The Poems of Goethe - Translated in the original metres by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
page 128 of 704 (18%)
page 128 of 704 (18%)
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How happy should I be! How soon would I leap high! 1789.* ----- TO HIS COY ONE. SEEST thou yon smiling Orange? Upon the tree still hangs it; Already March bath vanish'd, And new-born flow'rs are shooting. I draw nigh to the tree then, And there I say: Oh Orange, Thou ripe and juicy Orange, Thou sweet and luscious Orange, I shake the tree, I shake it, Oh fall into my lap! 1789.* ----- NIGHT THOUGHTS. OH, unhappy stars! your fate I mourn, Ye by whom the sea-toss'd sailor's lighted, Who with radiant beams the heav'ns adorn, But by gods and men are unrequited: For ye love not,--ne'er have learnt to love! |
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