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Poems About Germany

Table of Contents

  1. To the Bavarian Girl by Bayard Taylor
  2. In the Black Forest by Amy Levy
  3. Cologne by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
  4. Leipzig by Thomas Hardy
  5. Nuremberg by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
  6. The Battle of Blenheim by Robert Southey
  7. The Brave Roland by Thomas Campbell
  8. The Tomb of Charlemagne by Bayard Taylor
  9. Work and Worship by William Allen Butler

  1. To the Bavarian Girl

    by Bayard Taylor

    Thou, Bavaria's brown-eyed daughter,
    Art a shape of joy,
    Standing by the Isar's water
    With thy brother-boy;
    In thy dream, with idle fingers
    Threading through his curls,
    On thy cheek the sun's kiss lingers,
    Rosiest of girls!

    Woods of glossy oak are ringing
    With the echoes bland,
    While thy generous voice is singing
    Songs of Fatherland,—
    Songs, that by the Danube's river
    Sound on hills of vine,
    And where waves in green light quiver,
    Down the rushing Rhine.

    Life, with all its hues and changes,
    To thy heart doth lie
    Like those dreamy Alpine ranges
    In the southern sky;
    Where in haze the clefts are hidden,
    Which the foot should fear,
    And the crags that fall unbidden
    Startle not the ear.

    Where the village maidens gather
    At the fountain's brim,
    Or in sunny harvest-weather,
    With the reapers trim;
    Where the autumn fires are burning
    On the vintage-hills;
    Where the mossy wheels are turning
    In the ancient mills;

    Where from ruined robber-towers
    Hangs the ivy's hair,
    And the crimson foxbell flowers
    On the crumbling stair;—
    Everywhere, without thy presence,
    Would the sunshine fail,
    Fairest of the maiden peasants!
    Flower of Isar's vale!

  2. In the Black Forest

    by Amy Levy

    I lay beneath the pine trees,
    And looked aloft, where, through
    The dusky, clustered tree-tops,
    Gleamed rent, gay rifts of blue.

    I shut my eyes, and a fancy
    Fluttered my sense around:
    "I lie here dead and buried,
    And this is churchyard ground.

    "I am at rest for ever;
    Ended the stress and strife."
    Straight I fell to and sorrowed
    For the pitiful past life.

    Right wronged, and knowledge wasted;
    Wise labour spurned for ease;
    The sloth and the sin and the failure;
    Did I grow sad for these?

    They had made me sad so often;
    Not now they made me sad;
    My heart was full of sorrow
    For joy it never had.

  3. Cologne

    by Samuel Taylor Coleridge

    In Köhln, a town of monks and bones,
    And pavements fang'd with murderous stones
    And rags, and hags, and hideous wenches;
    I counted two and seventy stenches,
    All well defined, and several stinks!
    Ye Nymphs that reign o'er sewers and sinks,
    The river Rhine, it is well known,
    Doth wash your city of Cologne;
    But tell me, Nymphs, what power divine
    Shall henceforth wash the river Rhine?

  4. Leipzig

    by Thomas Hardy

    "Old Norbert with the flat blue cap—
    A German said to be—
    Why let your pipe die on your lap,
    Your eyes blink absently?"—

    —"Ah!… Well, I had thought till my cheek was wet
    Of my mother—her voice and mien
    When she used to sing and pirouette,
    And touse the tambourine

    "To the march that yon street-fiddler plies;
    She told me 'twas the same
    She'd heard from the trumpets, when the Allies
    Her city overcame.

    "My father was one of the German Hussars,
    My mother of Leipzig; but he,
    Long quartered here, fetched her at close of the wars,
    And a Wessex lad reared me.

    "And as I grew up, again and again
    She'd tell, after trilling that air,
    Of her youth, and the battles on Leipzig plain
    And of all that was suffered there!…

    "—'Twas a time of alarms. Three Chiefs-at-arms
    Combined them to crush One,
    And by numbers' might, for in equal fight
    He stood the matched of none.

    "Carl Schwartzenburg was of the plot,
    And Blücher, prompt and prow,
    And Jean the Crown-Prince Bernadotte:
    Buonaparte was the foe.

    "City and plain had felt his reign From the North to the Middle Sea,
    And he'd now sat down in the noble town Of the King of Saxony.

    "October's deep dew its wet gossamer threw
    Upon Leipzig's lawns, leaf-strewn,
    Where lately each fair avenue
    Wrought shade for summer noon.

    "To westward two dull rivers crept
    Through miles of marsh and slough,
    Whereover a streak of whiteness swept—
    The Bridge of Lindenau.

    "Hard by, in the City, the One, care-crossed,
    Gloomed over his shrunken power;
    And without the walls the hemming host
    Waxed denser every hour.

    "He had speech that night on the morrow's designs
    With his chiefs by the bivouac fire,
    While the belt of flames from the enemy's lines
    Flared nigher him yet and nigher.

    "Three sky-lights then from the girdling trine
    Told, 'Ready!' As they rose
    Their flashes seemed his Judgment-Sign
    For bleeding Europe's woes.

    "'Twas seen how the French watch-fires that night
    Glowed still and steadily;
    And the Three rejoiced, for they read in the sight
    That the One disdained to flee….

    "—Five hundred guns began the affray
    On next day morn at nine;
    Such mad and mangling cannon-play
    Had never torn human line.

    "Around the town three battle beat,
    Contracting like a gin;
    As nearer marched the million feet
    Of columns closing in.

    "The first battle nighed on the low Southern side;
    The second by the Western way;
    The nearing of the third on the North was heard;
    —The French held all at bay.

    "Against the first band did the Emperor stand;
    Against the second stood Ney;
    Marmont against the third gave the order-word:
    —Thus raged it throughout the day.

    "Fifty thousand sturdy souls on those trampled plains and knolls,
    Who met the dawn hopefully,
    And were lotted their shares in a quarrel not theirs,
    Dropt then in their agony.

    "'O,' the old folks said, 'ye Preachers stern!
    O so-called Christian time!
    When will men's swords to ploughshares turn?
    When come the promised prime?'…

    "—The clash of horse and man which that day began,
    Closed not as evening wore;
    And the morrow's armies, rear and van,
    Still mustered more and more.

    "From the City towers the Confederate Powers
    Were eyed in glittering lines,
    And up from the vast a murmuring passed
    As from a wood of pines.

    "''Tis well to cover a feeble skill
    By numbers!' scoffèd He;
    'But give me a third of their strength, I'd fill
    Half Hell with their soldiery!'

    "All that day raged the war they waged,
    And again dumb night held reign,
    Save that ever upspread from the dark death-bed
    A miles-wide pant of pain.

    "Hard had striven brave Ney, the true Bertrand,
    Victor, and Augereau,
    Bold Poniatowski, and Lauriston,
    To stay their overthrow;

    "But, as in the dream of one sick to death
    There comes a narrowing room
    That pens him, body and limbs and breath,
    To wait a hideous doom,

    "So to Napoleon, in the hush
    That held the town and towers
    Through these dire nights, a creeping crush
    Seemed inborne with the hours.

    "One road to the rearward, and but one,
    Did fitful Chance allow;
    'Twas where the Pleiss' and Elster run—
    The Bridge of Lindenau.

    "The nineteenth dawned. Down street and Platz
    The wasted French sank back,
    Stretching long lines across the Flats
    And on the bridge-way track;

    "When there surged on the sky on earthen wave,
    And stones, and men, as though
    Some rebel churchyard crew updrave
    Their sepulchres from below.

    "To Heaven is blown Bridge Lindenau;
    Wrecked regiments reel therefrom;
    And rank and file in masses plough
    The sullen Elster-Strom.

    "A gulf was Lindenau; and dead
    Were fifties, hundreds, tens;
    And every current rippled red
    With Marshal's blood and men's.

    "The smart Macdonald swam therein,
    And barely won the verge;
    Bold Poniatowski plunged him in
    Never to re-emerge.

    "Then stayed the strife. The remnants wound
    Their Rhineward way pell-mell;
    And thus did Leipzig City sound
    An Empire's passing bell;

    "While in cavalcade, with band and blade,
    Came Marshals, Princes, Kings;
    And the town was theirs…. Ay, as simple maid,
    My mother saw these things!

    "And whenever those notes in the street begin,
    I recall her, and that far scene,
    And her acting of how the Allies marched in,
    And her touse of the tambourine!"

  5. Nuremberg

    by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

    In the valley of the Pegnitz, where across broad meadow-lands
    Rise the blue Franconian mountains, Nuremberg, the ancient, stands.

    Quaint old town of toil and traffic, quaint old town of art and song,
    Memories haunt thy pointed gables, like the rooks that round them throng:

    Memories of the Middle Ages, when the emperors, rough and bold,
    Had their dwelling in thy castle, time-defying, centuries old;

    And thy brave and thrifty burghers boasted, in their uncouth rhyme,
    That their great imperial city stretched its hand through every clime.

    In the court-yard of the castle, bound with many an iron band,
    Stands the mighty linden planted by Queen Cunigunde's hand;

    On the square the oriel window, where in old heroic days
    Sat the poet Melchior singing Kaiser Maximilian's praise.

    Everywhere I see around me rise the wondrous world of Art:
    Fountains wrought with richest sculpture standing in the common mart;

    And above cathedral doorways saints and bishops carved in stone,
    By a former age commissioned as apostles to our own.

    In the church of sainted Sebald sleeps enshrined his holy dust,
    And in bronze the Twelve Apostles guard from age to age their trust;

    In the church of sainted Lawrence stands a pix of sculpture rare,
    Like the foamy sheaf of fountains, rising through the painted air.

    Here, when Art was still religion, with a simple, reverent heart,
    Lived and labored Albrecht Dürer, the Evangelist of Art;

    Hence in silence and in sorrow, toiling still with busy hand,
    Like an emigrant he wandered, seeking for the Better Land.

    Emigravit is the inscription on the tomb-stone where he lies;
    Dead he is not, but departed, — for the artist never dies.

    Fairer seems the ancient city, and the sunshine seems more fair,
    That he once has trod its pavement, that he once has breathed its air!

    Through these streets so broad and stately, these obscure and dismal lanes,
    Walked of yore the Mastersingers, chanting rude poetic strains.

    From remote and sunless suburbs came they to the friendly guild,
    Building nests in Fame's great temple, as in spouts the swallows build.

    As the weaver plied the shuttle, wove he too the mystic rhyme,
    And the smith his iron measures hammered to the anvil's chime;

    Thanking God, whose boundless wisdom makes the flowers of poesy bloom
    In the forge's dust and cinders, in the tissues of the loom.

    Here Hans Sachs, the cobbler-poet, laureate of the gentle craft,
    Wisest of the Twelve Wise Masters, in huge folios sang and laughed.

    But his house is now an ale-house, with a nicely sanded floor,
    And a garland in the window, and his face above the door;

    Painted by some humble artist, as in Adam Puschman's song,
    As the old man gray and dove-like, with his great beard white and long.

    And at night the swart mechanic comes to drown his cark and care,
    Quaffing ale from pewter tankards, in the master's antique chair.

    Vanished is the ancient splendor, and before my dreamy eye
    Wave these mingled shapes and figures, like a faded tapestry.

    Not thy Councils, not thy Kaisers, win for thee the world's regard;
    But thy painter, Albrecht Dürer, and Hans Sachs thy cobbler bard.

    Thus, O Nuremberg, a wanderer from a region far away,
    As he paced thy streets and court-yards, sang in thought his careless lay:

    Gathering from the pavement's crevice, as a floweret of the soil,
    The nobility of labor, — the long pedigree of toil.

  6. The Battle of Blenheim

    by Robert Southney

    Homely, forgotten flower,
    Under the rose's bower,
    Plain as a weed,
    Thou, the half-summer long,
    Waitest and waxest strong,
    Even as waits a song
    Till men shall heed.

    Then, when the lilies die,
    And the carnations lie
    In spicy death,
    Over thy bushy sprays
    Burst with a sudden blaze
    Stars of the August days,
    With Autumn's breath.

    Fain would the calyx hold;
    But splits, and half the gold
    Spills lavishly:
    Frost, that the rose appalls,
    Wastes not thy coronals,
    Till Summer's lustre falls
    And fades in thee.

  7. The Brave Roland

    by Thomas Campbell

    The brave Roland!—the brave Roland!—
    False tidings reached the Rhenish strand
    That he had fallen in fight;
    And thy faithful bosom swooned with pain,
    O loveliest maid of Allémayne!
    For the loss of thine own true knight.

    But why so rash has she ta'en the veil,
    In you Nonnenwerder's cloisters pale?
    For her vow had scarce been sworn,
    And the fatal mantle o'er her flung,
    When the "Drachenfels to a trumpet rung—
    'T was her own dear warrior's horn!

    Woe! woe! each heart shall bleed—shall break!
    She would have hung upon his neck,
    Had he come but yester-even;
    And he had clasped those peerless charms
    That shall never, never fill his arms,
    Or meet him but in heaven.

    Yet Roland the brave—yet Roland the true—
    He could not bid that spot adieu;
    It was dear still midst his woes,
    For he loved to breathe the neighboring air,
    And to think she blessed him in her prayer,
    When the Halleluiah rose.

    There's yet one window of that pile,
    Which he built above the nun's green isle;
    Thence sad and oft looked he
    (When the chant and organ sounded slow)
    On the mansion of his love below,
    For herself he might not see.

    She died! He sought the battle-plain!
    Her image filled his dying brain,
    When he fell and wished to fall:
    And her name was in his latest sigh,
    When Roland, the flower of chivalry,
    Expired at Roncevall.

  8. The Tomb of Charlemagne

    by Bayard Taylor

    I stood in that cathedral old, the work of kingly power,
    That from the clustered roofs of Aix lifts up its mouldering tower,
    And, like a legend strange and rude, speaks of an earlier day,—
    Of saint and knight, the tourney’s pomp, and the Minnesinger’s lay!

    Above me rose the pillared dome, with many a statue grim,
    And through the chancel-oriel came a splendor soft and dim,
    Till dusky shrine and painting old glowed in the lustre wan:
    Below me was a marble slab,—the tomb of Charlemagne.

    A burst of organ-music rang so grandly, sadly slow,
    It seemed a requiem thundered o’er the dead who slept below;
    And with the sound came thronging round the stern men of that time,
    When best was he who bravest fought, and cowardice was crime.

    I thought upon the day when he, whose dust I stood upon,
    Ruled with a monarch’s boundless right the kingdoms he had won,—
    When rose the broad Alps in his realm, and roared the Baltic’s wave;
    And now—the lowest serf might stand, unheeded, on his grave.

    And ruthless hands despoiled his dust, attired in regal pride,
    The crown upon his crumbled brows, and Joyeuse by his side,—
    Whose rusted blade, at Ronçeval, flamed in the hero’s hand
    In answer to the silver horn of the Paladin, Rolánd.

    I stood on that neglected stone, thrilled with the glorious sound,
    While bowed at many a holier shrine the worshippers around,—
    And through the cloud of incense-smoke burned many a taper dim,
    And priestly stoles went sweeping by,—I could but think of him!

    I saw the boy with yellow locks, crowned at St. Deny’s shrine;
    The emperor in his purple cloak, the lord of all the Rhine;
    The conqueror of a thousand foes, in battle stern and hard;
    The widowed mourner at thy tomb, O fairest Hildegarde!

    Long pealed the music of the choir through chancel-arch and nave.
    As, lost in those old memories, I stood upon his grave;
    And when the morning anthem ceased, and solemn mass began,
    I left that minster gray and old,—the tomb of Charlemagne!

  9. Work and Worship

    by William Allen Butler

    Charlemagne, the mighty monarch,
    As through Metten wood he strayed,
    Found the holy hermit, Hutto,
    Toiling in the forest glade.

    In his hand the woodman’s hatchet,
    By his side the knife and twine,
    There he cut and bound the fagots
    From the gnarled and stunted pine.

    Well the monarch knew the hermit
    For his pious works and cares,
    And the wonders which had followed
    From his vigils, fasts, and prayers.

    Much he marvelled now to see him
    Toiling thus, with axe and cord;
    And he cried in scorn, “O Father,
    Is it thus you serve the Lord?”

    But the hermit, resting neither
    Hand nor hatchet, meekly said:
    “He who does no daily labor
    May not ask for daily bread.

    “Think not that my graces slumber
    While I toil throughout the day;
    For all honest work is worship,
    And to labor is to pray.

    “Think not that the heavenly blessing
    From the workman’s hand removes;
    Who does best his task appointed,
    Him the Master most approves.”

    While he spoke the hermit, pausing
    For a moment, raised his eyes
    Where the overhanging branches
    Swayed beneath the sunset skies.

    Through the dense and vaulted forest
    Straight the level sunbeam came,
    Shining like a gilded rafter,
    Poised upon a sculptured frame.

    Suddenly, with kindling features,
    While he breathes a silent prayer,
    See, the hermit throws his hatchet,
    Lightly, upward in the air.

    Bright the well-worn steel is gleaming,
    As it flashes through the shade,
    And descending, lo! the sunbeam
    Holds it dangling by the blade!

    “See, my son,” exclaimed the hermit,—
    “See the token Heaven has sent;
    Thus to humble, patient effort
    Faith’s miraculous aid is lent.

    “Toiling, hoping, often fainting,
    As we labor, Love Divine
    Through the shadows pours its sunlight,
    Crowns the work, vouchsafes the sign!”

    Homeward slowly went the monarch,
    Till he reached his palace hall,
    Where he strode among his warriors,
    He the bravest of them all.

    Soon the Benedictine Abbey
    Rose beside the hermit’s cell;
    He, by royal hands invested,
    Ruled, as Abbot, long and well.

    Now beside the rushing Danube
    Still its ruined walls remain,
    Telling of the hermit’s patience
    And the zeal of Charlemagne.

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