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song, all sword and flame!" Ha--you observe me passionate. I aim To curb these wild emotions lest they soar Or drive against my will. (So I have said These many years--and still they are not tame.) Scraps of a song keep rumbling in my head ... Listen--you never heard me sing before. When a false world betrays your trust And stamps upon your fire, When what seemed blood is only rust, Take up the lyre! How quickly the heroic mood Responds to its own ringing; The scornful heart, the angry blood Leap upward, singing! Ah, that was how it used to be. But now, _Du schoner Todesengel_, it is odd How more than calm I am. Franz said it shows Power of religion, and it does, perhaps-- Religion or morphine or poultices--God knows. I sometimes have a sentimental lapse And long for saviours and a physical God. When health is all used up, when money goes, When courage cracks and leaves a shattered will, Then Christianity begins. For a sick Jew, It is a very good religion ... Still, I fear that I will die as I have lived, A long-nosed heathen playing with his scars, A pagan killed by weltschmerz ... I remember, Once when I stood with Hegel at a window, I, being full of bubbling youth and coffee, Spoke in symbolic tropes about the stars. Something I said about "those high Abodes of all the blest" provoked his temper. "Abodes? The stars?" He froze me with a sneer, "A light eruption on the firmament." "But," cried romantic I, "is there no sphere Where virtue is rewarded when we die?" And Hegel mocked, "A very pleasant whim. So you demand a bonus since you spent One lifetime and refrained from poisoning Your testy grandmother!" ... How much of him Remains in me--even when I am caught In dreams of death and immortality. To be eternal--what a brilliant thought! It must have been conceived and coddled first By some old shopkeeper in Nuremberg, His slippers warm, his children amply nursed, Who, with his lighted meerschaum in his hand, His nightcap on his head, one summer night Sat drowsing at his door. And mused, how grand If all of this could last beyond a doubt-- This placid moon, this plump _gemuthlichkeit_; Pipe, breath and summer never going out-- To vegetate through all eternity ... But no such everlastingness for me! God, if he can, keep me from such a blight. _Death, it
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