Goethe

Mignon

Mignon - context Summary

From Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship

This lyric appears within Goethe’s novel Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship as the plaintive song of Mignon. It imagines an idealized southern land of lemon trees, marble houses and high mountains as a distant refuge. The repeated question Do you know it well? and the longing to go there frame themes of exile, innocence, and desire for a protective companion, blending pastoral beauty with hints of danger and wanderlust.

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Do you know the land where the lemon-trees grow, In darkened leaves the gold-oranges glow, A soft wind blows from the pure blue sky, The myrtle stands mute, and the bay tree high? Do you know it well? It’s there I’d be gone, To be there with you, O, my beloved one! Do you know the house? It has columns and beams, There are glittering rooms, the hallway gleams, Are those figures of marble looking at me? What have they done, child of misery? Do you know it well? It’s there I’d be gone, To be there, with you, O my true guardian! Do you know the clouded mountain mass? The mule picks its way through the misted pass, And dragons in caves raise their ancient brood, And the cliffs are polished, smooth, by the flood; Do you know it well? It’s there I would be gone! It’s there our way leads! Father, we must go on!

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