Skip to content
Linespedia

Spring

Topics: classic

(After the German of Goethe, Faust, II)     When on the mountain tops ray-crowned Apollo     Turns his swift arrows, dart on glittering dart,     Let but a rock glint green, the wild goats follow     Glad-grazing shyly on each sparse-grown part.     Rolled into plunging torrents spring the fountains;     And slope and vale and meadowland grow green;     While on ridg'd levels of a hundred mountains,     Far fleece by fleece, the woolly flocks convene.     With measured stride, deliberate and steady,     The scattered cattle seek the beetling steep,     But shelter for th' assembled herd is ready     In many hollows that the walled rocks heap:     The lairs of Pan; and, lo, in murmuring places,     In bushy clefts, what woodland Nymphs arouse!     Where, full of yearning for the azure spaces,     Tree, crowding tree, lifts high its heavy boughs.     Old forests, where the gnarly oak stands regnant     Bristling with twigs that still repullulate,     And, swoln with spring, with sappy sweetness pregnant,     The maple blushes with its leafy weight.     And, mother-like, in cirques of quiet shadows,     Milk flows, warm milk, that keeps all things alive;     Fruit is not far, th' abundance of the meadows,     And honey oozes from the hollow hive.

AI analysis available. Enable JavaScript to interact.

About this line

"(After the German of Goethe, Faust, II)..."

"Spring" is a quintessential example of Madison Julius Cawein's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

Classified Tags

Related lines

"I saw the daughters of the ocean dance     With wind and tide, and heard them on the rocks:     White hands they waved me, tossing sunlit locks,"

"Listen, dearest! you must love me more,     More than you did before!     Hark, what a beating here of wings!     Never at rest,     Dear, in"

"I.     O Dark-Eyed goddess of the marble brow,     Whose look is silence and whose touch is night,     Who walkest lonely through the world, O tho"

"God made that night of pearl and ivory,     Perfect and holy as a holy thought     Born of perfection, dreams, and ecstasy,     In love and sil"

"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

"I saw the daughters of the ocean dance     With wi..."

Weekly Poetic Insight

Join our literary Sanctuary

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