Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Happy Couple. by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
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The Happy Couple.

    By Johann Wolfgang von Goethe



    After these vernal rains

    That we so warmly sought,
    Dear wife, see how our plains

    With blessings sweet are fraught!
    We cast our distant gaze

    Far in the misty blue;
    Here gentle love still strays,

    Here dwells still rapture true.

    Thou seest whither go

    Yon pair of pigeons white,
    Where swelling violets blow

    Round sunny foliage bright.
    'Twas there we gather'd first

    A nosegay as we roved;
    There into flame first burst

    The passion that we proved.

    Yet when, with plighted troth,

    The priest beheld us fare
    Home from the altar both,

    With many a youthful pair,
    Then other moons had birth,

    And many a beauteous sun,
    Then we had gain'd the earth

    Whereon life's race to run.

    A hundred thousand fold

    The mighty bond was seal'd;
    In woods, on mountains cold,

    In bushes, in the field,
    Within the wall, in caves,

    And on the craggy height,
    And love, e'en o'er the waves,

    Bore in his tube the light.

    Contented we remain'd,

    We deem'd ourselves a pair;
    'Twas otherwise ordain'd,

    For, lo! a third was there;
    A fourth, fifth, sixth appear'd,

    And sat around our board;
    And now the plants we've rear'd

    High o'er our heads have soar'd!

    How fair and pleasant looks,

    On yonder beauteous spot,
    Embraced by poplar-brooks,

    The newly-finish'd cot!
    Who is it there that sits

    In that glad home above?
    Is't not our darling Fritz

    With his own darling love?

    Beside yon precipice,

    Whence pent-up waters steal,
    And leaving the abyss,

    Fall foaming through the wheel,
    Though people often tell

    Of millers' wives so fair,
    Yet none can e'er excel

    Our dearest daughter there!

    Yet where the thick-set green

    Stands round yon church and sad,
    Where the old fir-tree's seen

    Alone tow'rd heaven to nod,
    'Tis there the ashes lie

    Of our untimely dead;
    From earth our gaze on high

    By their blest memory's led.

    See how yon hill is bright

    With billowy-waving arms!
    The force returns, whose might

    Has vanquished war's alarms.
    Who proudly hastens here

    With wreath-encircled brow?
    'Tis like our child so dear

    Thus Charles comes homeward now.

    That dearest honour'd guest

    Is welcom'd by the bride;
    She makes the true one blest,

    At the glad festal tide.
    And ev'ry one makes haste

    To join the dance with glee;
    While thou with wreaths hast graced

    The youngest children three.

    To sound of flute and horn

    The time appears renew'd,
    When we, in love's young morn,

    In the glad dance upstood;
    And perfect bliss I know

    Ere the year's course is run,
    For to the font we go

    With grandson and with son!



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