FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   73   74   75   76   >>  
, and then to go. [Indoors, MISS JAY plays and sings: "In the Gloaming." STIVER stands listening in silent emotion. With the same melody she calls me yet Which thrilled me to the heart when first we met. [Lays his hand on FALK's arm and gazes intently at him. Oft as she wakens those pathetic notes, From the white keys reverberating floats An echo of the "yes" that made her mine. And when our passions shall one day decline, To live again as friendship, to the last That song shall link that present to this past. And what tho' at the desk my back grow round, And my day's work a battle for mere bread, Yet joy will lead me homeward, where the dead Enchantment will be born again in sound. If one poor bit of evening we can claim, I shall come off undamaged from the game! [He goes into the house. FALK turns towards the summer-house. SVANHILD comes out, she is pale and agitated. They gaze at each other in silence a moment, and fling themselves impetuously into each other's arms. FALK. O, Svanhild, let us battle side by side! Thou fresh glad blossom flowering by the tomb,-- See what the life is that they call youth's bloom! There's coffin-stench wherever two go by At the street corner, smiling outwardly, With falsehood's reeking sepulchre beneath, And in their blood the apathy of death. And this they think is living! Heaven and earth, Is such a load so many antics worth? For such an end to haul up babes in shoals, To pamper them with honesty and reason, To feed them fat with faith one sorry season, For service, after killing-day, as souls? SVANHILD. Falk, let us travel! FALK. Travel? Whither, then? Is not the whole world everywhere the same? And does not Truth's own mirror in its frame Lie equally to all the sons of men? No, we will stay and watch the merry game, The conjurer's trick, the tragi-comedy Of liars that are dupes of their own lie; Stiver and Lind, the Parson and his dame, See them,--prize oxen harness'd to love's yoke, And yet at bottom very decent folk! Each wears for others and himself a mask, Yet one too innocent to take to task; Each one, a stranded sailor on a wreck, Counts himself happy as the gods in heaven; Each his own hand from Paradise has driven, Then, splash! into the sulphur to the neck! But none has any inkling where he lies, Each thinks himself a knight of Paradise, And each sits smiling between howl an
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   73   74   75   76   >>  



Top keywords:

battle

 

Paradise

 

SVANHILD

 
smiling
 
killing
 

Whither

 

travel

 

Travel

 
equally
 

mirror


antics
 

STIVER

 

Gloaming

 

Heaven

 

living

 

listening

 

stands

 

season

 
reason
 

honesty


shoals

 

pamper

 

service

 

conjurer

 

Counts

 

heaven

 

driven

 

sailor

 

innocent

 

stranded


splash

 

sulphur

 
knight
 

thinks

 

inkling

 

Indoors

 

Stiver

 
Parson
 
comedy
 

decent


bottom

 
harness
 

silent

 

homeward

 
intently
 
Enchantment
 

evening

 

wakens

 

reverberating

 

passions