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

    By Johann Wolfgang von Goethe



    In the deepest nights of Winter
    To the Muses kind oft cried I:
    "Not a ray of morn is gleaming,
    Not a sign of daylight breaking;
    Bring, then, at the fitting moment,
    Bring the lamp's soft glimm'ring lustre,
    'Stead of Phoebus and Aurora,
    To enliven my still labours!"
    Yet they left me in my slumbers,
    Dull and unrefreshing, lying,
    And to each late-waken'd morning
    Follow'd days devoid of profit.

    When at length return'd the spring-time,
    To the nightingales thus spake I:
    "Darling nightingales, oh, beat ye
    Early, early at my window,
    Wake me from the heavy slumber
    That chains down the youth so strongly!"
    Yet the love-o'erflowing songsters
    Their sweet melodies protracted
    Through the night before my window,
    Kept awake my loving spirit,
    Rousing new and tender yearnings
    In my newly-waken'd bosom.
    And the night thus fleeted o'er me,
    And Aurora found me sleeping,
    Ay, the sun could scarce arouse me.

    Now at length is come the Summer,
    And the early fly so busy
    Draws me from my pleasing slumbers
    At the first-born morning-glimmer.
    Mercilessly then returns she,
    Though the half-aroused one often
    Scares her from him with impatience,
    And she lures her shameless sisters,
    So that from my weary eyelids
    Kindly sleep ere long is driven.
    From my couch then boldly spring I,
    And I seek the darling Muses,
    in the beechen-grove I find them,
    Full of pieasure to receive me;
    And to the tormenting insects
    Owe I many a golden hour.
    Thus be ye, unwelcome beings,
    Highly valued by the poet,
    As the flies my numbers tell of.



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