Poetry Explorer


Classic and Contemporary Poetry


THE DYING FLOWER by FRIEDRICH RUCKERT

First Line: DROOP NOT, POOR FLOWER! - THERE'S HOPE FOR THEE
Last Line: I BOW MY HEAD AND SINK TO SLEEP!

Dialogue between a passenger and a fading violet.

Passenger

Droop not, poor flower! -- there's hope for thee:
The spring again will breathe and burn
And glory robe the kingly tree
Whose life is in the sun's return.
And once again its buds will chime
Their peal of joy from viewless bells
Through all the long dark winter-time
They mourned within their dreary cells.

Flower

Alas! no kingly tree am I,
No marvel of a thousand years:
I cannot dream a winter by
And wake with song when spring appears.
At best my life is kin to death;
My little all of being flows
From summer's kiss, from summer's breath,
And sleeps in summer's grave of snows.

Passenger

Yet grieve not! Summer may depart,
And beauty seek a brighter home;
But thou, thou bearest in thy heart
The germ of many a life to come.
Mayest lightly reek of autumn storms:
Whate'er thine individual doom,
thine essence, blent with other forms
Will still shine out in radiant bloom!

Flower

Yes! moons will wane, and bluer skies
Breathe blessing forth for flower and tree;
I know that while the unit dies,
The myriad live immortally.
But shall my soul survive in them"
Shall I be all I was before?
Vain dream! I wither, soul and stem;
I die, and know my place no more!
The sun may lavish life on them;
His light, in summer morns and eves
May color every dewy gem
That sparkles on their tender leaves.
But this will not avail the dead;
The glory of his wondrous face
Who now rains lustre on my head
Can only mock my burial-place!

And woe to me, fond foolish one,
To tempt an all-consuming ray!
To think a flower could love the sun,
Nor feel her soul dissolve away!
Oh, could I be what once I was,
How should I shun his fatal beam!
Wrapt in myself, my life should pass
But as a still, dark, painless dream!

But vainly in my bitterness
I speak the language of despair;
In life, in death, I still must bless
The sun, the light, the cradling air!
Mine early love to them I gave;
And now that yon bright orb on high
Illumines but a wider grave,
For them I breathe my final sigh!

How often soared my soul aloft
In balmy bliss too deep to speak,
When Zephyr came and kissed with soft
Sweet incense breath my blushing cheek!
When beauteous bees and butterflies
Flew round me in the summer beam,
Or when some virgin's glorious eyes
Bent o'er me like a dazzling dream!

Ah yes! I know myself a birth
Of that All-wise, All-mighty Love,
Which made the flower to bloom on earth,
And sun and stars to burn above;
And if like them I fade and fail,
If I but share the common doom,
Let no lament of mine bewail
My dark descent to Hades' gloom!

Farewell thou Lamp of this green globe!
Thy light is on my dying face;
Thy glory tints my faded robe,
And clasps me in a death embrace!
Farewell, thou balsam-dropping spring!
Farewell, ye skies that beam and weep!
Unhoping and unmurmuring,
I bow my head and sink to sleep!




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