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The Piccolomini (play)

Page 13

by Friedrich Schiller


  Compel him to the measure: it may happen,

  Because ye are determined that he is guilty,

  Guilty ye'll make him. All retreat cut off,

  You close up every outlet, hem him in

  Narrower and narrower, till at length ye force him-

  Yes, ye, ye force him, in his desperation,

  To set fire to his prison. Father! father!

  That never can end well-it cannot-will not!

  And let it be decided as it may,

  I see with boding heart the near approach

  Of an ill-starred, unblest catastrophe.

  For this great monarch-spirit, if he fall,

  Will drag a world into the ruin with him.

  And as a ship that midway on the ocean

  Takes fire, at once, and with a thunder-burst

  Explodes, and with itself shoots out its crew

  In smoke and ruin betwixt sea and heaven!

  So will he, falling, draw down in his fall

  All us, who're fixed and mortised to his fortune,

  Deem of it what thou wilt; but pardon me,

  That I must bear me on in my own way.

  All must remain pure betwixt him and me;

  And, ere the daylight dawns, it must be known

  Which I must lose-my father or my friend.

  [During his exit the curtain drops.

  FOOTNOTES.

  [1] A town about twelve German miles N.E. of Ulm.

  [2] The Dukes in Germany being always reigning powers, their sons

  and daughters are entitled princes and princesses.

  [3] Carinthia.

  [4] A town not far from the Mine-mountains, on the high road

  from Vienna to Prague.

  [5] In the original,-

  "Den blut'gen Lorbeer geb' ich hin mit Freuden

  Fuers erste Veilchen, das der Maerz uns bringt,

  Das duerftige Pfand der neuverjuengten Erde."

  [6] A reviewer in the Literary Gazette observes that, in these

  lines, Mr. Coleridge has misapprehended the meaning of the word

  "Zug," a team, translating it as "Anzug," a suit of clothes. The

  following version, as a substitute, I propose:-

  When from your stables there is brought to me

  A team of four most richly harnessed horses.

  The term, however, is "Jagd-zug" which may mean a "hunting

  equipage," or a "hunting stud;" although Hilpert gives only "a team

  of four horses."

  [7] Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar, who succeeded Gustavus in command.

  [8] The original is not translatable into English:-

  -Und sein Sold

  Muss dem Soldaten werden, darnach heisst er.

  It might perhaps have been thus rendered:-

  And that for which he sold his services,

  The soldier must receive-

  but a false or doubtful etymology is no more than a dull pun.

  [9] In Germany, after honorable addresses have been paid and formally

  accepted, the lovers are called bride and bridegreoom, even though

  the marriage should not take place till years afterwards.

  [10] I am doubtful whether this be the dedication of the cloister,

  or the name of one of the city gates, near which it stood. I have

  translated it in the former sense; but fearful of having made some

  blunder, I add the original,-

  Es ist ein Kloster hier zur Himmelspforte.

  [11] No more of talk, where god or angel guest

  With man, as with his friend familiar, used

  To sit indulgent. Paradise Lost, B. IX.

  [12] I found it not in my power to translate this song with literal

  fidelity preserving at the same time the Alcaic movement, and have

  therefore added the original, with a prose translation. Some of my

  readers may be more fortunate.

  THEKLA (spielt and singt).

  Der Eichwald brauset, die Wolken ziehn,

  Das Maegdlein wandelt an Ufers Gruen;

  Es bricht sich die Welle mit Macht, mit Macht,

  Und sie singt hinaus in die finstre Nacht,

  Das Auge von Weinen getruebet:

  Das Herz is gestorben, die Welt ist leer,

  Und weiter giebt sie dem Wunsche nichts mehr.

  Du Heilige, rufe dein Kind zurueck,

  Ich babe genossen das irdische Glueck,

  Ich babe gelebt and geliebet.

  LITERAL TRANSLATION.

  THEKLA (plays and sings). The oak-forest bellows, the clouds

  gather, the damsel walks to and fro on the green of the shore; the

  wave breaks with might, with might, and she sings out into the dark

  night, her eye discolored with weeping: the heart is dead, the world

  is empty, and further gives it nothing more to the wish. Thou Holy

  One, call thy child home. I have enjoyed the happiness of this

  world, I have lived and have loved.

  I cannot but add here an imitation of this song, with which my

  friend, Charles Lamb, has favored me, and which appears to me to

  have caught the happiest manner of our old ballads:-

  The clouds are blackening, the storms are threatening,

  The cavern doth mutter, the greenwood moan!

  Billows are breaking, the damsel's heart aching,

  Thus in the dark night she singeth alone,

  He eye upward roving:

  The world is empty, the heart is dead surely,

  In this world plainly all seemeth amiss;

  To thy heaven, Holy One, take home thy little one.

  I have partaken of all earth's bliss,

  Both living and loving.

  [13] There are few who will not have taste enough to laugh at the

  two concluding lines of this soliloquy: and still fewer, I would

  fain hope, who would not have been more disposed to shudder, had I

  given a faithful translation. For the readers of German I have

  added the original:-

  Blind-wuethend schleudert selbst der Gott der Freude

  Den Pechkranz in das brennende Gebaeude.

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