  them  the  Hallelujah's  strains 
"  And  Kyrie  Eleison  singing/' — 

Thus  spoke  the  dread  white  nightly  ghost 

With  loud  uproarious  laughter ; 
llirough  aU  the  resounding  halls  of  the  place 

The  echo  rang  wildly  long  after. 

13.  EPILOGUE. 

GRAVES  they  say  are  warm'd  by  gloij; 
Foolish  words  and  empty  story  I 
Better  far  the  warmth  we  prove 
From  a  cow-girl  deep  in  love, 
With  her  arms  around  us  flung, 
Becking  with  the  smell  of  dung. 
And  that  warmth  is  better  too 
That  man's  entrails  pierces  through 
When  he  drinks  hot  punch  and  wine^ 
Or  his  fill  of  grog  divine, 
In  the  vilest,  meanest  den 
'Mongst  the  thieves  and  scum  of  meb^ 
Who  escape  the  gallows  daily, 
But  who  breathe  and  live  ail-gaily. 
With  as  enviable  fate 
As  e'en  Thetis'  son  so  great. — 
Bightly  did  Pelides  say : 
Living  in  the  meanest  way 
In  the  upper  world's  worth  moif^ 
Than  beside  the  Stygian  shore 
King  of  shades  to  be ;  a  hero 
Such  as  Homer  sang  is  leio. 


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LATESPi   POEMS.  545 


ADDENDA  TO  THE  POEMS* 

THE  SONG  OF  SONGS. 

FAIE  woman's  body  is  a  song 
Inscribed  by  our  great  MaJker 
In  Nature's  migbty  album  erst, 
When  moved  to  life  to  wake  ber. 

Ab  yes  I  propitious  was  tbe  bour 
Wben  thus  be  show'd  compassion  I 

Tbe  coy  rebellious  stuff  be  worked 
In  true  artistic  fashion. 

Yes,  woman's  body  is,  'mongst  songs, 

Tbe  song  most  sweet  and  tender, 
And  wondrous  strophes  are  her  limbs, 

So  i^owy-white  and  slender. 

And  then  ber  neck,  her  glistening  neck, — 

0  what  a  godlike  notion  I — 
Where  the  main  thought,  her  little  bead, 

Kocks  with  a  grace^^l  motion. 

Like  polish'd  epigrams  one  loves 

Her  bosom's  rosebuds  dearly ; 
Enchanting  tbe  csesura  is 

That  parts  her  breasts  severely. 

The  song  has  flesh,  ribs,  hands,  and  feet. 

No  abstract  poem  this  is ! 
With  lips  that  rhyme  delidously 

It  smiles  and  sweetly  kisses. 

True  poetry  is  breathing  here, 

Grace  shines  in  each  direction ; 
Tbe  song  upon  its  forehead  bears 

Tbe  stamp  of  all  perfection. 

m  praise  thee,  Lord,  and  in  the  dust 

Will  humbly  kneel  to  show  it ; 
Bunglers  are  we,  compared  with  thee. 

Thou  glorious  heavenly  Poet. 

*  These  two  poems  were  fizet  published  in  the  Miitenmmanash 
tot  1854. 

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546  Heine's  poemb. 

Before  the  spleudonr  of  tliy  sozig 
111  bow  in  adoration, 

And  to  its  study  day  and  nigbi 
Pay  closest  application. 

Yes,  day  and  night  1*11  study  it, 
No  loss  of  time  admitting ; 

So  shall  I  soon  with  overwork 
Be  thinner  than  befitting. 


THE  SUTTLER  8  SONG. 

(From  the  Thirty  Years*  War.) 

THE  brave  hussars  I  dearly  love, 
I  love  each  gallant  fellow ; 
Without  distinction  I  love  them  all. 
The  blue  as  well  as  the  yellow. 

The  musketeers  I  dearly  love, 

I  love  the  musketeers,  too  ; 
The  ofl&cers,  privates,  and  recruits. 

And  those  of  older  years  too. 

The  in&ntry  and  cavalry— 

I  love  the  brave  fellows  sincerely ; 

And  then  the  artillery, — one  and  aJl, 
I  love  them  truly  and  dearly. 

I  love  the  Germans,  I  love  the  French, 
I  love  the  Italians  and  Dutchmen ; 

I  love  the  Bohemians,  Spaniards,  and  Swedes, 
I  love  both  many  and  much  men. 

Whatever  may  be  his  native  land, 
Whatever  his  faith  or  persuasion, 

Provided  a  man  is  sound  in  health, 
I  love  him  on  ev'ry  occasion. 

Beligion  and  country  are  nothing  more 

Than  his  outside  clothing. — God  bless  him! 

Away  with  his  covering,  that  I  to  my  heart 
Maj  fondly  and  warmly  press  him  1 

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LATEST  POEMS.  547 

A.  mortal  am  I,  and  only  too  glad 

With  any  mortal  to  dally ; 
And  as  for  the  man  wlio  can't  pay  on  the  spot, 

For  him  I  keep  a  tally. 

The  garland  gieen  in  front  of  my  tent 
In  the  light  of  the  son  smiles  gaily, 

And  I  am  now  drinking  malmsey  wine 
From  a  fresh-open'd  barrel  daily. 


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548 


POSTHUMOUS   POEMS. 


HORSE  AND  ASS. 

ATBAIN  was  rushing  along  one  day, 
With  carriages,  engine,  and  tender ; 
The  chimney  yomited  forth  its  smoke, 
Like  a  dashing  old  offender. 

The  train  pass'd  a  farmyard,  and  oyer  the  hedge 
A  grey  horse,  at  the  sound  of  the  whistle, 

Stretch'd  out  his  head ;  an  ass  stood  by. 
Demurely  chewing  a  thistle. 

With  wondering  gaze  the  horse  long  stared 
At  the  train ;  then  strangely  quivering 

In  every  limb,  he  sigh'd,  and  said : 
^'  The  sight  has  set  me  a-shivering  I 

"  I*m  sure  that  if  I  by  nature  had  been 
"  A  chesnut,  or  black,  or  bay  horse, 

"  My  skin  with  the  fright  its  colour  would  change, 
"  And  make  me  (as  now)  a  grey  horse. 

"  The  equestrian  race  is  doom'd,  beyond  doubt, 

"  To  be  swept  away  in  fate's  eddy ; 
"  Although  I*m  a  grey  horse,  I  cannot  but  see 

**  A  black  future  before  me  already. 

"  The  competition  of  these  machines 
"  Will  certainly  kill  us  poor  horses ; 

*'  For  riding  and  driving  will  man  prefer 
**  Iron  steeds,  if  so  great  their  force  is. 

**  And  if  man  can  get  on  without  our  help, 

"  Alike  for  riding  and  driving, 
"  Gbod-bye  to  our  oats,  good-bye  to  our  hay 

**  What  chance  have  we  of  surviving  ? 

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POSTHUMOUS   POEMS.  549 

**  Tho  heart  of  man  is  bard  as  a  ston^, 

"  He  gives  away  notbing  gratis ; 
"  They'll  drive  us  out  of  our  stables,  and  we 

"  Shall  starve — ^what  a  cruel  fate  'tis ! 

'*  We  cannot  borrow  and  cannot  steal 

'*  Like  mortals  whose  natures  are  blacker ; 

"  We  cannot  fawn  like  men  and  dogs, 
"  But  shall  fall  a  prey  to  the  knacker." 

Thus  grumbled  the  horse,  and  deeply  sigh'd,-— 

Meanwhile  the  ass  hard  by  him 
Had  quietly  chew*d  two  thistle-tops. 

As  if  nothing  could  terrify  him. 

He  presently  answer'd  in  dainty  tones, 
With  his  tongue  first  licking  his  muzzle : 

"  With  what  the  future  may  have  in  store, 
(<  My  brains  I  shall  not  puzzle. 

**  You  horses  proud  are  threaten'd,  no  doubt, 
*<  By  a  future  that's  far  from  pleasant  ; 

''  But  we  modest  asses  are  not  a&aid 
*'  Of  dangers  future  or  present. 

'*  That  grey  horses,  and  chesnut,  and  piebald,  and 
bla<^ 

'*  May  be  done  without,  true,  alas  !  is ; 
**  But  Mister  Steam,  with  his  chimney  long, 

*'  Can  never  replace  us  asses. 

•*  However  clever  may  be  the  machines 
'*  Made  by  man  with  Iiis  senses  besotted, 

'*  The  ass  as  his  portion  will  always  have 
^'  Sure  means  of  existence  allotted. 

*'  Its  asses  will  Heaven,  I  m  sure,  ne'er  desert, 
"  Who,  moved  by  a  calm  sense  of  duty, 

*'  Turn  ihe  mill  every  day,  as  their  fathers  have 
done, — 
"  A  sight  not  deficient  in  beauty. 

*'  The  mill-wheel  clatters,  the  miller  works  hard, 

*'  The  meal  in  the  sack  well  shaking, 
•*  And  people  eat  their  bread  and  their  rolls, 

"  As  soon  as  they've  finished  the  baking*    r^^^^oTp 


550  Heine's  poEHfs. 

**  lu  Nature's  old-fasbion'd  and  jogtrot  way 
'*  The  world  will  keep  spinning  for  oyer ; 

*'  And  as  changeless  eyen  as  Nature  herself 
"  The  ass  will  alter  neyer." 


MORAL. 

Gone  are  the  days  of  chiyalry, 
And  the  proud  steed  must  hungry  be ; 
But  L — ,  the  ass,  I  boldly  say, 
Will  neyer  want  his  oats  and  hay. 

THE  ASS-ELEOTION. 

BEING  tired  of  freedom  for  some  time  past 
The  beasts'  republic  decided 
To  be  with  a  single  ruler  at  last 
As  its  absolute  head  proyided. 

Each  kind  of  beast  prepared  for  the  strife, 

Electoral  billets  were  written ; 
Intrigues  on  eyery  side  were  rife, 

With  party  zeid  all  were  bitten. 

By  long-ear'd  gentry  at  its  head 

The  asses'  committee  was  aided ; 
Cockades,  whose  colours  were  black,  gold,  and  red,* 

They  boastfully  paraded. 

A  small  party  there  was  of  friends  of  the  horse, 

Who  yet  were  afraid  of  yoting. 
So  greatiy  they  dreaded  the  outcry  coarse 

The  long-ear'd  party  denoting. 

But  when  one  of  them  yentured  the  horse  to  name 

As  a  candidate,  greater  and  greater 
Wax'd  the  noise,  and  an  old  long-ear,  to  his  8hame» 

Shouted  out  '*  Thou  art  only  a  traitor. 

*'  A  traitor  art  thou,  in  thy  yeins  doth  not  flow 

"  One  drop  of  asses'  blood  proper ; 
**  No  ass  art  thou,  and  I  almost  know 

"  That  a  foreign  mare  was  thy  dropper ! 

*  The  national  oolours  of  Germanar^ 

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POSTHUMOUS  POEMS.  551 

*^  From  tbe  zebra  percbance  thou  art  sprang ;  thy  striped 
liide 

"  Quite  answers  the  zebra's  description ; 
**  The  nasal  twang  of  thy  voice  is  allied 

'*  To  the  Hebrew  as  well  as  Egyptian. 
*'  And  if  not  a  stranger,  thon  art,  thou  must  own^ 

*'  A  dull  ass,  of  an  intellect  paltry ; 
''  The  depths  of  ass-nature  to  thee  are  unknown 

"  Thou  hear'st  not  its  mystical  psalt'ry. 
*^  But  with  sweet  stupefaction  my  soul  drinks  in 

'^  That  sound  which  all  others  siurpasses ; 
"  An  ass  am  I,  and  each  hair  in  the  skin 

'^  Of  my  tail  the  hair  of  an  ass  is. 
**  I  am  not  a  Papist,  I  am  not  a  slave, 

'*  A  Grerman  ass  am  I  solely ; 
''  The  same  as  my  fathers,  who  all  were  so  brave, 

"  So  thoughtful,  demure,  and  so  holy. 
*'  They  were  not  addicted  to  doing  ill, 

*'  Or  practising  gallantry  gaily ; 
^  But  trotted  off  with  the  sack  to  the  mill 

'^  In  frolicsome  fashion  daily. 
"  Our  fathers  still  live.     In  the  tomb  only  lie 

"  Their  skins,  their  mortal  covering ; 
'*  Their  happy  spirits,  high  up  in  the  dcy, 

'*  Complacently  o'er  us  are  hovering. 
'*  Ye  glorified  asses,  ye  need  not  doubt 

'*  That  we  fain  would  resemble  you  ever, 
''  And  from  the  path  that  duty  points  out 

"  We'll  swerve  a  finger's  breadth  never. 
**  0  what  a  delight  an  ass  to  be, 

«<  From  such  long-ear'd  worthies  descended ! 
*•  From  every  house-top  I'd  fain  shout  with  glee  t 

•'  *  An  ass  I  was  bom — how  splendid  f 
^  The  noble  jackass  who  gave  me  birth 

'*  Was  of  genuine  German  extraction ; 
**  From  my  mother,  a  German  ass  of  worth, 

**  My  milk  suck'd  I  with  great  satisfaction. 
*'  An  ass  am  I,  and  folly  intend, 

**  Like  my  fathers  who  now  are  departed, 
**  To  stand  by  the  asses,  yes,  stand  to  the  end 

*'  By  the  asses  so  dear  and  true-hearted. 

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652  heinb'b  poems. 

'^  And  since  I*m  an  asB,  I  advise  jon  all  round 
''  To  choose  your  king  from  the  asses ; 

**  A  mighiy  ass-kingdom  we  thus  will  fonnd, 
''  They  being  the  goyemipg  classes. 

*'  We  all  are  asses.    Hee-ha  !  Hee-ha ! 

"  As  ostlers  we  will  not  demean  us ; 
*'  Away  with  the  horses !  Long  live,  hurrah, 

"  The  king  of  the  asinine  genus  !*' 

Thus  spake  the  patriot    Through  the  hall 

The  asses  cheer*d  him  proudly ; 
They  all,  in  fact,  were  national. 

And  with  their  hoofs  stamped  loudly. 

An  oaken  wreath  on  the  orator's  head 

They  put  as  a  decoration  ; 
He  wagg*d  his  tail  (though  nothing  he  said) 

With  evident  gratification. 

BERTHA 

SHE  seem'd  so  gentle,  she  seem'd  so  good, 
An  angel  I  thought  my  lover ; 
She  wrote  the  dearest  letters  to  me, 
With  kindness  teeming  all  over. 

The  wedding  was  very  soon  to  take  place, 

Her  relations  heard  this  by  dozens ; 
My  Bertha  was  a  silly  thing, 

For  she  listened  to  aunts  and  cousins. 

She  kept  not  her  word,  she  broke  her  oath. 

And  yet  I  have  been  forgiving ; 
Had  I  married  her  first,  I  ne'er  should  have  known 

Either  pleasure  or  love  while  living. 

When  I  of  a  fjEiithless  woman  think, 

I  think  of  Bertha  the  faithless ; 
The  only  wish  I  have  left,  is  that  she 

May  pass  through  her  confinement  scathelesB. 

IN  THE  CATHEDBAL.    . 

BEFOEE  me  the  sexton's  daughter  fair 
Through  the  sacred  edifice  skipped  ; 
Her  siae  was  small,  and  light  her  hair. 
From  her  neck  her  kerchief  had  slipped. 

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POSTHUMOUS  POEMS.  553 

In  tlie  old  cathedral  for  sixpence  I  got 

A  sight  of  its  marvellous  creatures, 
Its  tombs,  lights,  crosses ;  I  tum'd  quite  hot 

When  I  gazed  on  Elspoth's  features. 

And  once  again  I  stared  about 

At  the  sacred  relics  entrancing ; 
In  their  tmder-petticoats  all  trick'd  out, 

On  the  window  the  women  were  dancing. 

The  sexton's  little  daughter  fair 

Stood  by  me,  while  thus  I  inspected. 
She  had  a  very  pretty  pair 

Of  eyes,  wherein  ail  was  reflected. 

Before  me  the  sexton's  daughter  fair 

From  the  sacred  edifice  skipped  ; 
Her  mouth  was  small,  her  neck  was  bare, 

From  her  bosom  her  kerchief  had  slipped. 

THE  DRAGONFLY 

THE  dragonfly  blue's  all  the  fashion 
In  beetle-land,  in  the  present  day ; 
The  butterflies  their  addresses  pay 
To  the  beauty  with  amorous  passion. 

Her  hips  are  excessively  slender, 

She  wears  a  gauze  dress  of  delicate  hue, 
With  very  symmetrical  movements  too 

She  flutters  about  in  splendour. 

Her  colour'd  admirers  hover 

In  her  train,  and  many  a  young  gallant 

Thus  swears :  '^  111  Holland  give,  and  Brabanl^ 

*'  If  thou  wilt  be  my  lover." 

She  answers  (but  how  insincerely!) : 

"  Brabant  and  Holland  are  nothing  to  me, 
"  I  want  but  a  spark  of  light,  to  see 

In  my  little  chamber  clearly." 

When  she  imposes  this  duty, 

Her  lovers  hasten  to  join  in  the  race. 

And  eagerly  seek,  from  place  to  place^ 
A  spark  of  light  for  the  beauty*  ^         . 

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554  HXINlfs  POEKft. 

As  soon  as  one  sees  a  taper. 

He  blindly  rushes  on  to  his  doom, 

And  the  crael  flames  the  victim  consame. 

And  his  loving  heart,  like  paper. 

«  «  «  » 

It  comes  from  Japan,  this  fable, 

Tet  even  in  Germany,  my  dear  child, 
Are  plenty  of  dragonflies,  devilish  wild, 

Perfidious,  and  unstable. 

OLD  SCENTS. 

THE  nosegay  Matilda  twined  for  me, 
And  smilingly  offer'd  entreatingly, 
I  push'd  away,  o'erpower*d  completely 
By  the  sight  of  the  flowers  that  blossom'd  so  sweetly. 

At  the  scent  of  the  flowers,  my  tears  fast  flow, — 
I  feel  that  in  all  this  fair  world  below, 
Its  beauty,  sunlight,  joy,  love  are  bereft  me. 
And  nought  but  its  bitter  tears  are  left  me. 

They  tell  me  that  I  no  longer  share 
A  part  in  life  and  its  circle  fair, 
That  I  belong  to  death's  kingdom  dreary, 
Yes,  I,  a  corpse  imburied  and  weary. 

How  happy  was  I  when  erst  I  saw 

The  dance  of  rats  at  the  Opera ! 

But  now  I  hear  the  odious  scuffling 

Of  churchyard  rats  and  grave-moles  shuffling. 

The  scent  of  the  flowers  recalls  again 

A  perfect  ballet,  a  joyous  train 

Of  recollections  perfumed  and  glowing, 

From  the  hidden  depths  of  the  past  overflowing^ 

To  sound  of  comet  and  castanet, 
In  spangled  dresses  (full  short,  I  regret), — 
Yet  all  their  toying,  each  laugh,  each  titter, 
Can  only  render  my  thoughts  more  bitter. 

Away  with  the  flowers  I  O,  how  I  abhor 
The  scent  that  maliciously  tells  once  more 
Of  days  long  vanished  and  hours  of  gladness— 
I  weep  at  the  thought  with  speechless  sadness. 

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POSTHUMOUS  POEMS.  555 


MISEHEBE. 


THE  sons  of  Fortune  I  envy  not 
For  their  lives,  in  pleasure  vying, 
I  envy  them  only  their  happy  dea^, 
Their  easy  and  painless  dying. 

In  gala  dresses,  with  garlanded  heads, 

Their  lips  in  laughter  extended. 
They  joyously  sit  at  the  banquet  of  life, — 

The  sickle  fells, — all  is  ended ! 

In  festal  attire,  with  roses  adom'd, 

Still  blooming  with  life,  these  glad  mortals, 

These  fav'rites  of  fortune  reach  at  last 
The  shadowy  realm's  dark  portals. 

They  neW  were  disfigured  by  fever's  attack. 

They  die  with  a  joyous  demeanour. 
And  gladly  are  welcomed  at  her  sad  court 

By  Proserpine,  hell's  Czarina. 

O  how  I  envy  a  fate  like  theirs  I 

Seven  years  I  daily  languish 
For  death,  as  on  the  ground  I  writhe 

In  bitter  and  speechless  anguish. 

0  God !  my  agony  shorten,  that  I 
May  be  buried, — my  sole  ambition. 

Thou  knowest  that  I  no  talent  possess 
For  filling  a  martyr's  position. 

1  feel  astonished,  gracious  Lord, 
At  a  course  so  unconsequential ; 

Thou  madest  a  joyous  poet,  without 
That  joy  that  is  so  essentiaL 

My  torments  blunt  each  feeling  of  mirth. 

And  melancholy  make  me ; 
Unless  I  get  better  ere  long,  to  the  faith 

Of  a  Catholic  I  must  betake  me. 

Like  other  good  Christians,  I  then  shall  howl 

In  thine  ears  my  wailings  dreary — 
The  best  of  humorists  then  will  be  lost 

For  ever — O  Miserere . 

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566  heink'b  poems. 

TO  MATILDA. 

I  WAS,  dear  lamb,  ordain'd  to  be 
A  shepberd  bere,  to  lyatcb  o'er  tbee ; 
I  Lourisb'd  tbee  witb  mine  own  bread, 
Witb  water  from  tbe  fountain  bead. 

And  wben  the  winter  storm  roar*d  loudly, 
Against  my  breast  I  warm*d  tiiee  proudly ; 
Tbere  beld  I  tbee  encircled  well 
Wbilst  rain  in  torrents  round  us  fell ; 
Wben,  tbrougb  its  rocky  dark  bed  pouring 
Tbe  torrent,  witb  tbe  wolf,  was  roaring, 
Tbou  feared'st  not,  no  muscle  quiver'd. 
E'en  wben  tbe  bigbest  pine  was  sbiver'd 
By  tbe  fork'd  flasb — witbin  mine  arm 
Tbou  slept'st  in  peace  witbout  alarm. 

My  arm  grows  weak,  and  fast  draws  near 
Pale  deatb !     My  sbepberd's  task  so  dear, 
And  pastoral  care  approacb  tbeir  end. 
Into  Tby  bands,  God,  I  commend 
My  staff  once  more.    O  do  Tbou  guard 
My  lamb,  wben  I  beneatb  tbe  sward 
Am  laid  in  peace,  and  suffer  ne'er 
A  tbom  to  prick  ber  any  wbere. 

From  tbomy  bedges  guard  ber  fleece, 
May  quagmires  ne'er  disturb  ber  peaoe^ 
May  &ere  spring  up  beneatb  ber  feet 
An  ample  crop  of  pasture  sweet, 
And  let  ber  sleep  witbout  alarm. 
As  erst  sbe  slept  witbin  mine  arm ! 

FOR  THE  "MOUCHE."* 

I  HAD  a  dream.     It  was  a ,  summer's  nigbt, 
And  in  tbe  moonligbt,  pale  and  weatberbeaten, 
Lay  buildings,  relics  of  past  ages  brigbt, — 

Tbe  style,  renaissant,  of  tbese  wrecks  time-eaten. 

*  This  was  the  nickname  of  a  young  lady  whose  acqnaintaiioe 
Heine  made  towards  the  end  of  his  life,  who  attended  him  in 
his  last  illness,  and  for  whom  he  felt  a  strong  affection.  The 
present  poem  was  the  last  composition  of  Heine,  and  was  written 
only  two  or  three  weeks  before  his  death.  It  is  undoubtedly  one 
of  the  finest  of  his  works. 


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POSTHUMOUS   POEMS.  557 

And  here  and  there,  with  stately  Doric  head* 
Eose  single  columns  &om  the  mass  there  lying, 

And  on  the  firmament  high  o'er  them  spread 
Grazed  they,  as  if  its  thunderbolts  defying. 

In  broken  fragments  lay  there  on  the  gronnd. 
Mingled  with  many  a  portal,  many  a  gable, 

8cnlptiires  where  man,  beast,  centaur,  sphinx  were  f ound. 
Chimera,  satyr, — creatureis  of  old  fabla 

The  contrasts  there  presented  were  grotesque^ 
The  emblems  of  Judaea's  God  combining 

With  Grecian  grace,  in  fashion  arabesque 

The  iyy  roxmd  them  both,  its  tendrils  twining. 

A  fair  sarcophagus  of  marble  white 

Amid  the  ruins  stood,  xmmutilated ; 
And  in  the  coffin  lay  a  corpse  in  sight. 

Of  features  mild,  with  sadness  penetrated. 

The  power  supporting  it  appeared  supplied 

By  Caryatides,  with  necks  extended ; 
And  many  a  bas-relief  on  either  side 

Was  seen,  of  chisell'd  figures  strangely  blended. 

The  glories  of  Olympus  there  saw  I, 

With  all  its  heathen  deities  misguided ; 
Adam  and  Eve  were  there,  decorously 

With  figleaf  aprons  round  their  loins  provided. 

Troy's  taking  and  Troy's  burning  here  were  seen. 
Hector  and  Helen,  Paris  (that  wild  gay  man) ; 

Moses  and  Aaron  also  stood  between. 

With  Esther,  Judith,  Holofemes,  Haman^ 

God  Amor  also  had  his  place  hard  by, 
Phoebus,  Apollo,  Vulcan,  Madam  Venus, 

Pluto,  Proserpina,  and  Mercury, 

Grod  Bacchus,  and  Priapus,  and  Silenos. 

Likewise  was  Balaam's  ass  omitted  not,  — 

(The  ass  for  speaking  seem'd,  in  fact,  created), 

And  Abraham's  temptation  too,  and  Lot, 
Who  by  his  daughters  was  intoxicated. 

Herodias'  daughter's  dance  was  shown  as  well. 
The  Baptist's  head  was  in  the  charger  giveii ; 

The  monster  Satan  too  was  there,  and  hell, 
And  Peter,  with  the  heavy  keys  of  heaven. 

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558  Heine's  poems. 

And  next  in  order  saw  I  scnlptnred  there 

The  loyes  of  Jove,  with  his  yile  actions  blending ; 

How  as  a  swan  he  ravish'd  Leda  fair, 
And  Danae,  in  golden  shower  descending. 

The  wild  hunt  of  Diana  was  displayed, 

With  her  fleet  dogs,  and  nymphs  attired  so  trimly ; 
And  Hercules,  in  woman's  clothes  array'd, 

Distaff  on  arm,  the  spindle  whirling  nimbly. 

And  next  was  Sinai's  mountain  to  be  view'd, 
And  Israel  near  it,  with  his  oxen  lowing ; 

The  Lord  a  child  within  the  temple  stood, 

Disputing  with  the  doctors  proud  and  knowing. 

But,  strange  to  tell,  when  I  had  dreamily 

These  forms  a  while  observed,  in  thought  suspended, 

I  suddenly  conceived  myself  to  be 

The  corpse,  in  that  fair  marble  tomb  extended. 

And  at  the  head  of  this  my  grave  there  stood 
A  flower  full  fair^  of  strange  conjuration ; 

Its  leaves  were  yellow-tinged  and  violet-hued, 
The  flower  possessed  a  wondrous  fascination. 

*Tis  by  the  name  of  passion-flower  well  known, 
On  Golgotha,  they  say,  'twas  first  created 

The  day  they  crucified  God's  only  Son, 
And  the  Eedeemer's  body  lacerated. 

Bloodwitness  doth  this  flower  now  bear,  they  say ; 

Each  instrument  of  torture  then  invented 
And  used  at  His  sad  martyrdom  that  day. 

Is  in  its  calyx  duly  represented. 

Yes !  every  passion-attribute  adorns 

The  flower,  each  emblem  of  their  cruel  malice, — 
For  instance,  scourge  and  rope  and  crown  of  thorns. 

The  hammer  and  the  nails,  the  cross,  th.e  chaUce 

Such  was  the  flower  which  at  my  grave  did  stand. 
And  o'er  my  body  bending  with  compassion. 

As  with  a  woman's  sorrow,  fiss'd  my  hand. 
My  eyes,  and  forehead,  in  sad  silent  fashion. 

But  O,  my  dream's  strange  magic  I     Wondrously 
The  passion-flower,  the  yellow-hued  and  rare  one, 

Changed  to  a  woman's  likeness, — ah  !  and  she. 

She  was  my  loved  one.  she  was  mine  own  fedr  one ! 

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POSTHXTMOUS  POEMS.  559 

Thou  wert  the  flower,  yes,  thou,  my  darling  child  I 
At  once  I  knew  thee  by  thy  kisses  yearning ; 

No  lips  of  flowers  so  tender  are  and  mild, 
No  tears  of  flowers  so  flery  are  and  burning. 

Although  mine  eyes  were  closed,  my  spirit  gazed 
With  steadiness  upon  thy  face  entrancing ; 

Thou  look'dst  at  me  with  raptured  look  amazed, 
Strangely  illumined  in  the  moonlight  glancing. 

No  words  we  spake,  and  yet  my  heart  could  see 
The  thoughts  that  in  thy  mind  in  silence  hover'd ; 

A  word  when  spoken  has  no  modesty, 

By  silence  is  love's  modest  blossoms  cover'd. 

Voiceless  our  converse  I    Wondrous  doth  it  seem 

How  in  our  silent,  tender  conversation 
The  time  pass'd.  in  that  summer  night's  fair  dream. 

When  joy  commingled  was  with  consternation. 

That  which  we  spoke  of  then,  no*er  seek  to  learn. 
The  glow-worm  ask,  why  in  the  grass  it  gloweth. 

The  torrent,  why  it  roareth  in  the  bum, 

The  west  wind,  why  it  waileth  as  it  bloweth. 

Ask  the  carbuncle  why  it  gleams  so  bright. 
The  rose  and  violet,  why  so  sweetly  scented ; 

But  ask  not  what,  beneath  the  moon's  soft  light, 
The  martyr-flower  talk'd  with  her  love  lamented ! 

1  cannot  tell  how  long  it  was  that  I 

Enjoy'd,  as  in  the  marble  tomb  I  slumber'd, 

That  beauteous,  happy  dream.     It  fleeted  by. 
Too  soon  the  moments  of  my  rest  were  numbered. 

Death  with  thy  gravelike  silence !  Thou  alone 
Canst  give  us  pleasure  in  a  lasting  fashion ; 

Vain  barbarous  fife,  for  joy  is  ever  known 
To  give  us  restless  bliss,  convulsive  passion. 

Alas,  alas !  my  happiness  soon  fled. 

For  suddenly  arose  a  noise  exciting, 
It  was  a  savage  conflict,  fierce  and  dread  — 

Ah,  my  poor  flower  was  scared  by  all  this  fighting  j 

Yes !  there  arose  outside,  with  hideous  yell, 
A  quarrelling,  a  yelping,  and  a  scolding ; 

Methought  that  many  a  voice  I  knew  full  well, — 
It  was  the  bas-relief l  my  tomb  enfolding  I 

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560  heime's  POEics. 

Is  the  stone  haunted  by  those  risions  wan  ? 

And  are  those  marble  phantoms  all  disputing  ? 
The  fearful  clamour  of  the  wood-god  Pan, 

Moses's  fierce  anathemas  confuting^ 

Alas !  this  contest  ne'er  will  ended  be^ 
The  True  and  Beautiful  will  wrangle  ever  I 

Greeks  and  Barbarians  in  wild  rivalrf 

The  ranks  of  man  are  always  doom'd  to  sever. 

They  cursed  and  raved.    No  end  would  there  have  been 
To  this  long  squabble,  and  their  passion  towering, 

Had  Balaam's  ass  not  come  upon  the  scene, 
The  voices  of  the  gods  and  saints  o'erpowering. 

The  stupid  beast,  with  his  disgusting  brag, 
-  That  sobbing  sound  of  sheer  abomination, 
Made  me  cry  out  in  terrible  dismay, 
And  I  awoke  at  last  in  desperation.. 


THE  ENB. 


IAMDON:   printed  by  WILLIAM  CLOWES  AND  SONS,  LIMITBO^ 
STAMFORD  STRBBT  AND  CHARING  CKOJUt. 


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