Faust by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
page 28 of 224 (12%)
page 28 of 224 (12%)
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_Faust_. Is parchment, then, the holy well-spring, thinkest,
A draught from which thy thirst forever slakes? No quickening element thou drinkest, Till up from thine own soul the fountain breaks. _Wagner_. Excuse me! in these olden pages We catch the spirit of the by-gone ages, We see what wisest men before our day have thought, And to what glorious heights we their bequests have brought. _Faust_. O yes, we've reached the stars at last! My friend, it is to us,--the buried past,-- A book with seven seals protected; Your spirit of the times is, then, At bottom, your own spirit, gentlemen, In which the times are seen reflected. And often such a mess that none can bear it; At the first sight of it they run away. A dust-bin and a lumber-garret, At most a mock-heroic play[8] With fine, pragmatic maxims teeming, The mouths of puppets well-beseeming! _Wagner_. But then the world! the heart and mind of man! To know of these who would not pay attention? _Faust_. To know them, yes, as weaklings can! Who dares the child's true name outright to mention? The few who any thing thereof have learned, Who out of their heart's fulness needs must gabble, |
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