八喜电子书 > 经管其他电子书 > the home book of verse-4 >

第14部分

the home book of verse-4-第14部分

小说: the home book of verse-4 字数: 每页4000字

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!




My own Araminta; say 〃No!〃



Miss Lane; at her Temple of Fashion;

Taught us both how to sing and to speak;

And we loved one another with passion;

Before we had been there a week:

You gave me a ring for a token;

I wear it wherever I go;

I gave you a chain; … it is broken?

My own Araminta; say 〃No!〃



O think of our favorite cottage;

And think of our dear Lalla Rookh!

How we shared with the milkmaids their pottage;

And drank of the stream from the brook;

How fondly our loving lips faltered;

〃What further can grandeur bestow?〃

My heart is the same; … is yours altered?

My own Araminta; say 〃No!〃



Remember the thrilling romances

We read on the bank in the glen;

Remember the suitors our fancies

Would picture for both of us then;

They wore the red cross on their shoulder;

They had vanquished and pardoned their foe … 

Sweet friend; are you wiser or colder?

My own Araminta; say 〃No!〃



You know; when Lord Rigmarole's carriage;

Drove off with your cousin Justine;

You wept; dearest girl; at the marriage;

And whispered 〃How base she has been!〃

You said you were sure it would kill you;

If ever your husband looked so;

And you will not apostatize; … will you?

My own Araminta; say 〃No!〃



When I heard I was going abroad; love;

I thought I was going to die;

We walked arm in arm to the road; love;

We looked arm in arm to the sky;

And I said; 〃When a foreign postilion

Has hurried me off to the Po;

Forget not Medora Trevilian: …

My own Araminta; say 〃No!〃



We parted! but sympathy's fetters

Reach far over valley and hill;

I muse o'er your exquisite letters;

And feel that your heart is mine still;

And he who would share it with me; love; …

The richest of treasures below; …

If he's not what Orlando should be; love;

My own Araminta; say 〃No!〃



If he wears a top…boot in his wooing;

If he comes to you riding a cob;

If he talks of his baking or brewing;

If he puts up his feet on the hob;

If he ever drinks port after dinner;

If his brow or his breeding is low;

If he calls himself 〃Thompson〃 or 〃Skinner;〃

My own Araminta; say 〃No!〃



If he studies the news in the papers

While you are preparing the tea;

If he talks of the damps or the vapors

While moonlight lies soft on the sea;

If he's sleepy while you are capricious;

If he has not a musical 〃Oh!〃

If he does not call Werther delicious; …

My own Araminta; say 〃No!〃



If he ever Sets foot in the city

Among the stockbrokers and Jews;

If he has not a heart full of pity;

If he don't stand six feet in his shoes;

If his lips are not redder than roses;

If his hands are not whiter than snow;

If he has not the model of noses; …

My own Araminta; say 〃No!〃



If he speaks of a tax or a duty;

If he does not look grand on his knees;

If he's blind to a landscape of beauty;

Hills; valleys; rocks; waters; and trees;

If he dotes not on desolate towers;

If he likes not to hear the blast blow;

If he knows not the language of flowers; …

My own Araminta; say 〃No!〃



He must walk like a god of old story

Come down from the home of his rest;

He must smile like the sun in his glory

On the buds he loves ever the best;

And oh! from its ivory portal

Like music his soft speech must flow! …

If he speak; smile; or walk like a mortal; 

My own Araminta; say 〃No!〃 



Don't listen to tales of his bounty;

Don't hear what they say of his birth;

Don't look at his seat in the county;

Don't calculate what he is worth;

But give him a theme to write verse on;

And see if he turns out his toe; …

If he's only an excellent person;

My own Araminta; say 〃No!〃



Winthrop Mackworth Praed '1802…1839'





A NICE CORRESPONDENT



〃There are plenty of roses〃 (the patriarch speaks)

〃Alas not for me; on your lips and your cheeks;

Fair maiden rose…laden enough and to spare;

Spare; spare me that rose that you wear in your hair。〃



The glow and the glory are plighted

To darkness; for evening is come;

The lamp in Glebe Cottage is lighted;

The birds and the sheep…bells are dumb。

I'm alone; for the others have flitted

To dine with a neighbor at Kew:

Alone; but I'm not to be pitied …

I'm thinking of you!



I wish you were here!  Were I duller

Than dull; you'd be dearer than dear;

I am dressed in your favorite color …

Dear Fred; how I wish you were here!

I am wearing my lazuli necklace;

The necklace you fastened askew!

Was there ever so rude or so reckless

A Darling as you?



I want you to come and pass sentence

On two or three books with a plot;

Of course you know 〃Janet's Repentance〃?

I am reading Sir Waverley Scott。

That story of Edgar and Lucy;

How thrilling; romantic; and true!

The Master (his bride was a goosey!)

Reminds me of you。



They tell me Cockaigne has been crowning

A Poet whose garland endures; …

It was you that first told me of Browning; …

That stupid old Browning of yours!

His vogue and his verve are alarming;

I'm anxious to give him his due;

But; Fred; he's not nearly so charming

A Poet as you!



I heard how you shot at The Beeches;

I saw how you rode Chanticleer;

I have read the report of your speeches;

And echoed the echoing cheer。

There's a whisper of hearts you are breaking;

Dear Fred; I believe it; I do!

Small marvel that Folly is making

Her Idol of you!



Alas for the World; and its dearly

Bought triumph; … its fugitive bliss;

Sometimes I half wish I were merely

A plain or a penniless Miss;

But; perhaps; one is blest with 〃a measure

Of pelf;〃 and I'm not sorry; too;

That I'm pretty; because it's a pleasure;

My Darling; to you!



Your whim is for frolic and fashion;

Your taste is for letters and art; …

This rhyme is the commonplace passion

That glows in a fond woman's heart:

Lay it by in some sacred deposit

For relics … we all have a few!

Love; some day they'll print it; because it

Was written to You。



Frederick Locker…Lampson '1821…1895'





HER LETTER



I'm sitting alone by the fire;

Dressed just as I came from the dance;

In a robe even you would admire; …

It cost a cool thousand in France;

I'm be…diamonded out of all reason;

My hair is done up in a cue:

In short; sir; 〃the belle of the season〃

Is wasting an hour upon you。



A dozen engagements I've broken;

I left in the midst of a set;

Likewise a proposal; half spoken;

That waits … on the stairs … for me yet。

They say he'll be rich; … when he grows up; …

And then he adores me indeed;

And you; sir; are turning your nose up;

Three thousand miles off; as you read。



〃And how do I like my position?〃

〃And what do I think of New York?〃

〃And now; in my higher ambition;

With whom do I waltz; flirt; or talk?〃

〃And isn't it nice to have riches;

And diamonds and silks; and all that?〃

〃And aren't they a change to the ditches

And tunnels of Poverty Flat?〃



Well; yes; … if you saw us out driving

Each day in the Park; four…in…hand;

If you saw poor dear mamma contriving

To look supernaturally grand; …

If you saw papa's picture; as taken

By Brady; and tinted at that; …

You'd never suspect he sold bacon

And flour at Poverty Flat。



And yet; just this moment; when sitting

In the glare of the grand chandelier; …

In the bustle and glitter befitting

The 〃finest soiree of the year;〃 …

In the mists of a gaze de Chambery;

And the hum of the smallest of talk; …

Somehow; Joe; I thought of the 〃Ferry;〃

And the dance that we had on 〃The Fork;〃



Of Harrison's bar; with its muster

Of flags festooned over the wall;

Of the candles that shed their soft lustre

And tallow on head…dress and shawl;

Of the steps that we took to one fiddle;

Of the dress of my queer vis…a…vis;

And how I once went down the middle

With the man that shot Sandy McGee。



Of the moon that was quietly sleeping

On the hill; when the time came to go;

Of the few baby peaks that were peeping

From under their bedclothes of snow;

Of that ride; … that to me was the rarest;

Of … the something you said at the gate。

Ah! Joe; then I wasn't an heiress

To 〃the best…paying lead in the State。〃



Well; well; it's all past; yet it's funny

To think; as I stood in the glare

Of fashion and beauty and money;

That I should be thinking; right there;

Of some one who breasted high water;

And swam the North Fork; and all that;

Just to dance with old Folinsbee's daughter;

The Lily of Poverty Flat。



But goodness! what nonsense I'm writing!

(Mamma says my taste still is low);

Instead of my triumphs reciting; … 

I'm spooning on Joseph; … heigh…ho!

And I'm to be 〃finished〃 by travel; …

Whatever's the meaning of that。

Oh; why did papa strike pay gravel

In drifting on Poverty Flat?



Good…night! … here's the end of my paper;

Good…night! … if the longitude please; …

For maybe; while wasting my taper;

Your sun's climbing over the trees。

But know; if you haven't got riches;

And are poor; dearest Joe; and all that;

That my heart's somewhere there in the ditches;

And you've struck it; … on Poverty Flat



Bret Harte '1830…1902'





A DEAD LETTER

A coeur blesse … l'ombre et le silence。 … Balzac 



I

I drew it from its china tomb; …

It came out feebly scented

With some thin ghost of past perfume

That dust and days had lent it。



An old; old letter; … folded still!

To read with due composure;

I sought the sun…lit window…sill;

Above the gray enclosure;



That; glimmering in the sultry haze;

Faint…flowered; dimly shaded;

Slumbered like Goldsmith's Madam Blaize;

Bedizened and brocaded。



A queer old place!  You'd surely say

Some tea…board garden…maker

Had planned it in Dutch William's day

To please some florist Quaker;



So trim it was。  The yew…trees still;

With pious care perverted;

Grew in the same grim shapes; and still

The lipless dolphin spu

返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 1 1

你可能喜欢的