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Johann Wolfgang von Goethe - From "Wilhelm Meister`s Apprenticeship" - Book II, Chap. XIIIJohann Wolfgang von Goethe - From "Wilhelm Meister`s Apprenticeship" - Book II, Chap. XIII
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WHO never eat with tears his bread, Who never through night`s heavy hours Sat weeping on his lonely bed,-- He knows you not, ye heavenly powers! Through you the paths of life we gain, Ye let poor mortals go astray, And then abandon them to pain,-- E`en here the penalty we pay, ----- WHO gives himself to solitude, Soon lonely will remain; Each lives, each loves in joyous mood, And leaves him to his pain. Yes! leave me to my grief! Were solitude`s relief E`er granted me, Alone I should not be. A lover steals, on footstep light, To learn if his love`s alone; Thus o`er me steals, by day and night, Anguish before unknown, Thus o`er me steals deep grief. Ah, when I find relief Within the tomb so lonely, Will rest be met with only!
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