In the heart of white summer mist lay a green little
piece of the world;
And the tops of the beeches were lost in the mist, and
the mist ringed us round;
All the low leaves were silvered with dew, and the herbage
with dew was impearled;
And the turmoil of life was but vaguely divined through
the mist as a sound.
In the heart of the mist there was warmth, for the soil
full of sun was aglow,
Like a fruit when it colors, - and fragrance from flowers,
and a scent from the soil;
And a lamb in the grass, in the flowers, in the dew,
nibbled, whiter than snow;
And the white summer mist was a fold for us both against
sorrow and toil.
From the fields in the mist came a bleating, a sound
as of longing and need:
But the lamb from the grass it its little green heaven
never lifted its head;
It was innocent, whiter than snow; it was glad in the
flowers, took no heed;
But the sound from
the fields in the mist made me grieve as for one that is dead.
And behold! ’t was a dream I had dreamed, and a voice
made me wake with a start,
Saying: „Hark! once again in the flesh shall ye twain
live your life for a span;
But since whiteness of snow is as nought in mine eyes
without pity of heart,
Lo! the lamb shall be born as a wolf, with a wolf’s heart,
but thou as a man!”