The poems and ballads of Schiller, tr. by sir E.B. Lytton. With a sketch of Schiller's life [by the translator]. |
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Страница xiii
... feels as the enthusiast , while it learns to see as the world - wise , " there is no conceivable reason why Schiller should charm less in maturity than youth . Goethe may please a reader more in proportion as his mind can embrace a ...
... feels as the enthusiast , while it learns to see as the world - wise , " there is no conceivable reason why Schiller should charm less in maturity than youth . Goethe may please a reader more in proportion as his mind can embrace a ...
Страница xvi
... feelings - ever exalting those whom it addresses -ever intent upon strengthening man in his struggles with his destiny , and uniting with a golden chain the outer world and the inner to the Celestial Throne . The beauty of diction , the ...
... feelings - ever exalting those whom it addresses -ever intent upon strengthening man in his struggles with his destiny , and uniting with a golden chain the outer world and the inner to the Celestial Throne . The beauty of diction , the ...
Страница 13
... feeling itself are founded those ideal truths which make up the true philosophy of a Poet . In these few stanzas is ... feelings - what intimate conviction of the moral of the Middle Ages , in the picture of the Knight looking up to the ...
... feeling itself are founded those ideal truths which make up the true philosophy of a Poet . In these few stanzas is ... feelings - what intimate conviction of the moral of the Middle Ages , in the picture of the Knight looking up to the ...
Страница 32
... feeling - common not to poets alone , but to us all - the human feeling which approaches to an instinct , and in which so many philosophers have recognised the inward assurance of a hereafter , viz . , the desire to escape from the ...
... feeling - common not to poets alone , but to us all - the human feeling which approaches to an instinct , and in which so many philosophers have recognised the inward assurance of a hereafter , viz . , the desire to escape from the ...
Страница 43
... feels glad to me ! Yet where the Gladness - Bringer - blest In the sweet art which moves the breast With lyre and verse divine ? Dear from my youth the craft of song , And what as knight I loved so long , As Kaisar , still be mine ...
... feels glad to me ! Yet where the Gladness - Bringer - blest In the sweet art which moves the breast With lyre and verse divine ? Dear from my youth the craft of song , And what as knight I loved so long , As Kaisar , still be mine ...
Често срещани думи и фрази
afar aloft amidst arms ballad beauty behold beneath blessed blest bliss bloom breast breath bright brooklet calm Ceres charms crown dark death deep delight divine doth dreams dwell earth Elysium eternal Eumenides Ev'n eyes fair fall Fate feel flies flowers gaze Genius glides glory glow Gods Goethe golden grace grave grief hand happy hast hath heart heaven heavenly HERO AND LEANDER hexameters holy human Ibycus Iliad King labour Life's light lips living Man's metre mighty mission earth moral murmur Nature ne'er never nevermore Night o'er once poem Poet Poetry Polycrates repose round Savern Scamander Schiller shine shore smile soft solemn song sorrow soul spirit spring Stanza steed stream strife Styx Suabian sublime sweet swell tears thee thine thou thought throne thunder Toggenburg translation Truth unto veil vex'd voice wander wave wild wind wings youth
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Страница 34 - Sirens' harmony, That sit upon the nine infolded spheres, And sing to those that hold the vital shears, And turn the adamantine spindle round, On which the fate of Gods and men is wound. Such sweet compulsion doth in music lie, To lull the daughters of Necessity, And keep unsteady Nature to her law, And the low world in measured motion draw After the heavenly tune, which none can hear Of human mould, with gross unpurged ear...
Страница 36 - Here bring the last gifts ! — and with these The last lament be said ; Let all that pleased, and yet may please, Be buried with the dead. ' Beneath his head the hatchet hide, That he so stoutly swung ; And place the bear's fat haunch beside — The journey hence is long ! ' And let the knife new sharpened be That on the battle-day Shore with quick strokes — he took but three — The foeman's scalp away ! ' The paints that warriors love to use, Place here within his hand, That he may shine with...
Страница 7 - On the youth gazed the monarch, and marvelled — quoth he, " Bold diver, the goblet I promised is thine, And this ring will I give, a fresh guerdon to thee, — Never jewels more precious shone up from the mine, If thou'lt bring me fresh tidings; and venture again, To say what lies hid in the innermost main 1" Then outspake the daughter in tender emotion, " Ah ! father, my father, what more can there rest?
Страница 230 - Making it momentary as a sound, Swift as a shadow, short as any dream ; Brief as the lightning in the collied night, That, in a spleen, unfolds both heaven and earth. And ere a man hath power to say, — Behold ! The jaws of darkness do devour it up : So quick bright things come to confusion.
Страница 263 - Joy is the mainspring in the whole Of endless Nature's calm rotation ; Joy moves the dazzling wheels that roll In the great Timepiece of Creation ; Joy breathes on buds, and flowers they are; Joy beckons — suns come forth from heaven; Joy rolls the spheres in realms afar, — Ne'er to thy glass, dim Wisdom, given!
Страница 197 - If like glass the wand be glimmering , Then the casting may begin. Brisk, brisk now, and see If the fusion flow free; If — (happy and welcome indeed were the sign ! ) If the hard and the ductile united combine.
Страница 246 - Pool's dull stagner — the great Sea's repose. THE MASTER THE herd of scribes, by what they tell us, Show all in which their wits excel us; But the True Master we behold, In what his art leaves — just untold.
Страница 6 - There I hung, and the awe gathered icily o'er me, So far from the earth, where man's help there was none! The one human thing, with the goblins before...
Страница 1 - H, where is the knight or the squire so bold, As to dive to the howling charybdis below ? I cast in the whirlpool a goblet of gold, And o'er it already the dark waters flow; Whoever to me may the goblet bring, Shall have for his guerdon that gift of his king.
Страница 96 - Men suffer all their life long under the foolish superstition that they can be cheated. But it is as impossible for a man to be cheated by any one but himself, as for a thing to be and not to be at the same time.