Title: Evening songs
Author: Vítězslav Hálek
Translator: Joseph Štýbr
Release date: January 5, 2026 [eBook #77623]
Language: English
Original publication: Boston: The Gorham Press, 1920
Credits: Tim Miller, chenzw and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
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BY
VÍTĚZSLAV HÁLEK
From the Czech Original
TRANSLATED BY
DR. JOSEPH ŠTÝBR
BOSTON
RICHARD G. BADGER
THE GORHAM PRESS
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Copyright, 1920, by Joseph Štýbr
All Rights Reserved
Made in the United States of America
The Gorham Press, Boston, U. S. A.
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Vítězslav Hálek, whose little volume of verses is herewith presented to the reader in English translation, belonged to the romantic and lyric school of Czech poesy during the second half of the last century. He was born in 1835 and died in 1874. From his first appearance in literature in 1858 he held his nation at attention and enjoyed its admiration and love for twenty years. During that time he produced a line of works touching upon nearly all classes of writing; however, the lyric string of his lyre proved to be the most charming one, and this little volume of Evening Songs proved to be his culminating point. As an expression of fragrant effusions of feeling it always appealed to the tenderness of youthful hearts and was eagerly sought and read, so that the book in the original appeared in many editions.
Should the little volume bring real pleasure to the reader and induce others to open wider the doors to the rich and charming Czech literature for the readers in English, the effort of the translator would be well rewarded.
The Translator.
| PAGE | |
|---|---|
| As in the sky rises the moon | 53 |
| At prophets cast ye never stones | 71 |
| Blest is the man whom the Lord’s hand | 67 |
| Day and night went each their way, The | 55 |
| Deep silence reigns—it seems to me | 48 |
| Don’t wonder, shouldst Thou chance to hear | 58 |
| From heaven angels come to earth | 72 |
| God summoned me to paradise | 17 |
| God’s world is so far and wide, The | 59 |
| Greatest hero is not he, The | 32 |
| Heavens are replete with stars, The | 33 |
| He’s going far from home | 75 |
| He who can strike the golden strings | 70 |
| Hey, in the rounds what pleasure | 60 |
| Humming of the trees has ceased, The | 13 |
| I am a linden with large crown | 21 |
| I am the knight from the old tale | 12 |
| I bade the trumpets to be blown | 69 |
| I do not know, was it a dream? | 45 |
| I thought to myself, with no love | 50 |
| If all the world lost its delight | 37 |
| If that poor nightingale | 18 |
| In the sky the moon was standing | 74 |
| It happened. My soul minus Thee | 26 |
| It seemed to me—Grief had grown old | 49 |
| Moon sails slowly in the sky, The | 76 |
| Much has been trusted to Thy hands | 68 |
| My God, of all things I aspire | 66 |
| My lips were lockt a long, long time | 64 |
| My pillow was of sorrow made | 62 |
| My sweetheart, come, kneel down with me | 20 |
| My sweetheart, come, sit close to me | 29 |
| My sweetheart, I dreamt Thou hadst died | 39 |
| My sweetheart, look at those two clouds | 77 |
| Night is fair and transparent, The | 43 |
| Now go, my darling children, go | 73 |
| Of my songs I shall build Thy throne | 57 |
| Once as I through the golden stars | 30 |
| Scorching heat of noonday sun, The | 35 |
| Should I tell Thee the secret tale | 19 |
| So many, many things there are | 41 |
| So often it appears to me | 22 |
| Spring came flying from afar, The | 11 |
| Stars upon the heavens there, The | 31 |
| Stars by the hundreds dot the sky | 15 |
| Tell wherein thou hast sinned, my heart | 36 |
| That deep and dark blue heaven’s bowl | 46 |
| That little bird sings all the time | 47 |
| That nightingale has not retired | 24 |
| That young little singer there | 52 |
| There were two thoughts, two thoughts of God | 51 |
| Those stars, those fair wee little stars | 44 |
| Thou art still but a youthful bud | 23 |
| Thou hast laid Thy hand on my head | 56 |
| Thou maiden, charming most of all | 25 |
| Though all the world has gone to sleep | 14 |
| Thy beautiful eye is a lake | 28 |
| ’Tis wrong for men to lack in song | 63 |
| Up in the oak tree a dove wailed | 42 |
| Upon the sky the moon and stars | 34 |
| What charm is there in love for us | 16 |
| What matters it what in sweet songs | 38 |
| When God felt His supreme delight | 40 |
| When I gaze at Thee, darling mine | 27 |
| When I shall trust my corpse to earth | 65 |
| Ye all who deem yourselves oppressed | 54 |
| Ye little, ye wee little stars | 61 |
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Transcriber’s notes
Half-title page on page 9 has been removed in this edition.