Skip to content
Linespedia

Man's Dignity.

Topics: classic

I am a man! Let every one     Who is a man, too, spring     With joy beneath God's shining sun,     And leap on high, and sing!     To God's own image fair on earth     Its stamp I've power to show;     Down to the front, where heaven has birth     With boldness I dare go.     'Tis well that I both dare and can!     When I a maiden see,     A voice exclaims: thou art a man!     I kiss her tenderly.     And redder then the maiden grows,     Her bodice seems too tight     That I'm a man the maiden knows,     Her bodice therefore's tight.     Will she, perchance, for pity cry,     If unawares she's caught?     She finds that I'm a man then, why     By her is pity sought?     I am a man; and if alone     She sees me drawing near,     I make the emperor's daughter run,     Though ragged I appear.     This golden watchword wins the smile     Of many a princess fair;     They call ye'd best look out the while,     Ye gold-laced fellows there!     That I'm a man is fully shown     Whene'er my lyre I sweep;     It thunders out a glorious tone     It otherwise would creep.     The spirit that my veins now hold,     My manhood calls its brother!     And both command, like lions bold,     And fondly greet each other.     From out this same creative flood     From which we men have birth,     Both godlike strength and genius bud,     And everything of worth.     My talisman all tyrants hates,     And strikes them to the ground;     Or guides us gladly through life's gates     To where the dead are found.     E'en Pompey, at Pharsalia's fight,     My talisman o'erthrew;     On German sand it hurled with might     Rome's sensual children, too.     Didst see the Roman, proud and stern,     Sitting on Afric's shore?     His eyes like Hecla seem to burn,     And fiery flames outpour.     Then comes a frank and merry knave,     And spreads it through the land:     "Tell them that thou on Carthage's grave     Hast seen great Marius stand!"     Thus speaks the son of Rome with pride,     Still mighty in his fall;     He is a man, and naught beside,     Before him tremble all.     His grandsons afterwards began     Their portions to o'erthrow,     And thought it well that every man     Should learn with grace to crow.     For shame, for shame, once more for shame!     The wretched ones? they've even     Squandered the tokens of their fame,     The choicest gifts of heaven.     God's counterfeit has sinfully     Disgraced his form divine,     And in his vile humanity     Has wallowed like the swine.     The face of earth each vainly treads,     Like gourds, that boys in sport     Have hollowed out to human heads,     With skulls, whose brains are naught.     Like wine that by a chemist's art     Is through retorts refined,     Their spirits to the deuce depart,     The phlegma's left behind.     From every woman's face they fly,     Its very aspect dread,     And if they dared and could not why,     'Twere better they were dead.     They shun all worthies when they can,     Grief at their joy they prove     The man who cannot make a man,     A man can never love!     The world I proudly wander o'er,     And plume myself and sing     I am a man! Whoe'er is more?     Then leap on high, and spring!

AI analysis available. Enable JavaScript to interact.

About this line

"I am a man! Let every one..."

Friedrich Schiller's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "Man's Dignity."... ### 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.