Home
Fictions/Novels
Short Stories
Poems
Essays
Plays
 
All Authors
All Titles
 

Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe > Text of Violet

A poem by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

The Violet

The Violet

UPON the mead a violet stood,
Retiring, and of modest mood,

In truth, a violet fair.
Then came a youthful shepherdess,
And roam'd with sprightly joyousness,
And blithely woo'd

With carols sweet the air

"Ah!" thought the violet, "had I been
For but the smallest moment e'en

Nature's most beauteous flower,
'Till gather'd by my love, and press'd,
When weary, 'gainst her gentle breast,
For e'en, for e'en

One quarter of an hour!"

Alas! alas! the maid drew nigh,
The violet failed to meet her eye,

She crush'd the violet sweet.
It sank and died, yet murmur'd not:
"And if I die, oh, happy lot,
For her I die,

And at her very feet!"


1775.


-THE END-
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's poem: The Violet



GO TO TOP OF SCREEN