www.readbookonline.org
Home > Authors Index > Johann Wolfgang von Goethe > Trilogy of Passion > Content of selected page

Trilogy of Passion by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

III - Atonement

Fictions/Novels
Short stories
Poems
Essays
Plays

III - Atonement

[Composed, when 74 years old, for a Polish lady, who excelled in playing on the pianoforte.]


PASSION brings reason--who can pacify

An anguish'd heart whose loss hath been so great?
Where are the hours that fled so swiftly by?

In vain the fairest thou didst gain from fate;
Sad is the soul, confused the enterprise;

The glorious world, how on the sense it dies!

In million tones entwined for evermore,

Music with angel-pinions hovers there,
To pierce man's being to its inmost core,

Eternal beauty has its fruit to bear;
The eye grows moist, in yearnings blest reveres
The godlike worth of music as of tears.

And so the lighten'd heart soon learns to see

That it still lives, and beats, and ought to beat,
Off'ring itself with joy and willingly,

In grateful payment for a gift so sweet.
And then was felt,--oh may it constant prove!--
The twofold bliss of music and of love.


1823.

Content of III - Atonement
-THE END-
[Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's poem collection: Trilogy of Passion]



Read another book by author
Read previous: II - Elegy

Table of content of Trilogy of Passion



|| You're invited to visit our other site Coupons & Sale for
|| your shopping online - use coupons, find best deals, save time and money.

GO TO TOP OF SCREEN