The Poems of Goethe - Translated in the original metres by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
page 69 of 704 (09%)
page 69 of 704 (09%)
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If she'll but grant her smile so sweet, Or if at table she'll employ, To pillow hers, her lover's feet, Give me the apple that she bit, The glass from which she drank, bestow, And when my kiss so orders it, Her bosom, veil'd till then, will show. And when she wills of love to speak, In fond and silent hours of bliss, Words from her mouth are all I seek, Nought else I crave,--not e'en a kiss. With what a soul her mind is fraught, Wreath'd round with charms unceasingly! She's perfect,--and she fails in nought Save in her deigning to love me. My rev'rence throws me at her feet, My longing throws me on her breast; This, youth, is rapture true and sweet, |
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