Samuel Waddington, comp. The Sonnets of Europe. 1888.
The Philosophic FlightGiordano Bruno (15481600)
Translated by John Addington Symonds
N
The more I feel vast air beneath my feet,
The more toward boundless air on pinions fleet,
Spurning the earth, soaring to heaven, I tend:
Nor makes them stoop their flight the direful end
Of Dædal’s son; but upward still they beat.
What life the while with this death could compete,
If dead to earth at last I must descend?
My own heart’s voice in the void air I hear.
Where wilt thou bear me, O rash man! Recall
Thy daring will! This boldness waits on fear!
Dread not, I answer, that tremendous fall:
Strike through the clouds, and smile when death is near,
If death so glorious be our doom at all!