Page:The Spirit of Modern Philosophy (1892).djvu/212

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THE SPIRIT OF MODERN PHILOSOPHY.




• • •

Thus, then, in my heart am I freed from fear,
Sound in body and soul stand here,
And may, instead of posture and prayer,
Instead of losing my way in the air,
Here on the earth, in her blue eyes see
The deepest depths that exist for me.
Nay, and why should I in the world suffer dread,
I, who know the world from the foot to the head?
’T is a tame creature, is it not?
When has it ever its bonds forgot?
Yields to the yoke of all-ruling law,
Crouches at my feet in awe.

• • •

Within it a giant spirit doth dream.
But his soul is a frozen lava stream;[1]
From his narrow house he cannot away.
Nor his iron chains escape for a day.
Yet often he flutters his wings in his sleep.
Mightily stirs in his dungeon-keep,
Travails in dead and in living things
To know his will and to free his wings.[2]

• • •

His power, that fills the veins with ore.
And renews in the spring the buds once more.
Labors unceasing in darkness and night,
In all nature’s nooks and crannies for light.
Fears no pang in its fierce desire
To live and to conquer and win its way higher.
Organs and members it fashions anew,
Lengthens or shortens, makes many or few.
And wrestles and writhes in its search till it find
The form that is worthiest of its mind.
Struggling thus on life intent.
Against a cruel environment.
It triumphs at last, in one narrow space,
And comes to itself in a dwarfish race.
That, fair of form, of stature erect,
Stands on earth as the giant’s elect,
  1. “Steckt zwar ein Riesengeist darinnen,
    Ist aber versteinert mit seinen Sinnen.”
  2. “In todten und lebendigen Dingen
    Thut nach Bewusstseyn mächtig ringen.”