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The Goblet.

Topics: classic

Once I held a well-carved brimming goblet,     In my two hands tightly clasp'd I held it,     Eagerly the sweet wine sipp'd I from it,     Seeking there to drown all care and sorrow.     Amor enter'd in, and found me sitting,     And he gently smiled in modest fashion,     Smiled as though the foolish one he pitied.     "Friend, I know a far more beauteous vessel,     One wherein to sink thy spirit wholly;     Say, what wilt thou give me, if I grant it,     And with other nectar fill it for thee?"     Oh, how kindly hath he kept his promise!     For to me, who long had yearn'd, he granted     Thee, my Lida, fill'd with soft affection.     When I clasp mine arms around thee fondly,     When I drink in love's long-hoarded balsam     From thy darling lips so true, so faithful,     Fill'd with bliss thus speak I to my spirit     "No! a vessel such as this, save Amor     Never god hath fashion'd or been lord of!     Such a form was ne'er produced by Vulcan     With his cunning, reason-gifted hammers!     On the leaf-crown'd mountains may Lyaeus     Bid his Fauns, the oldest and the wisest,     Pass the choicest clusters through the winepress,     And himself watch o'er the fermentation:     Such a draught no toil can e'er procure him!"

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"Once I held a well-carved brimming goblet, ..."

"The Goblet." is a quintessential example of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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