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The Beauteous Flower. Song Of The Imprisoned Count.

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COUNT.     I Know a flower of beauty rare,     Ah, how I hold it dear!     To seek it I would fain repair,     Were I not prison'd here.     My sorrow sore oppresses me,     For when I was at liberty,     I had it close beside me.     Though from this castle's walls so steep     I cast mine eyes around,     And gaze oft from the lofty keep,     The flower can not be found.     Whoe'er would bring it to my sight,     Whether a vassal he, or knight,     My dearest friend I'd deem him. THE ROSE.     I blossom fair, thy tale of woes     I hear from 'neath thy grate.     Thou doubtless meanest me, the rose.     Poor knight of high estate!     Thou hast in truth a lofty mind;     The queen of flowers is then enshrin'd,     I doubt not, in thy bosom. COUNT.     Thy red, in dress of green array'd,     As worth all praise I hold;     And so thou'rt treasured by each maid     Like precious stones or gold.     Thy wreath adorns the fairest face     But still thou'rt not the flower whose grace     I honour here in silence. THE LILY.     The rose is wont with pride to swell,     And ever seeks to rise;     But gentle sweethearts love full well     The lily's charms to prize,     The heart that fills a bosom true,     That is, like me, unsullied too,     My merit values duly. COUNT.     In truth, I hope myself unstain'd,     And free from grievous crime;     Yet I am here a prisoner chain'd,     And pass in grief my time,     To me thou art an image sure     Of many a maiden, mild and pure,     And yet I know a dearer. THE PINK.     That must be me, the pink, who scent     The warder's garden here;     Or wherefore is he so intent     My charms with care to rear?     My petals stand in beauteous ring,     Sweet incense all around I fling,     And boast a thousand colours. COUNT.     The pink in truth we should not slight,     It is the gardener's pride     It now must stand exposed to light,     Now in the shade abide.     Yet what can make the Count's heart glow     Is no mere pomp of outward show;     It is a silent flower. THE VIOLET.     Here stand I, modestly half hid,     And fain would silence keep;     Yet since to speak I now am bid,     I'll break my silence deep.     If, worthy Knight, I am that flower,     It grieves me that I have not power     To breathe forth all my sweetness. COUNT.     The violet's charms I prize indeed,     So modest 'tis, and fair,     And smells so sweet; yet more I need     To ease my heavy care.     The truth I'll whisper in thine ear:     Upon these rocky heights so drear,     I cannot find the loved one.     The truest maiden 'neath the sky     Roams near the stream below,     And breathes forth many a gentle sigh,     Till I from hence can go.     And when she plucks a flow'ret blue,     And says "Forget-me-not!" I, too,     Though far away, can feel it.     Ay, distance only swells love's might,     When fondly love a pair;     Though prison'd in the dungeon's night,     In life I linger there     And when my heart is breaking nigh,     "Forget-me-not!" is all I cry,     And straightway life returneth.

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"The Beauteous Flower. Song Of The Imprisoned Count." 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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