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1825
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Should this life sometime deceive you,
Don’t be sad or mad at it!
On a gloomy day, submit:
Trust – fair day will come, why grieve you?
Heart lives in the future, so
What if gloom pervade the present?
All is fleeting, all will go;
What is gone will then be pleasant.
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I have endured my desire,
I’ve ceased to love my fairy dreams,
And only fruit of hearty fire -
My sufferings have stayed, it seems.
And under storms of cruel kismet
My blooming spirit quickly died,
I waited for the end, I missed it.
I’m feeling loneliness inside.
So that enveloped by the blow
Of cold wind and stormy flaws
A leaf which is belated, sole,
Vibrates on bare branch in pause..
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1829
I loved you, and that love, to die refusing,
May still – who knows! – be smouldering in my breast
Pray be not pained – believe me, of my choosing
I’d never have you troubled or distressed.
I loved you mutely, hopelessly and truly,
With shy yet fervent tenderness aglow;
Mine was a jealous passion and unruly…
May God grant that another’ll love you so!
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1825
My lonely heart athirst, I trod
A barren waste when, so ’twas fated,
A winged seraph ‘fore me stood:
Where crossed the desert roads he waited.
Upon my orbs of sightless clay
His fingers lightly he did lay.
And like a startled eagle round me
I gazed and saw the earth surrounded,
Hemmed in by sky… He touched my ear,
Then t’other, and, most marked and clear,
There came to me the gentle flutter
Of angels’ wings, I heard the vine
Push through the earth and skyward climb,
The deep-sea monsters in the water
Like tiny fishes glide… And o’er
Me calm he bent and out he tore
My sinful tongue… Not once withdrawing
His gaze from mine, he pushed, unseen,
A serpent’s deadly sting between
My ice-cold lips… Then, swiftly drawing
His shining sword, he clove my breast,
Plucked out my quivering heart, and, sombre
And grim of aspect, coolly thrust
Into the gaping hole an ember
That ran with flame… I lay there, dead,
And God, God spake, and this He said:
«Arise, O sage! My summons hearing,
Do as I bid, by naught deterred;
Stride o’er the earth, a prophet, searing
The hearts of men with righteous word.»
Translated by I.Zheleznova
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1828
I love you, though I rage at it,
Though it is shame and toil misguided,
And to my folly self-derided
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