FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   298   299   300   301   302   303   304   305   306   307   308   >>  
won: To many millions space I thus should give, Though not secure, yet free to toil and live; Green fields and fertile; men, with cattle blent, Upon the newest earth would dwell content, Settled forthwith upon the firm-based hill, Up-lifted by a valiant people's skill; Within, a land like Paradise; outside, E'en to the brink, roars the impetuous tide, And as it gnaws, striving to enter there, All haste, combined, the damage to repair. Yea, to this thought I cling, with virtue rife, Wisdom's last fruit, profoundly true: Freedom alone he earns as well as life, Who day by day must conquer them anew. So girt by danger, childhood bravely here, Youth, manhood, age, shall dwell from year to year; Such busy crowds I fain would see, Upon free soil stand with a people free; Then to the moment might I say; Linger awhile, so fair thou art! Nor can the traces of my earthly day Through ages from the world depart! In the presentiment of such high bliss, The highest moment I enjoy--'tis this. (FAUST _sinks back, the_ LEMURES _lay hold of him and lay him upon the ground_.) * * * * * [Footnote 1: For lack of space, scientists and historians have been excluded.] [Footnote 2: The chief original sources for the life of Goethe are his own autobiographic writings, his letters, his diaries, and his conversations. Of the autobiographic writings the most important are (1) _Poetry and Truth from my Life_, which ends with the year 1775; (2) _Italian Journey_, covering the period from September, 1786, to June, 1788; (3) _Campaign in France_ and _Siege of Antwerp_, dealing with episodes of the years 1792 and 1793; (4) _Annals (Tag- und Jahreshefte)_, which are useful for his later years down to 1823. His letters, forty-nine volumes in all, and his diaries, thirteen volumes, are included in the great Weimar edition of Goethe's works. His conversations, so far as they were recorded, have been well edited by W. von Biedermann, ten volumes, Leipzig, 1889-1896.] [Footnote 3: This earlier version was long supposed to be lost, but in 1910 a copy of the original manuscript was discovered at Zuerich and published. Its six books correspond very nearly to the first four of the final version.] [Footnote 4: Translator: Charles Wharton Stork.] [Footnote 5: Adapted from E.A. Bowring.] [Footnote 6: Translator: E.A. Bowring. (All poems in this section translated by E.A. Bowring, W.E. Aytoun and Theodore Mar
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   298   299   300   301   302   303   304   305   306   307   308   >>  



Top keywords:

Footnote

 

volumes

 

Bowring

 
version
 
moment
 

people

 
Translator
 

original

 

Goethe

 

writings


conversations
 

diaries

 

autobiographic

 

letters

 

dealing

 
Antwerp
 

excluded

 

France

 

Annals

 
historians

episodes

 
important
 

covering

 

period

 

Journey

 

Italian

 

September

 
sources
 

Campaign

 

Poetry


correspond

 

published

 

Zuerich

 

manuscript

 

discovered

 

section

 

translated

 

Aytoun

 

Theodore

 

Adapted


Charles

 

Wharton

 

included

 

thirteen

 

scientists

 

Weimar

 
edition
 

earlier

 

supposed

 

Leipzig