Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Germany: Vols. XVII–XVIII. 1876–79.
Count Eberhard, the Weeper of Würtemberg
By Friedrich von Schiller (17591805)Y
Lift not your heads so grand!
Men hath it borne, and heroes stout,
Alike for peace or battle-rout,—
Our gallant Swabian land!
And Ludwig as ye might,
Charles, Frederic, Ludwig, Edward too,
Was Eberhard, our count so true,—
A tempest in the fight.
Loved well the iron clang;
The county’s boy, young Ulric, too,
No footfall backward ever drew,
Where men to saddle sprang.
To see our names so bright;
And strove the victor’s wreath to gain,
And many a sword-dance dared maintain,
And drew their girdles tight.
Whence beaten home he came!
The father’s brow was black as night,—
The youthful warrior fled the light,
And wept for very shame.
(And kept it in his soul)—
“Now by my father’s beard I swear
To grind the notch my sword doth bear
On many a townsman’s poll!”
Forth sallied horse and man;
Toward Döffingen the army stood,
And brighter grew the younker’s mood,
And hot the fight began.
Was given—“the ill-starred fight”—
That drove us like the storm away,
And lodged us deep in bloody fray,
And in the lances’ night.
Swung high his hero-glaive;
Wild battle-roar before his path,
Wailing and groans his feet beneath,
And all around—the grave.
Fell heavy on his head;
The hero-band surround their lord
In vain; young Ulric on the sward
With glassy eyes lay dead.
Tears from all eyes ’gan flow;
But ho!—the count to charge began,—
“My son is as another man;
March, children, on the foe!”
For vengeance spurs them well;
Forth o’er the corpses went their might,
And townsmen flying left and right
O’er forest, hill, and dell.
When to our camp hied we;
And wives and children gayly sang,
Mid dances’ whirl and beaker-clang,
To praise our victory.
Before him lies his son;
Within his tent, no mortal near,
The count hath dropt one sparkling tear
That silent form upon.
Around the count we stand;
Alone, he is a hero-swarm,—
The thunder rageth in his arm,—
The star of Swabian land.
Lift not your heads so grand!
Men hath it borne, and heroes stout,
Alike in peace and battle-rout,
Our gallant Swabian land.