Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe > Text of Lines on seeing Schiller's Skull
A poem by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |
||
Lines on seeing Schiller's Skull |
||
________________________________________________
Title: Lines on seeing Schiller's Skull Author: Johann Wolfgang von Goethe [More Titles by Goethe] [This curious imitation of the ternary metre of Dante was written at the age of 77.]
I view'd the countless skulls, so strangely mated, Close pack'd they stand, that once so fiercely hated, Are lying cross'd,--to lie for ever, fated. No one now asks; and limbs with vigour fired, Vainly ye sought the tomb for rest when tired; Back into daylight by a force inspired; A glorious noble kernel it contained. Which not to all its holy sense explained, I saw a form, that glorious still remained. Gave me a blest, a rapture-fraught emotion, What mystic joy I felt! What rapt devotion! A look, how did it whirl me tow'rd that ocean Mysterious vessel! Oracle how dear! Except to steal thee from thy prison here Back to the air, free thoughts, and sunlight clear. Than when God-Nature will to him explain How steadfast, too, the Spirit-Born remain.
-THE END- GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |