Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Eagle And Dove. by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
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The Eagle And Dove.

    By Johann Wolfgang von Goethe



    In search of prey once raised his pinions
    An eaglet;
    A huntsman's arrow came, and reft
    His right wing of all motive power.
    Headlong he fell into a myrtle grove,
    For three long days on anguish fed,
    In torment writhed
    Throughout three long, three weary nights;
    And then was cured,
    Thanks to all-healing Nature's
    Soft, omnipresent balm.
    He crept away from out the copse,
    And stretch'd his wing alas!
    Lost is all power of flight
    He scarce can lift himself
    From off the ground
    To catch some mean, unworthy prey,
    And rests, deep-sorrowing,
    On the low rock beside the stream.
    Up to the oak he looks,
    Looks up to heaven,
    While in his noble eye there gleams a tear.
    Then, rustling through the myrtle boughs, behold,
    There comes a wanton pair of doves,
    Who settle down, and, nodding, strut
    O'er the gold sands beside the stream,
    And gradually approach;
    Their red-tinged eyes, so full of love,
    Soon see the inward-sorrowing one.
    The male, inquisitively social, leaps
    On the next bush, and looks
    Upon him kindly and complacently.
    "Thou sorrowest," murmurs he:
    "Be of good cheer, my friend!
    All that is needed for calm happiness
    Hast thou not here?
    Hast thou not pleasure in the golden bough
    That shields thee from the day's fierce glow?
    Canst thou not raise thy breast to catch,
    On the soft moss beside the brook,
    The sun's last rays at even?
    Here thou mayst wander through the flowers' fresh dew,
    Pluck from the overflow
    The forest-trees provide,
    Thy choicest food, mayst quench
    Thy light thirst at the silvery spring.
    Oh friend, true happiness
    Lies in contentedness,
    And that contentedness
    Finds everywhere enough."
    "Oh, wise one!" said the eagle, while he sank
    In deep and ever deep'ning thought
    "Oh Wisdom! like a dove thou speakest!"



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