C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
New Years Wishes
By Adam Mickiewicz (17981855)
T
New Phœnix, spreading wings o’er the heavens far and near;
Full of hopes and wishes, earth salutes it with delight.
What should I for myself desire on this glad New Year?
When they the heavens open and gild the wide earth o’er,
We wait the assumption till the weary eyes we lift
Are darkened by a night sadder than e’er known before.
Bears one to spheres platonic—to joys divine I know.
Till the strong and gay are hurled down pain’s profound abyss,
Hurled from the seventh heaven upon the rocks below.
Of a peerless rose I dreamed, and to gather it I thought,
When I awoke. Then vanished the rose with the dream’s bright spell—
Thorns in my breast alone were left—Love I desire not!
Youth creates? Ah! who is there who would not friendship crave?
She is first to give imagination’s daughter birth.
Ever to the uttermost she seeks its life to save.
Ever the self-same power has o’er ye all control,
Like Armida’s palm whose leaves seemed separate elements
While the whole tree was nourished by one accursed soul.
Or when the venomous insects poison it with their bane,
In what sharp suffering each separate branch must be
For others and itself…. I desire not friendship’s pain!
Some lovely by-place—bed of oak—where sweet peace descends,
From whence I could see never the brightness of the sun,
Hear the laugh of enemies, or see the tears of friends!
In sleep which all my senses against all power should bind,
Dreaming as I dreamt my golden youthful years away,
Love the world—wish it well—but away from humankind.