FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   374   375   376   377   378   379   380   381   382   383   384   385   386   387   388   389   390   391   392   393   394   395   396   >>  
main, For as with me so 'tis with him there-- In the skull's cavern seethes the brain. Oh, land of tents and arrows flying! Oh, desert people brave and wise! Thou Arab on thy steed relying,-- A poem in fantastic guise! Here in the dark I roam so blindly-- How cunning is the North, and cold! Oh, for the East, the warm and kindly, To sing and ride, a Bedouin bold! * * * * * WILD FLOWERS[44] (1840) Alone I strode where the broad Rhine flowed, The hedge with roses was covered, And wondrous rare through all the air The scent of the vineyards hovered. The cornflowers blue, the poppies too, Waved in the wheat so proudly! From a cliff near-by the joyous cry Of a falcon echoed loudly. Then I thought ere long of the old love song: Ah, would that I were a falcon! With its melody as a falcon free, And daring, too, as a falcon. As I sang, thought I: Toward the sun I'll fly, The very tune shall upbear me To her window small with a bolt in the wall, Where I'll beat till she shall hear me. Where the rose is brave, and curtains wave, And ships by the bank are lying, Two brown eyes dream o'er the lazy stream-- Oh, thither would I be flying! With talons long and strange wild song I'd perch me at her feet then, Or bold I'd spread my wings o'er her head, And gladly we should greet then. Though I gaily sang and gaily sprang, No pinions had I to aid me; I took my path through the corn in wrath-- So restless my love had made me. Then branch and tree all ruthlessly I stripped, nor ceased from my ranting Till with hands all torn and heart forlorn I sank down, weary and panting. While I heard the sound from all around Of frolicking lads and lasses, Alone for hours I gathered flowers And bound them together with grasses. O crude bouquet, O rude bouquet!-- Though many a girl despise it, Yet come there may the happy day When thou, my love, shalt prize it. In fitting place it well might grace An honest farmer's dwelling These cornflowers mild and poppies wild, With others past my telling; The osier fine, the blossoming vine, The meadow-sweetening clover-- All vagrant stuff, and like enough To him, thy vagrant lover. His dark eye beams, his visage gleams, His clenched hand--how it trembles!
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   374   375   376   377   378   379   380   381   382   383   384   385   386   387   388   389   390   391   392   393   394   395   396   >>  



Top keywords:

falcon

 

cornflowers

 

thought

 
bouquet
 
poppies
 

vagrant

 

Though

 
flying
 

spread

 

panting


gladly

 

branch

 

ruthlessly

 
restless
 

stripped

 

ranting

 

sprang

 
pinions
 

ceased

 
forlorn

blossoming

 
sweetening
 

meadow

 

telling

 
dwelling
 

farmer

 

clover

 

gleams

 

visage

 

clenched


trembles

 

honest

 

grasses

 

flowers

 
frolicking
 

lasses

 
gathered
 
despise
 
fitting
 

Bedouin


FLOWERS

 

kindly

 

strode

 
wondrous
 

vineyards

 

covered

 

flowed

 
cunning
 

arrows

 
desert