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! Or, yet later, in watch On the roof of the Brocken-tower Thou standest, gazing!--to see The broad red sun, over field, Forest, and city, and spire, And mist-track'd stream of the wide, Wide German land, going down In a bank of vapours----again Standest, at nightfall, alone! Or, next morning, with limbs Rested by slumber, and heart Freshen'd and light with the May, O'er the gracious spurs coming down Of the Lower Hartz, among oaks, And beechen coverts, and copse Of hazels green in whose depth Ilse, the fairy transform'd, In a thousand water-breaks light Pours her petulant youth-- Climbing the rock which juts O'er the valley, the dizzily perch'd Rock--to its iron cross Once more thou cling'st; to the Cross Clingest! with smiles, with a sigh! Goethe, too, had been there.[24] In the long-past winter he came To the frozen Hartz, with his soul Passionate, eager--his youth All in ferment!--but he Destined to work and to live Left it, and thou, alas! Only to laugh and to die. But something prompts me: Not thus Take leave of Heine! not thus Speak the last word at his grave! Not in pity, and not With half censure--with awe Hail, as it passes from earth Scattering lightnings, that soul! The Spirit of the world, Beholding the absurdity of men-- Their vaunts, their feats--let a sardonic smile, For one short moment, wander o'er his lips. _That smile was Heine!_--for its earthly hour The strange guest sparkled; now 'tis pass'd away. That was Heine! and we, Myriads who live, who have lived, What are we all, but a mood, A single mood, of the life Of the Spirit in whom we exist, Who alone is all things in one? Spirit, who fillest us all! Spirit, who utterest in each New-coming son of mankind Such of thy thoughts as thou wilt! O thou, one of whose moods, Bitter and strange, was the life Of Heine--his strange, alas, His bitter life!--may a life Other and milder be mine! May'st thou a mood more serene, Happier, have utter'd in mine! May'st thou the rapture of peace Deep have embreathed at its core; Made it a ray of thy thou
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