Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Translations. - The Philosophers. (From Schiller.) by George MacDonald
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Translations. - The Philosophers. (From Schiller.)

    By George MacDonald



    The principle whence everything
    To life and shape ascended--
    The pulley whereon Zeus the ring
    Of Earth, which else in sherds would spring,
    Has carefully suspended--
    To genius I yield him a claim
    Who fathoms for me what its name,
    Save I withdraw its curtain:
    It is--ten is not thirteen.

    That snow makes cold, that fire burns,
    That man on two feet goeth,
    That in the heavens the sun sojourns--
    This much the man who logic spurns
    Through his own senses knoweth;
    But metaphysics who has got,
    Knows he that burneth, freezeth not;
    Knows 'tis the moist that wetteth,
    And 'tis the rough that fretteth.

    Great Homer sings his epic high;
    The hero fronts his dangers;
    The brave his duty still doth ply--
    And did it while, I won't deny,
    Philosophers were strangers:
    But grant by heart and brain achiev'd
    What Locke and Des Cartes ne'er conceiv'd--
    By them yet, as behovéd,
    It possible was provéd.

    Strength for the Right is counted still;
    Bold laughs the strong hyena;
    Who rule not, servants' parts must fill;
    It goes quite tolerably ill
    Upon this world's arena;
    But how it would be, if the plan
    Of the universe now first began,
    In many a moral system
    All men may read who list 'em.

    "Man needs with man must linked be
    To reach the goal of growing;
    In the whole only worketh he;
    Many drops go to make the sea;
    Much water sets mills going.
    Then with the wild wolves do not stand,
    But knit the state's enduring band:"
    From doctor's chair thus, tranquil,
    Herr Pufendorf and swan-quill.

    But since to all, what doctors say
    Flies not as soon as spoken,
    Nature will use her mother-way,
    See that her chain fly not in tway,
    The circle be not broken:
    Meantime, until the world's great round
    Philosophy in one hath bound,
    She keeps it on the move, sir,
    By hunger and by love, sir.



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