Skip to content
Linespedia

Fantasie To Laura.

Topics: classic

Name, my Laura, name the whirl-compelling      Bodies to unite in one blest whole      Name, my Laura, name the wondrous magic      By which soul rejoins its kindred soul!      See! it teaches yonder roving planets      Round the sun to fly in endless race;      And as children play around their mother,      Checkered circles round the orb to trace.      Every rolling star, by thirst tormented,      Drinks with joy its bright and golden rain      Drinks refreshment from its fiery chalice,      As the limbs are nourished by the brain.      'Tis through Love that atom pairs with atom,      In a harmony eternal, sure;      And 'tis Love that links the spheres together      Through her only, systems can endure.      Were she but effaced from Nature's clockwork,      Into dust would fly the mighty world;      O'er thy systems thou wouldst weep, great Newton,      When with giant force to chaos hurled!      Blot the goddess from the spirit order,      It would sink in death, and ne'er arise.      Were love absent, spring would glad us never;      Were love absent, none their God would prize!      What is that, which, when my Laura kisses,      Dyes my cheek with flames of purple hue,      Bids my bosom bound with swifter motion,      Like a fever wild my veins runs through?      Every nerve from out its barriers rises,      O'er its banks, the blood begins to flow;      Body seeks to join itself to body,      Spirits kindle in one blissful glow.      Powerful as in the dead creations      That eternal impulses obey,      O'er the web Arachne-like of Nature,      Living Nature, Love exerts her sway.      Laura, see how joyousness embraces      E'en the overflow of sorrows wild!      How e'en rigid desperation kindles      On the loving breast of Hope so mild.      Sisterly and blissful rapture softens      Gloomy Melancholy's fearful night,      And, deliver'd of its golden children,      Lo, the eye pours forth its radiance bright!      Does not awful Sympathy rule over      E'en the realms that Evil calls its own?      For 'tis Hell our crimes are ever wooing,      While they bear a grudge 'gainst Heaven alone!      Shame, Repentance, pair Eumenides-like,      Weave round sin their fearful serpent-coils:      While around the eagle-wings of Greatness      Treach'rous danger winds its dreaded toils.      Ruin oft with Pride is wont to trifle,      Envy upon Fortune loves to cling;      On her brother, Death, with arms extended,      Lust, his sister, oft is wont to spring.      On the wings of Love the future hastens      In the arms of ages past to lie;      And Saturnus, as he onward speeds him,      Long hath sought his bride Eternity!      Soon Saturnus will his bride discover,      So the mighty oracle hath said;      Blazing worlds will turn to marriage torches      When Eternity with Time shall wed!      Then a fairer, far more beauteous morning,      Laura, on our love shall also shine,      Long as their blest bridal-night enduring:      So rejoice thee, Laura Laura mine!

AI analysis available. Enable JavaScript to interact.

About this line

"Name, my Laura, name the whirl-compelling..."

Exploring the themes of classic, Friedrich Schiller delivers a powerful performance in "Fantasie To Laura."... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

Classified Tags

Related lines

"A youth, impelled by a burning thirst for knowledge     To roam to Sais, in fair Egypt's land,     The priesthood's secret learning to explore,"

"Nature in charms is exhaustless, in beauty ever reviving;     And, like Nature, fair art is inexhaustible too.     Hail, thou honored old man! f"

"Naught is for man so important as rightly to know his own purpose;     For but twelve groschen hard cash 'tis to be bought at my shop!"

"APPENDIX.     The following variations appear in the first two verses of Hector's     Farewell, as given in The Robbers, act ii. scene 2."

"Here morning in the ploughman's songs is met     Ere yet one footstep shows in all the sky,     And twilight in the east, a doubt as yet,     S"

"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"

Continue Reading

"A youth, impelled by a burning thirst for knowledg..."

Weekly Poetic Insight

Join our literary Sanctuary

Get the most inspiring lines, poetic analysis, and secret shayaris delivered to your inbox every Sunday.