FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1806   1807   1808   1809   1810   1811   1812   1813   1814   1815   1816   1817   1818   1819   1820   1821   1822   1823   1824   1825   1826   1827   1828   1829   1830  
1831   1832   1833   1834   1835   1836   1837   1838   1839   1840   1841   1842   1843   1844   1845   1846   1847   1848   1849   1850   1851   1852   1853   1854   1855   >>   >|  
A maiden blush o'er every feature straying, The Muse her gentle harp now lays down here, And stands before thee, for thy judgment praying,-- She waits with reverence, but not with fear; Her last farewell for his kind smile delaying. Whom splendor dazzles not who holds truth dear. The hand of him alone whose soaring spirit Worships the beautiful, can crown her merit. These simple lays are only heard resounding, While feeling hearts are gladdened by their tone, With brighter phantasies their path surrounding, To nobler aims their footsteps guiding on. Yet coming ages ne'er will hear them sounding, They live but for the present hour alone; The passing moment called them into being, And, as the hours dance on, they, too, are fleeing. The spring returns, and nature then awaking, Bursts into life across the smiling plain; Each shrub its perfume through the air is shaking, And heaven is filled with one sweet choral strain; While young and old, their secret haunts forsaking, With raptured eye and ear rejoice again. The spring then flies,--to seed return the flowers. And naught remains to mark the vanished hours. DEDICATION TO DEATH, MY PRINCIPAL. Most high and mighty Czar of all flesh, ceaseless reducer of empires, unfathomable glutton in the whole realms of nature. With the most profound flesh-creeping I take the liberty of kissing the rattling leg-bones of your voracious Majesty, and humbly laying this little book at your dried-up feet. My predecessors have always been accustomed, as if on purpose to annoy you, to transport their goods and chattels to the archives of eternity, directly under your nose, forgetting that, by so doing, they only made your mouth water the more, for the proverb--Stolen bread tastes sweetest--is applicable even to you. No! I prefer to dedicate this work to you, feeling assured that you will throw it aside. But, joking apart! methinks we two know each other better than by mere hearsay. Enrolled in the order of Aesculapius, the first-born of Pandora's box, as old as the fall of man, I have stood at your altar,-- have sworn undying hatred to your hereditary foe, Nature, as the son of Hamilcar to the seven hills of Rome,--have sworn to besiege her with a whole army of medicines,--to throw up barricades round the obstinate soul,--to drive from the field the insolents who cut down your fees and cr
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1806   1807   1808   1809   1810   1811   1812   1813   1814   1815   1816   1817   1818   1819   1820   1821   1822   1823   1824   1825   1826   1827   1828   1829   1830  
1831   1832   1833   1834   1835   1836   1837   1838   1839   1840   1841   1842   1843   1844   1845   1846   1847   1848   1849   1850   1851   1852   1853   1854   1855   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

spring

 

nature

 

feeling

 

chattels

 
eternity
 

forgetting

 

archives

 

transport

 

directly

 

creeping


liberty

 

kissing

 

rattling

 

profound

 

reducer

 
ceaseless
 

empires

 
unfathomable
 

realms

 

glutton


voracious

 

predecessors

 

accustomed

 

purpose

 

humbly

 

Majesty

 

laying

 

dedicate

 

hereditary

 

hatred


Nature

 

Hamilcar

 
undying
 
Pandora
 

insolents

 

obstinate

 

besiege

 

medicines

 
barricades
 

prefer


assured

 

applicable

 
proverb
 

Stolen

 

sweetest

 
tastes
 

joking

 
hearsay
 

Enrolled

 

Aesculapius