GANYMEDE.
55
Before I saw thee, I was like the May, |
Longing for summer that must mar its bloom, |
Or like the morning star that calls the day, |
Whose glories to its promise are the tomb; |
And as the eager fountain rises higher |
To throw itself more strongly back to earth, |
Still, as more sweet and full rose my desire, |
More fondly it reverted to its birth, |
For, what the rosebud seeks tells not the rose, |
The meaning foretold by the boy the man cannot disclose. |
I was all Spring, for in my being dwelt |
Eternal youth, where flowers are the fruit, |
Full feeling was the thought of what was felt, |
Its music was the meaning of the lute; |
But heaven and earth such life will still deny, |
For earth, divorced from heaven, still asks the question Why? |
Upon the highest mountains my young feet |
Ached, that no pinions from their lightness grew, |
My starlike eyes the stars would fondly greet, |
Yet win no greeting from the circling blue; |
Fair, self-subsistent each in its own sphere, |
They had no care that there was none for me; |
Alike to them that I was far or near, |
Alike to them, time and eternity. |
But, from the violet of lower air, |
Sometimes an answer to my wishing came, |
Those lightning births mv nature seemed to share, |
They told the secrets of its fiery frame, |
The sudden messengers of hate and love, |
The thunderbolts that arm the hand of Jove, |
And strike sometimes the sacred spire, and strike the sacred grove. |