The Wanderer's Storm-Song

By Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

He whom thou ne'er leavest, Genius,

Feels no dread within his heart

At the tempest or the rain.

He whom thou ne'er leavest, Genius,

Will to the rain-clouds,

Will to the hailstorm,

Sing in reply

As the lark sings,

Oh thou on high!

Him whom thou ne'er leavest, Genius,

Thou wilt raise above the mud-track

With thy fiery pinions.

He will wander,

As, with flowery feet,

Over Deucalion's dark flood,

Python-slaying, light, glorious,

Pythius Apollo.

Him whom thou ne'er leavest, Genius,

Thou wilt place upon thy fleecy pinion

When he sleepeth on the rock,—

Thou wilt shelter with thy guardian wing

In the forest's midnight hour.

Him whom thou ne'er leavest, Genius,

Thou wilt wrap up warmly

In the snow-drift;

Tow'rd the warmth approach the Muses,

Tow'rd the warmth approach the Graces.

Ye Muses, hover round me!

Ye Graces also!

That is water, that is earth,

And the son of water and of earth

Over which I wander,

Like the gods.

Ye are pure, like the heart of the water,

Ye are pure like the marrow of earth,

Hov'ring round me, while I hover

Over water, o'er the earth

Like the gods.

Shall he, then, return,

The small, the dark, the fiery peasant?

Shall he, then, return, waiting

Only thy gifts, oh Father Bromius,

And brightly gleaming, warmth-spreading fire?

Return with joy?

And I, whom ye attended,

Ye Muses and ye Graces,

Whom all awaits that ye,

Ye Muses and ye Graces,

Of circling bliss in life

Have glorified—shall I

Return dejected?

Father Bromius!

Thourt the Genius,

Genius of ages,

Thou'rt what inward glow

To Pindar was,

What to the world

Phoebus Apollo.

Woe! Woe Inward warmth,

Spirit-warmth,

Central-point!

Glow, and vie with

Phoebus Apollo!

Coldly soon

His regal look

Over thee will swiftly glide,—

Envy-struck

Linger o'er the cedar's strength,

Which, to flourish,

Waits him not.

Why doth my lay name thee the last?

Thee, from whom it began,

Thee, in whom it endeth,

Thee, from whom it flows,

Jupiter Pluvius!

Tow'rd thee streams my song.

And a Castalian spring

Runs as a fellow-brook,

Runs to the idle ones,

Mortal, happy ones,

Apart from thee,

Who cov'rest me around,

Jupiter Pluvius!

Not by the elm-tree

Him didst thou visit,

With the pair of doves

Held in his gentle arm,—

With the beauteous garland of roses,—

Caressing him, so blest in his flowers,

Anacreon,

Storm-breathing godhead!

Not in the poplar grove,

Near the Sybaris' strand,

Not on the mountain's

Sun-illumined brow

Didst thou seize him,

The flower-singing,

Honey-breathing,

Sweetly nodding

Theocritus.

When the wheels were rattling,

Wheel on wheel tow'rd the goal,

High arose

The sound of the lash

Of youths with victory glowing,

In the dust rolling,

As from the mountain fall

Showers of stones in the vale—

Then thy soul was brightly glowing, Pindar—

Glowing? Poor heart!

There, on the hill,—

Heavenly might!

But enough glow

Thither to wend,

Where is my cot!

Goethe says of this ode, that it is the only one remaining outof several strange hymns and dithyrambs composed by him at aperiod of great unhappiness, when the love-affair between him andFrederica had been broken off by him. He used to sing them whilewandering wildly about the country. This particular one wascaused by his being caught in a tremendous storm on one of theseoccasions. He calls it a half-crazy piece (halkunsinn), and thereader will probably agree with him.