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A poem by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |
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The God and the Bayadere |
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Title: The God and the Bayadere Author: Johann Wolfgang von Goethe [More Titles by Goethe] AN INDIAN LEGEND. [This very fine Ballad was also first given in the Horen.]
For the sixth time comes below, As a man of mortal birth,-- Like him, feeling joy and woe. Hither loves he to repair, And his power behind to leave; If to punish or to spare, Men as man he'd fain perceive.
When an outcast met his eyes,-- Fair in form, with painted face,-- Where some straggling dwellings rise. "Maiden, hail!"--"Thanks! welcome here! Stay!--I'll join thee in the road.' "Who art thou?"--"A Bayadere, And this house is love's abode."
Then she draws him, as in play, O'er the threshold eagerly: "Beauteous stranger, light as day Thou shalt soon this cottage see. I'll refresh thee, if thou'rt tired, And will bathe thy weary feet; Take whate'er by thee's desired, Toying, rest, or rapture sweet."--
Of a slave; he's straight obey'd. What at first had been but art, Soon is nature in the maid. By degrees the fruit we find, Where the buds at first obtain; When obedience fills the mind, Love will never far remain.
And his vows her heart enthrall; Feeling love's sharp pangs and blisses, Soon her tears begin to fall. At his feet she now must sink, Not with thoughts of lust or gain,-- And her slender members shrink, And devoid of power remain.
Early wakes, her slumbers fled, And she finds the much-loved guest On her bosom lying dead. Screaming falls she on him there, But, alas, too late to save! And his rigid limbs they bear Straightway to their fiery grave.
And her screams through air resound: "I must seek my spouse so dear, E'en if in the grave he's bound. Shall those limbs of grace divine Fall to ashes in my sight? Mine he was! Yes, only mine! Ah, one single blissful night!"
This one was thy husband ne'er; Live still as a Bayadere, And no duty thou need'st share. To deaths silent realms from life, None but shades attend man's frame, With the husband, none but wife,-- That is duty, that is fame.
By the cruel, heartless quire; And with arms outstretching far Leaps she on the glowing pyre. But the youth divine outsprings From the flame with heav'nly grace, And on high his flight he wings, While his arms his love embrace. 1797. -THE END- GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |