Love's Comedy by Henrik Ibsen
page 38 of 190 (20%)
page 38 of 190 (20%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
No, lovely as a song,
But for our age too great and stern and strong, How can a modern demoiselle fill out The ideal that heroic name expresses? No, no, discard it with your outworn dresses. SVANHILD. You mean the mythical princess, no doubt-- FALK. Who, guiltless, died beneath the horse's feet. SVANHILD. But now such acts are clearly obsolete. No, no, I'll mount his saddle! There's my place! How often have I dreamt, in pensive ease, He bore me, buoyant, through the world apace, His mane a flag of freedom in the breeze! FALK. Yes, the old tale. In "pensive ease" no mortal Is stopped by thwarting bar or cullis'd portal; Fearless we cleave the ether without bound; In practice, tho', we shrewdly hug the ground; For all love life and, having choice, will choose it; And no man dares to leap where he may lose it. SVANHILD. Yes! show me but the end, I'll spurn the shore; But let the end be worth the leaping for! |
|