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小说: forty-two poems 字数: 每页4000字

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again;
We have stood on the shore of the plain where the Waters of Destiny boom。

A mart of destruction we made at Jalula where men were afraid;
For death was a difficult trade; and the sword was a broker of doom;
And the Spear was a Desert Physician who cured not a few of ambition;
And drave not a few to perdition with medicine bitter and strong:
And the shield was a grief to the fool and as bright as a  desolate pool;
And as straight as the rock of Stamboul when their cavalry thundered
along:
For the coward was drowned with the brave when our battle sheered up like
a wave;
And the dead to the desert we gave; and the glory to God in our song。



JOSEPH AND MARY



JOSEPH

Mary; art thou the little maid
   Who plucked me flowers in Spring?
I know thee not:  I feel afraid:
   Thou'rt strange this evening。

A sweet and rustic girl I won
   What time the woods were green;
No woman with deep eyes that shone;
   And the pale brows of a Queen。

MARY (inattentive to his words。)

A stranger came with feet of flame
   And told me this strange thing; …
For all I was a village maid
   My son should be a King。

JOSEPH

A King; dear wife。  Who ever knew
   Of Kings in stables born!

MARY

Do you hear; in the dark and starlit blue
   The clarion and the horn?

JOSEPH

Mary; alas; lest grief and joy
   Have sent thy wits astray;
But let me look on this my boy;
   And take the wraps away。

MARY

Behold the lad。

JOSEPH

   I dare not gaze:
Light streams from every limb。

MARY

The winter sun has stored his rays;
   And passed the fire to him。

Look Eastward; look!  I hear a sound。
   O Joseph; what do you see?

JOSEPH

The snow lies quiet on the ground
   And glistens on the tree;

The sky is bright with a star's great light;
   And clearly I behold
Three Kings descending yonder hill;
   Whose crowns are crowns of gold。

O Mary; what do you hear and see
   With your brow toward the West?

MARY

The snow lies glistening on the tree
   And silent on Earth's breast;

And strong and tall; with lifted eyes
   Seven shepherds walk this way;
And angels breaking from the skies
   Dance; and sing hymns; and pray。

JOSEPH


I wonder much at these bright Kings;
   The shepherds I despise。

MARY

You know not what a shepherd sings;
   Nor see his shining eyes。



NO COWARD'S SONG



I am afraid to think about my death;
When it shall be; and whether in great pain
I shall rise up and fight the air for breath
Or calmly wait the bursting of my brain。

I am no coward who could seek in fear
A folklore solace or sweet Indian tales:
I know dead men are deaf and cannot hear
The singing of a thousand nightingales。

I know dead men are blind and cannot see
The friend that shuts in horror their big eyes;
And they are witlessO I'd rather be
A living mouse than dead as a man dies。



A WESTERN VOYAGE



My friend the Sunlike all my friends
   Inconstant; lovely; far away …
Is out; and bright; and condescends
   To glory in our holiday。

A furious march with him I'll go
   And race him in the Western train;
And wake the hills of long ago
   And swim the Devon sea again。

I have done foolishly to head
   The footway of the false moonbeams;
To light my lamp and call the dead
   And read their long black printed dreams。

I have done foolishly to dwell
   With Fear upon her desert isle;
To take my shadowgraph to Hell;
   And then to hope the shades would smile。

And since the light must fail me soon
   (But faster; faster; Western train!)
Proud meadows of the afternoon;
   I have remembered you again。

And I'll go seek through moor and dale
   A flower that wastrel winds caress;
The bud is red and the leaves pale;
   The name of it Forgetfulness。

Then like the old and happy hills
   With frozen veins and fires outrun;
I'll wait the day when darkness kills
   My brother and good friend; the Sun。



FOUNTAINS



Soft is the collied night; and cool
The wind about the garden pool。
Here will I dip my burning hand
And move an inch of drowsy sand;
And pray the dark reflected skies
To fasten with their seal mine eyes。
A million million leagues away
Among the stars the goldfish play;
And high above the shadowed stars
Wave and float the nenuphars。



THE WELSH SEA


Far out across Carnarvon bay;
   Beneath the evening waves;
The ancient dead begin their day
   And stream among the graves。

Listen; for they of ghostly speech;
   Who died when Christ was born;
May dance upon the golden beach
   That once was golden corn。

And you may learn of Dyfed's reign;
   And dream Nemedian tales
Of Kings who sailed in ships from Spain
   And lent their swords to Wales。

Listen; for like a golden snake
   The Ocean twists and stirs;
And whispers how the dead men wake
   And call across the years。



OXFORD CANAL



When you have wearied of the valiant spires of this County Town;
Of its wide white streets and glistening museums; and black monastic
walls;
Of its red motors and lumbering trains; and self…sufficient people;
I will take you walking with me to a place you have not seen …
Half town and half countrythe land of the Canal。
It is dearer to me than the antique town:  I love it more than the
rounded hills:
Straightest; sublimest of rivers is the long Canal。
I have observed great storms and trembled:  I have wept for fear of the
dark。
But nothing makes me so afraid as the clear water of this idle canal on a
summer s noon。
Do you see the great telegraph poles down in the water; how every wire is
distinct?
If a body fell into the canal it would rest entangled in those wires for
ever; between earth and air。
For the water is as deep as the stars are high。
One day I was thinking how if a man fell from that lofty pole
He would rush through the water toward me till his image was scattered by
his splash;
When suddenly a train rushed by:  the brazen dome of the engine flashed:
the long white carriages roared;
The sun veiled himself for a moment; and the signals loomed in fog;
A savage woman screamed at me from a barge:  little children began to
cry;
The untidy landscape rose to life:  a sawmill started;
A cart rattled down to the wharf; and workmen clanged over the iron
footbridge;
A beautiful old man nodded from the first story window of a square red
house;
And a pretty girl came out to hang up clothes in a small delightful
garden。
O strange motion in the suburb of a county town:  slow regular movement
of the dance of death!
Men and not phantoms are these that move in light。
   Forgotten they live; and forgotten die。



HIALMAR SPEAKS TO THE RAVEN
from Leconte de Lisle



Night on the bloodstained snow:  the wind is chill:
And there a thousand tombless warriors lie;
Grasping their swords; wild…featured。  All are still。
Above them the black ravens wheel and cry。

A brilliant moon sends her cold light abroad:
Hialmar arises from the reddened slain;
Heavily leaning on his broken sword;
And bleeding from his side the battle…rain。

〃Hail to you all:  is there one breath still drawn
Among those fierce and fearless lads who played
So merrily; and sang as sweet in the dawn
As thrushes singing in the bramble shade?

〃They have no word to say:  my helm's unbound;
My breastplate by the axe unriveted:
Blood's on my eyes; I hear a spreading sound;
Like waves or wolves that clamour in my head。

〃Eater of men; old raven; come this way;
And with thine iron bill open my breast:
To…morrow find us where we lie to…day;
And bear my heart to her that I love best。

〃Through Upsala; where drink the Jarls and sing;
And clash their golden bowls in company;
Bird of the moor; carry on tireless wing
To Ylmer's daughter there the heart of me。

〃And thou shalt see her standing straight and pale;
High pedestalled on some rook…haunted tower:
She has two earrings; silver and vermeil;
And eyes like stars that shine in sunset hour。

〃Tell her my love; thou dark bird ominous;
Give her my heart; no bloodless heart and vile
But red compact and strong; O raven。  Thus
Shall Ylmer's daughter greet thee with a smile。

〃Now let my life from twenty deep wounds flow;
And wolves may drink the blood。  My time is done。
Young; brave and spotless; I rejoice to go
And sit where all the Gods are; in the sun。〃



THE BALLAD OF THE STUDENT IN THE SOUTH



It was no sooner than this morn
   That first I found you there;
Deep in a field of southern corn
   As golden as your hair。

I had read books you had not read;
   Yet I was put to shame
To hear the simple words you said;
   And see your eyes aflame。

Shall I forget when prying dawn
   Sends me about my way;
The careless stars; the quiet lawn;
   And you with whom I lay?

Your's is the beauty of the moon;
   The wisdom of the sea;
Since first you tasted; sweet and soon;
   Of God's forbidden tree。

Darling; a scholar's fancies sink
   So faint beneath your song;
And you are right; why should we think;
   We who are young and strong?

For we are simple; you and I;
   We do what others do;
Linger and toil and laugh and die
   And love the whole night through。



THE QUEEN'S SONG



Had I the power
   To Midas given of old
To touch a flower
   And leave the petals gold
I then might touch thy face;
   Delightful boy;
And leave a metal grace;
   A graven joy。

Thus would I slay; …
   Ah; desperate device!
The vital day
   That trembles in thine eyes;
And let the red lips close
   Which sang so well;
And drive away the rose
   To leave a shell。

Then I myself;
   Rising austere and dumb
On the hight shelf
   Of my half…lighted room;
Would place the shining bust
   And wait alone;
Until I was but dust;
   Buried unknown。

Thus in my love
   For nations yet unborn;
I would remove
   From our two lives the morn;
And muse on loveliness
   In mine armchair;
Content should Time confess
   How sweet you were。



LORD ARNALDOS
Quien hubiese tal ventura?



The strangest of adventures;
That happen by the sea;
Befell to Lord Arnaldos
On the Evening of St。 John;
For he was out a hunting …
A huntsman bold was he! …
When he beheld a little ship
A

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