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the complete poetical works-第67部分

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A tide…like darkness overwhelms

  The fields that round us lie。



But the night is fair;

And everywhere

A warm; soft vapor fills the air;

  And distant sounds seem near;



And above; in the light

Of the star…lit night;

Swift birds of passage wing their flight

  Through the dewy atmosphere。



I hear the beat

Of their pinions fleet;

As from the land of snow and sleet

  They seek a southern lea。



I hear the cry

Of their voices high

Falling dreamily through the sky;

  But their forms I cannot see。



O; say not so!

Those sounds that flow

In murmurs of delight and woe

  Come not from wings of birds。



They are the throngs

Of the poet's songs;

Murmurs of pleasures; and pains; and wrongs;

  The sound of winged words。



This is the cry

Of souls; that high

On toiling; beating pinions; fly;

  Seeking a warmer clime;



From their distant flight

Through realms of light

It falls into our world of night;

  With the murmuring sound of rhyme。







PROMETHEUS



OR THE POET'S FORETHOUGHT



Of Prometheus; how undaunted

  On Olympus' shining bastions

His audacious foot he planted;

Myths are told and songs are chanted;

  Full of promptings and suggestions。



Beautiful is the tradition

  Of that flight through heavenly portals;

The old classic superstition

Of the theft and the transmission

  Of the fire of the Immortals!



First the deed of noble daring;

  Born of heavenward aspiration;

Then the fire with mortals sharing;

Then the vulture;the despairing

  Cry of pain on crags Caucasian。



All is but a symbol painted

  Of the Poet; Prophet; Seer;

Only those are crowned and sainted

Who with grief have been acquainted;

  Making nations nobler; freer。



In their feverish exultations;

  In their triumph and their yearning;

In their passionate pulsations;

In their words among the nations;

  The Promethean fire is burning。



Shall it; then; be unavailing;

  All this toil for human culture?

Through the cloud…rack; dark and trailing;

Must they see above them sailing

  O'er life's barren crags the vulture?



Such a fate as this was Dante's;

  By defeat and exile maddened;

Thus were Milton and Cervantes;

Nature's priests and Corybantes;

  By affliction touched and saddened。



But the glories so transcendent

  That around their memories cluster;

And; on all their steps attendant;

Make their darkened lives resplendent

  With such gleams of inward lustre!



All the melodies mysterious;

  Through the dreary darkness chanted;

Thoughts in attitudes imperious;

Voices soft; and deep; and serious;

  Words that whispered; songs that haunted!



All the soul in rapt suspension;

  All the quivering; palpitating

Chords of life in utmost tension;

With the fervor of invention;

  With the rapture of creating!



Ah; Prometheus! heaven…scaling!

  In such hours of exultation

Even the faintest heart; unquailing;

Might behold the vulture sailing

  Round the cloudy crags Caucasian!



Though to all there is not given

  Strength for such sublime endeavor;

Thus to scale the walls of heaven;

And to leaven with fiery leaven

  All the hearts of men for ever;



Yet all bards; whose hearts unblighted

  Honor and believe the presage;

Hold aloft their torches lighted;

Gleaming through the realms benighted;

  As they onward bear the message!







EPIMETHEUS



OR THE POET'S AFTERTHOUGHT





Have I dreamed? or was it real;

  What I saw as in a vision;

When to marches hymeneal

In the land of the Ideal

  Moved my thought o'er Fields Elysian?



What! are these the guests whose glances

  Seemed like sunshine gleaming round me?

These the wild; bewildering fancies;

That with dithyrambic dances

  As with magic circles bound me?



Ah! how cold are their caresses!

  Pallid cheeks; and haggard bosoms!

Spectral gleam their snow…white dresses;

And from loose dishevelled tresses

  Fall the hyacinthine blossoms!



O my songs! whose winsome measures

  Filled my heart with secret rapture!

Children of my golden leisures!

Must even your delights and pleasures

  Fade and perish with the capture?



Fair they seemed; those songs sonorous;

  When they came to me unbidden;

Voices single; and in chorus;

Like the wild birds singing o'er us

  In the dark of branches hidden。



Disenchantment!  Disillusion!

  Must each noble aspiration

Come at last to this conclusion;

Jarring discord; wild confusion;

  Lassitude; renunciation?



Not with steeper fall nor faster;

  From the sun's serene dominions;

Not through brighter realms nor vaster;

In swift ruin and disaster;

  Icarus fell with shattered pinions!



Sweet Pandora! dear Pandora!

  Why did mighty Jove create thee

Coy as Thetis; fair as Flora;

Beautiful as young Aurora;

  If to win thee is to hate thee?



No; not hate thee! for this feeling

  Of unrest and long resistance

Is but passionate appealing;

A prophetic whisper stealing

  O'er the chords of our existence。



Him whom thou dost once enamour;

  Thou; beloved; never leavest;

In life's discord; strife; and clamor;

Still he feels thy spell of glamour;

  Him of Hope thou ne'er bereavest。



Weary hearts by thee are lifted;

  Struggling souls by thee are strengthened;

Clouds of fear asunder rifted;

Truth from falsehood cleansed and sifted;

  Lives; like days in summer; lengthened!



Therefore art thou ever clearer;

  O my Sibyl; my deceiver!

For thou makest each mystery clearer;

And the unattained seems nearer;

  When thou fillest my heart with fever!



Muse of all the Gifts and Graces!

  Though the fields around us wither;

There are ampler realms and spaces;

Where no foot has left its traces:

  Let us turn and wander thither!







THE LADDER OF ST。 AUGUSTINE



Saint Augustine! well hast thou said;

  That of our vices we can frame

A ladder; if we will but tread

  Beneath our feet each deed of shame!



All common things; each day's events;

  That with the hour begin and end;

Our pleasures and our discontents;

  Are rounds by which we may ascend。



The low desire; the base design;

  That makes another's virtues less;

The revel of the ruddy wine;

  And all occasions of excess;



The longing for ignoble things;

  The strife for triumph more than truth;

The hardening of the heart; that brings

  Irreverence for the dreams of youth;



All thoughts of ill; all evil deeds;

  That have their root in thoughts of ill;

Whatever hinders or impedes

 The action of the nobler will;



All these must first be trampled down

  Beneath our feet; if we would gain

In the bright fields of fair renown

  The right of eminent domain。



We have not wings; we cannot soar;

  But we have feet to scale and climb

By slow degrees; by more and more;

  The cloudy summits of our time。



The mighty pyramids of stone

  That wedge…like cleave the desert airs;

When nearer seen; and better known;

  Are but gigantic flights of stairs。



The distant mountains; that uprear

  Their solid bastions to the skies;

Are crossed by pathways; that appear

  As we to higher levels rise。



The heights by great men reached and kept

  Were not attained by sudden flight;

But they; while their companions slept;

  Were toiling upward in the night。



Standing on what too long we bore

  With shoulders bent and downcast eyes;

We may discernunseen before

  A path to higher destinies。



Nor deem the irrevocable Past;

  As wholly wasted; wholly vain;

If; rising on its wrecks; at last

  To something nobler we attain。







THE PHANTOM SHIP



In Mather's Magnalia Christi;

  Of the old colonial time;

May be found in prose the legend

  That is here set down in rhyme。



A ship sailed from New Haven;

  And the keen and frosty airs;

That filled her sails at parting;

  Were heavy with good men's prayers。



〃O Lord! if it be thy pleasure〃

  Thus prayed the old divine

〃To bury our friends in the ocean;

  Take them; for they are thine!〃



But Master Lamberton muttered;

  And under his breath said he;

〃This ship is so crank and walty

  I fear our grave she will be!〃



And the ships that came from England;

  When the winter months were gone;

Brought no tidings of this vessel

  Nor of Master Lamberton。



This put the people to praying

  That the Lord would let them hear

What in his greater wisdom

He had done with friends so dear。



And at last their prayers were answered:

  It was in the month of June;

An hour before the sunset

  Of a windy afternoon;



When; steadily steering landward;

  A ship was seen below;

And they knew it was Lamberton; Master;

  Who sailed so long ago。



On she came; with a cloud of canvas;

  Right against the wind that blew;

Until the eye could distinguish

  The faces of the crew。



Then fell her straining topmasts;

  Hanging tangled in the shrouds;

And her sails were loosened and lifted;

  And blown away like clouds。



And the masts; with all their rigging;

  Fell slowly; one by one;

And the hulk dilated and vanished;

  As a sea…mist in the sun!



And the people who saw this marvel

  Each said unto his friend;

That this was the mould of their vessel;

  And thus her tragic end。



And the pastor of the village

  Gave thanks to God in prayer;

That; to quiet their troubled spirits;

  He had sent this Ship of Air。







THE WARDEN OF THE CINQUE PORTS



A mist was driving down the British Channel;

    The day was just begun;

And through the window…panes; on floor and panel;

    Streamed the red autumn sun。



It glanced on flowing flag and rippling pennon;

    And the white sails of ships;

And; from the frowning rampart; the 

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