Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Germany: Vols. XVII–XVIII. 1876–79.
Charlemagne and the Bridge of Moonbeams
By Emanuel Geibel (18151884)B
And like molten silver shines the light that sleeps on wave and vine.
But a stately figure standeth on the silent hill alone,
Like the phantom of a monarch looking vainly for his throne!
’T is the glorious Car’lus Magnus, with his gleamy sword in hand,
And his crown enwreathed with myrtle, and his golden sceptre bright,
And his rich imperial purple vesture floating on the night!
Thrones and kingdoms have departed, and the world is waxing old:
Why leaveth he his house of rest? Why cometh he once more
From his marble tomb to wander here by Langewinkel’s shore?
As the herald of disaster to our land of blight and bloom;
He cometh not with blight or ban on castle, field, or shrine,
But with overflowing blessings for the vineyards of the Rhine!
They shine from Langewinkel unto ancient Ingelheim;
And along this Bridge of Moonbeams is the monarch seen to go,
And from thence he pours his blessings on the royal flood below.
The lakes and glades and orchards, and fields of golden grain,
The lofty castle-turrets and the lowly cottage-hearth;
He blesses all, for over all he reigned of yore on earth;
And returns to slumber softly in his tomb at La Chapelle,
Till the summer-time be come again, with sun and rain and dew,
And the vineyards and the gardens woo him back to them anew.