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an anthology of australian verse-第6部分

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 And the chances are I go where most men go。



The deep blue skies wax dusky; and the tall green trees grow dim;

 The sward beneath me seems to heave and fall;

And sickly; smoky shadows through the sleepy sunlight swim;

 And on the very sun's face weave their pall。

Let me slumber in the hollow where the wattle blossoms wave;

 With never stone or rail to fence my bed;

Should the sturdy station children pull the bush…flowers on my grave;

 I may chance to hear them romping overhead。



I don't suppose I shall though; for I feel like sleeping sound;

 That sleep; they say; is doubtful。  True; but yet

At least it makes no difference to the dead man underground

 What the living men remember or forget。

Enigmas that perplex us in the world's unequal strife;

 The future may ignore or may reveal;

Yet some; as weak as water; Ned; to make the best of life;

 Have been to face the worst as true as steel。









Henry Kendall。







  Prefatory Sonnets





      I。



I purposed once to take my pen and write;

 Not songs; like some; tormented and awry

 With passion; but a cunning harmony

Of words and music caught from glen and height;

And lucid colours born of woodland light

 And shining places where the sea…streams lie。

But this was when the heat of youth glowed white;

 And since I've put the faded purpose by。

I have no faultless fruits to offer you

 Who read this book; but certain syllables

 Herein are borrowed from unfooted dells

And secret hollows dear to noontide dew;

And these at least; though far between and few;

 May catch the sense like subtle forest spells。



      II。



So take these kindly; even though there be

 Some notes that unto other lyres belong;

 Stray echoes from the elder sons of song;

And think how from its neighbouring native sea

The pensive shell doth borrow melody。

 I would not do the lordly masters wrong

 By filching fair words from the shining throng

Whose music haunts me as the wind a tree!

 Lo; when a stranger in soft Syrian glooms

Shot through with sunset treads the cedar dells;

And hears the breezy ring of elfin bells

 Far down by where the white…haired cataract booms;

He; faint with sweetness caught from forest smells;

 Bears thence; unwitting; plunder of perfumes。







  September in Australia





Grey Winter hath gone; like a wearisome guest;

   And; behold; for repayment;

September comes in with the wind of the West

   And the Spring in her raiment!

The ways of the frost have been filled of the flowers;

   While the forest discovers

Wild wings; with the halo of hyaline hours;

   And the music of lovers。



September; the maid with the swift; silver feet!

   She glides; and she graces

The valleys of coolness; the slopes of the heat;

   With her blossomy traces;

Sweet month; with a mouth that is made of a rose;

   She lightens and lingers

In spots where the harp of the evening glows;

   Attuned by her fingers。



The stream from its home in the hollow hill slips

   In a darling old fashion;

And the day goeth down with a song on its lips

   Whose key…note is passion;

Far out in the fierce; bitter front of the sea

   I stand; and remember

Dead things that were brothers and sisters of thee;

   Resplendent September。



The West; when it blows at the fall of the noon

   And beats on the beaches;

Is filled with a tender and tremulous tune

   That touches and teaches;

The stories of Youth; of the burden of Time;

   And the death of Devotion;

Come back with the wind; and are themes of the rhyme

   In the waves of the ocean。



We; having a secret to others unknown;

   In the cool mountain…mosses;

May whisper together; September; alone

   Of our loves and our losses。

One word for her beauty; and one for the grace

   She gave to the hours;

And then we may kiss her; and suffer her face

   To sleep with the flowers。



     。    。    。    。    。



Oh; season of changes  of shadow and shine 

   September the splendid!

My song hath no music to mingle with thine;

   And its burden is ended;

But thou; being born of the winds and the sun;

   By mountain; by river;

Mayst lighten and listen; and loiter and run;

   With thy voices for ever。







  Rose Lorraine





Sweet water…moons; blown into lights

 Of flying gold on pool and creek;

And many sounds and many sights

 Of younger days are back this week。

I cannot say I sought to face

 Or greatly cared to cross again

The subtle spirit of the place

 Whose life is mixed with Rose Lorraine。



What though her voice rings clearly through

 A nightly dream I gladly keep;

No wish have I to start anew

 Heart fountains that have ceased to leap。

Here; face to face with different days;

 And later things that plead for love;

It would be worse than wrong to raise

 A phantom far too vain to move。



But; Rose Lorraine  ah! Rose Lorraine;

 I'll whisper now; where no one hears 

If you should chance to meet again

 The man you kissed in soft; dead years;

Just say for once 〃He suffered much;〃

 And add to this 〃His fate was worst

Because of me; my voice; my touch〃 

 There is no passion like the first!



If I that breathe your slow sweet name;

 As one breathes low notes on a flute;

Have vext your peace with word of blame;

 The phrase is dead  the lips are mute。

Yet when I turn towards the wall;

 In stormy nights; in times of rain;

I often wish you could recall

 Your tender speeches; Rose Lorraine。



Because; you see; I thought them true;

 And did not count you self…deceived;

And gave myself in all to you;

 And looked on Love as Life achieved。

Then came the bitter; sudden change;

 The fastened lips; the dumb despair:

The first few weeks were very strange;

 And long; and sad; and hard to bear。



No woman lives with power to burst

 My passion's bonds; and set me free;

For Rose is last where Rose was first;

 And only Rose is fair to me。

The faintest memory of her face;

 The wilful face that hurt me so;

Is followed by a fiery trace

 That Rose Lorraine must never know。



I keep a faded ribbon string

 You used to wear about your throat;

And of this pale; this perished thing;

 I think I know the threads by rote。

God help such love!  To touch your hand;

 To loiter where your feet might fall;

You marvellous girl; my soul would stand

 The worst of hell  its fires and all!







  To a Mountain





To thee; O father of the stately peaks;

Above me in the loftier light  to thee;

Imperial brother of those awful hills

Whose feet are set in splendid spheres of flame;

Whose heads are where the gods are; and whose sides

Of strength are belted round with all the zones

Of all the world; I dedicate these songs。

And if; within the compass of this book;

There lives and glows ONE verse in which there beats

The pulse of wind and torrent  if ONE line

Is here that like a running water sounds;

And seems an echo from the lands of leaf;

Be sure that line is thine。  Here; in this home;

Away from men and books and all the schools;

I take thee for my Teacher。  In thy voice

Of deathless majesty; I; kneeling; hear

God's grand authentic Gospel!  Year by year;

The great sublime cantata of thy storm

Strikes through my spirit  fills it with a life

Of startling beauty!  Thou my Bible art

With holy leaves of rock; and flower; and tree;

And moss; and shining runnel。  From each page

That helps to make thy awful volume; I

Have learned a noble lesson。  In the psalm

Of thy grave winds; and in the liturgy

Of singing waters; lo! my soul has heard

The higher worship; and from thee; indeed;

The broad foundations of a finer hope

Were gathered in; and thou hast lifted up

The blind horizon for a larger faith!

Moreover; walking in exalted woods

Of naked glory; in the green and gold

Of forest sunshine; I have paused like one

With all the life transfigured:  and a flood

Of light ineffable has made me feel

As felt the grand old prophets caught away

By flames of inspiration; but the words

Sufficient for the story of my Dream

Are far too splendid for poor human lips!

But thou; to whom I turn with reverent eyes 

O stately Father; whose majestic face

Shines far above the zone of wind and cloud;

Where high dominion of the morning is 

Thou hast the Song complete of which my songs

Are pallid adumbrations!  Certain sounds

Of strong authentic sorrow in this book

May have the sob of upland torrents  these;

And only these; may touch the great World's heart;

For; lo! they are the issues of that grief

Which makes a man more human; and his life

More like that frank exalted life of thine。

But in these pages there are other tones

In which thy large; superior voice is not 

Through which no beauty that resembles thine

Has ever shone。  THESE are the broken words

Of blind occasions; when the World has come

Between me and my Dream。  No song is here

Of mighty compass; for my singing robes

I've worn in stolen moments。  All my days

Have been the days of a laborious life;

And ever on my struggling soul has burned

The fierce heat of this hurried sphere。  But thou;

To whose fair majesty I dedicate

My book of rhymes  thou hast the perfect rest

Which makes the heaven of the highest gods!

To thee the noises of this violent time

Are far; faint whispers; and; from age to age;

Within the world and yet apart from it;

Thou standest!  Round thy lordly capes the sea

Rolls on with a superb indifference

For ever; in thy deep; green; gracious glens

The silver fountains sing for ever。  Far

Above dim ghosts of waters in the caves;

The royal robe of morning on thy head

Abides for ever!  Evermore the wind

Is thy august companion; and thy peers

Are cloud; and thunder; and the face sublime

Of blue mid…heaven!  On thy awful brow

Is Deity; and in that vo

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