Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Germany: Vols. XVII–XVIII. 1876–79.
The Lady of Castle Windeck
By Ludolf Adelbert von Chamisso (17811838)R
That stag but cheats thy sight;
He is luring thee on to Windeck,
With his seeming fear and flight.
Of the outer gate arise,
The knight gazed over the ruins
Where the stag was lost to his eyes.
The castle was still as death;
He wiped the sweat from his forehead,
With a deep and weary breath.
Of the rich old wine that here,
In the choked-up vaults of Windeck,
Has lain for many a year?”
Time from his lips to fall,
When the Lady of Castle Windeck
Came round the ivy-wall.
In her snow-white drapery stand,
The bunch of keys at her girdle,
The beaker high in her hand.
With an eager lip he quaffed;
But he took into his bosom
A fire with the grateful draught.
The flowing gold of her hair!
He folded his hands in homage,
And murmured a lover’s prayer.
A gentle look of pain;
And quickly as he had seen her
She passed from his sight again.
He haunted the ruins there,
A sleepless, restless wanderer,
A watcher with despair.
With a dreamy, haggard eye;
He seemed not one of the living,
And yet he could not die.
When many years had passed,
And, kissing his lips, released him
From the burden of life at last.