The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 01 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 477 pages of information about The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 01.

The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 01 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 477 pages of information about The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 01.
falling,
Wraps itself, when she is walking, about her neatly shaped ankles. 
Yet one thing will I say, and would make it my earnest petition,—­
Speak not yourselves with the maiden, nor let your intent be discovered;
Rather inquire of others, and hearken to what they may tell you. 
When ye have tidings enough to satisfy father and mother,
Then return to me here, and we will consider what further. 
So did I plan it all out in my mind while driving you hither.”

Thus he spoke.  The friends thereupon went their way to the village,
Where, in the houses and gardens and barns, the people were swarming;
Wagons on wagons stood crowded together along the broad highway. 
Men for the harnessed horses and lowing cattle were caring,
While the women were busy in drying their clothes on the hedges,
And in the running brook the children were merrily splashing. 
Making their way through the pressure of wagons, of people and cattle,
Went the commissioned spies, and to right and to left looked about them,
If they a figure might see that answered the maiden’s description;
But not one of them all appeared the beautiful damsel. 
Denser soon grew the press.  A contest arose round the wagons
’Mongst the threatening men, wherein blended the cries of the women. 
Rapidly then to the spot, and with dignified step, came an elder,
Joined the clamoring group, and straightway the uproar was silenced,
As he commanded peace, and rebuked with a fatherly sternness. 
“Has, then, misfortune,” he cried, “not yet so bound us together,
That we have finally learned to bear and forbear one another,
Though each one, it may be, do not measure his share of the labor? 
He that is happy, forsooth, is contentious!  Will sufferings never
Teach you to cease from your brawls of old between brother and brother? 
Grudge not one to another a place on the soil of the stranger;
Rather divide what ye have, as yourselves ye would hope to find mercy.”

[Illustration:  THE EMIGRANTS IN THE VILLAGE Ludwig Richter]

Thus spoke the man and all became silent:  restored to good humor,
Peaceably then the people arranged their cattle and wagons. 
But when the clergyman now had heard what was said by the stranger,
And had the steadfast mind of the foreign justice discovered,
He to the man drew near and with words of meaning addressed him: 
“True it is, father, that when in prosperity people are living,
Feeding themselves from the earth, which far and wide opens her bosom,
And in the years and months renews the coveted blessings,—­
All goes on of itself, and each himself deems the wisest,
Deems the best, and so they continue abiding together,
He of greatest intelligence ranking no higher than others;
All that occurs, as if of itself, going quietly forward. 
But let disaster unsettle the usual course of existence,
Tear down the buildings about us, lay waste the crops

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The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 01 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.