BEETHOVEN

BEETHOVEN

HE wandered down, an Orpheus wilder-souled,From some melodious world of love and song,And through our earthly vales strange music rolled.Who heard that alien note could only long,As pale Eurydice once longed, to know againThe happier ways, the more harmonious air,Where once they heard that half-remembered strain,—Where once their exiled feet were wont to fare.A gleam of some strange golden life now gone,A sad remembrance of celestial things,Some old-time glory, like the gods', outshoneFrom men's rapt souls, wherein a memory clingsOf that diviner day, from them withdrawn.For all the dreams that smouldered in man's breast,And all the clearer ways he yearned to reach,—The fugitive ideal, the old unrest,—Found utterance in song, that slept in speech.And like a minstrel in an alien land,Who sings his native strains while men crowd roundAnd hearken long, but cannot understand,He sang to us, and through the unknown soundWe caught a passing glimmer of the soulThose foreign runes concealed, and strove to gleanFrom out the uninterpretable wholeSome earthlier harmony.It must have beenHe heard far-off that low uranian strainThat only maddens him who vainly hears;For they, the gods, soon saw the god-like painThat mocked a man, and closed his listening ears.

HE wandered down, an Orpheus wilder-souled,From some melodious world of love and song,And through our earthly vales strange music rolled.Who heard that alien note could only long,As pale Eurydice once longed, to know againThe happier ways, the more harmonious air,Where once they heard that half-remembered strain,—Where once their exiled feet were wont to fare.A gleam of some strange golden life now gone,A sad remembrance of celestial things,Some old-time glory, like the gods', outshoneFrom men's rapt souls, wherein a memory clingsOf that diviner day, from them withdrawn.For all the dreams that smouldered in man's breast,And all the clearer ways he yearned to reach,—The fugitive ideal, the old unrest,—Found utterance in song, that slept in speech.And like a minstrel in an alien land,Who sings his native strains while men crowd roundAnd hearken long, but cannot understand,He sang to us, and through the unknown soundWe caught a passing glimmer of the soulThose foreign runes concealed, and strove to gleanFrom out the uninterpretable wholeSome earthlier harmony.It must have beenHe heard far-off that low uranian strainThat only maddens him who vainly hears;For they, the gods, soon saw the god-like painThat mocked a man, and closed his listening ears.

HE wandered down, an Orpheus wilder-souled,From some melodious world of love and song,And through our earthly vales strange music rolled.Who heard that alien note could only long,As pale Eurydice once longed, to know againThe happier ways, the more harmonious air,Where once they heard that half-remembered strain,—Where once their exiled feet were wont to fare.A gleam of some strange golden life now gone,A sad remembrance of celestial things,Some old-time glory, like the gods', outshoneFrom men's rapt souls, wherein a memory clingsOf that diviner day, from them withdrawn.For all the dreams that smouldered in man's breast,And all the clearer ways he yearned to reach,—The fugitive ideal, the old unrest,—Found utterance in song, that slept in speech.And like a minstrel in an alien land,Who sings his native strains while men crowd roundAnd hearken long, but cannot understand,He sang to us, and through the unknown soundWe caught a passing glimmer of the soulThose foreign runes concealed, and strove to gleanFrom out the uninterpretable wholeSome earthlier harmony.

HE wandered down, an Orpheus wilder-souled,

From some melodious world of love and song,

And through our earthly vales strange music rolled.

Who heard that alien note could only long,

As pale Eurydice once longed, to know again

The happier ways, the more harmonious air,

Where once they heard that half-remembered strain,—

Where once their exiled feet were wont to fare.

A gleam of some strange golden life now gone,

A sad remembrance of celestial things,

Some old-time glory, like the gods', outshone

From men's rapt souls, wherein a memory clings

Of that diviner day, from them withdrawn.

For all the dreams that smouldered in man's breast,

And all the clearer ways he yearned to reach,—

The fugitive ideal, the old unrest,—

Found utterance in song, that slept in speech.

And like a minstrel in an alien land,

Who sings his native strains while men crowd round

And hearken long, but cannot understand,

He sang to us, and through the unknown sound

We caught a passing glimmer of the soul

Those foreign runes concealed, and strove to glean

From out the uninterpretable whole

Some earthlier harmony.

It must have beenHe heard far-off that low uranian strainThat only maddens him who vainly hears;For they, the gods, soon saw the god-like painThat mocked a man, and closed his listening ears.

It must have been

He heard far-off that low uranian strain

That only maddens him who vainly hears;

For they, the gods, soon saw the god-like pain

That mocked a man, and closed his listening ears.


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