Peter Schlemihl eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 138 pages of information about Peter Schlemihl.

Peter Schlemihl eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 138 pages of information about Peter Schlemihl.

Content, our life advancing
   To a life that shall abide,
Each flame its worth enhancing,
   The soul is glorified. 
The starry host shall sink then
   To bright and living wine,
The golden draught we drink then,
   And stars ourselves shall shine.

Love released, lives woundless,
   No separation more;
While life swells free and boundless
   As a sea without a shore. 
One night of glad elation,
   One joy that cannot die,
And the sun of all creation
   Is the face of the Most High.”

VI—­LONGING FOR DEATH.

Below, within the earth’s dark breast,
   From realms of light departing,
There sorrow’s pang and sigh oppressed
   Is signal of our starting. 
In narrow boat we ferry o’er
Speedily to heaven’s shore.

To us be hallowed endless Night,
   Hallowed eternal slumber! 
The day hath withered us with light,
   And troubles beyond number. 
No more ’mong strangers would we roam;
We seek our Father, and our home.

Upon this world, what do we here,
   As faithful, fond, and true men? 
The Old but meets with scorn and sneer:-
   What care we for the New, then? 
Oh, lone is he, and sadly pines,
Who loves with zeal the olden times!

Those old times when the spirits light
   To heaven as flame ascended;
The Father’s hand and features bright
   When men yet comprehended;
When many a mortal, lofty-souled,
Yet bore the mark of heavenly mould.

Those olden times when budded still
   The stems of ancient story,
And children, to do Heaven’s will,
   In pain and death sought glory;
Those times when life and pleasure spoke,
Yet many a heart with fond love broke.

Those old times when in fires of youth
   Was God himself revealed,
And early death, in love and truth,
   His sweet existence sealed,
Who put not from him care and pain,
That dear to us he might remain.

With trembling longing these we see,
   By darkness now belated,
In Time’s dominions ne’er will be
   Our ardent thirsting sated. 
First to our home ’tis need we go,
Seek we these holy times to know.

And our return what still can stay? 
   Long have the best-loved slumbered;
Their grave bounds for us life’s drear way,
   Our souls with grief are cumbered. 
All that we have to seek is gone,
The heart is full—­the world is lone.

Unending, with mysterious flame,
   O’er us sweet awe is creeping;
Methought from viewless distance came
   An echo to our weeping;
The loved ones long for us on high,
And sent us back their pining sigh.

Below, to seek the tender bride,
   To Jesus, whom we cherish! 
Good cheer! lo, greys the even-tide, —
   Love’s agonies shall perish. —
A dream—­our fetters melt, at rest
We sink upon the Father’s breast.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Peter Schlemihl from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.