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the complete poetical works-第68部分

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    And the white sails of ships;

And; from the frowning rampart; the black cannon

    Hailed it with feverish lips。



Sandwich and Romney; Hastings; Hithe; and Dover

    Were all alert that day;

To see the French war…steamers speeding over;

    When the fog cleared away。



Sullen and silent; and like couchant lions;

    Their cannon; through the night;

Holding their breath; had watched; in grim defiance;

    The sea…coast opposite。



And now they roared at drum…beat from their stations

    On every citadel;

Each answering each; with morning salutations;

    That all was well。



And down the coast; all taking up the burden;

    Replied the distant forts;

As if to summon from his sleep the Warden

    And Lord of the Cinque Ports。



Him shall no sunshine from the fields of azure;

    No drum…beat from the wall;

No morning gun from the black fort's embrasure;

    Awaken with its call!



No more; surveying with an eye impartial

    The long line of the coast;

Shall the gaunt figure of the old Field Marshal

    Be seen upon his post!



For in the night; unseen; a single warrior;

    In sombre harness mailed;

Dreaded of man; and surnamed the Destroyer;

    The rampart wall has scaled。



He passed into the chamber of the sleeper;

    The dark and silent room;

And as he entered; darker grew; and deeper;

    The silence and the gloom。



He did not pause to parley or dissemble;

    But smote the Warden hoar;

Ah! what a blow! that made all England tremble

    And groan from shore to shore。



Meanwhile; without; the surly cannon waited;

    The sun rose bright o'erhead;

Nothing in Nature's aspect intimated

    That a great man was dead。







HAUNTED HOUSES



All houses wherein men have lived and died

  Are haunted houses。  Through the open doors

The harmless phantoms on their errands glide;

  With feet that make no sound upon the floors。



We meet them at the door…way; on the stair;

  Along the passages they come and go;

Impalpable impressions on the air;

  A sense of something moving to and fro。



There are more guests at table; than the hosts

  Invited; the illuminated hall

Is thronged with quiet; inoffensive ghosts;

  As silent as the pictures on the wall。



The stranger at my fireside cannot see

  The forms I see; nor hear the sounds I hear;

He but perceives what is; while unto me

  All that has been is visible and clear。



We have no title…deeds to house or lands;

  Owners and occupants of earlier dates

From graves forgotten stretch their dusty hands;

  And hold in mortmain still their old estates。



The spirit…world around this world of sense

  Floats like an atmosphere; and everywhere

Wafts through these earthly mists and vapors dense

  A vital breath of more ethereal air。



Our little lives are kept in equipoise

  By opposite attractions and desires;

The struggle of the instinct that enjoys;

  And the more noble instinct that aspires。



These perturbations; this perpetual jar

  Of earthly wants and aspirations high;

Come from the influence of an unseen star;

  An undiscovered planet in our sky。



And as the moon from some dark gate of cloud

  Throws o'er the sea a floating bridge of light;

Across whose trembling planks our fancies crowd

  Into the realm of mystery and night;



So from the world of spirits there descends

  A bridge of light; connecting it with this;

O'er whose unsteady floor; that sways and bends;

  Wander our thoughts above the dark abyss。







IN THE CHURCHYARD AT CAMBRIDGE



In the village churchyard she lies;

Dust is in her beautiful eyes;

  No more she breathes; nor feels; nor stirs;

At her feet and at her head

Lies a slave to attend the dead;

  But their dust is white as hers。



Was she a lady of high degree;

So much in love with the vanity

  And foolish pomp of this world of ours?

Or was it Christian charity;

And lowliness and humility;

  The richest and rarest of all dowers?



Who shall tell us?  No one speaks;

No color shoots into those cheeks;

  Either of anger or of pride;

At the rude question we have asked;

Nor will the mystery be unmasked

  By those who are sleeping at her side。



Hereafter?And do you think to look

On the terrible pages of that Book

  To find her failings; faults; and errors?

Ah; you will then have other cares;

In your own short…comings and despairs;

  In your own secret sins and terrors!







THE EMPEROR'S BIRD'S…NEST



Once the Emperor Charles of Spain;

  With his swarthy; grave commanders;

I forget in what campaign;

Long besieged; in mud and rain;

  Some old frontier town of Flanders。



Up and down the dreary camp;

  In great boots of Spanish leather;

Striding with a measured tramp;

These Hidalgos; dull and damp;

  Cursed the Frenchmen; cursed the weather。



Thus as to and fro they went;

  Over upland and through hollow;

Giving their impatience vent;

Perched upon the Emperor's tent;

  In her nest; they spied a swallow。



Yes; it was a swallow's nest;

  Built of clay and hair of horses;

Mane; or tail; or dragoon's crest;

Found on hedge…rows east and west;

  After skirmish of the forces。



Then an old Hidalgo said;

  As he twirled his gray mustachio;

〃Sure this swallow overhead

Thinks the Emperor's tent a shed;

  And the Emperor but a Macho!〃



Hearing his imperial name

  Coupled with those words of malice;

Half in anger; half in shame;

Forth the great campaigner came

  Slowly from his canvas palace。



〃Let no hand the bird molest;〃

  Said he solemnly; 〃nor hurt her!〃

Adding then; by way of jest;

〃Golondrina is my guest;

  'Tis the wife of some deserter!〃



Swift as bowstring speeds a shaft;

  Through the camp was spread the rumor;

And the soldiers; as they quaffed

Flemish beer at dinner; laughed

  At the Emperor's pleasant humor。



So unharmed and unafraid

  Sat the swallow still and brooded;

Till the constant cannonade

Through the walls a breach had made;

  And the siege was thus concluded。



Then the army; elsewhere bent;

  Struck its tents as if disbanding;

Only not the Emperor's tent;

For he ordered; ere he went;

  Very curtly; 〃Leave it standing!〃



So it stood there all alone;

  Loosely flapping; torn and tattered;

Till the brood was fledged and flown;

Singing o'er those walls of stone

  Which the cannon…shot had shattered。







THE TWO ANGELS



Two angels; one of Life and one of Death;

  Passed o'er our village as the morning broke;

The dawn was on their faces; and beneath;

  The sombre houses hearsed with plumes of smoke。



Their attitude and aspect were the same;

  Alike their features and their robes of white;

But one was crowned with amaranth; as with flame;

  And one with asphodels; like flakes of light。



I saw them pause on their celestial way;

  Then said I; with deep fear and doubt oppressed;

〃Beat not so loud; my heart; lest thou betray

  The place where thy beloved are at rest!〃



And he who wore the crown of asphodels;

  Descending; at my door began to knock;

And my soul sank within me; as in wells

  The waters sink before an earthquake's shock。



I recognized the nameless agony;

  The terror and the tremor and the pain;

That oft before had filled or haunted me;

  And now returned with threefold strength again。



The door I opened to my heavenly guest;

  And listened; for I thought I heard God's voice;

And; knowing whatsoe'er he sent was best;

  Dared neither to lament nor to rejoice。



Then with a smile; that filled the house with light;

  〃My errand is not Death; but Life;〃 he said;

And ere I answered; passing out of sight;

  On his celestial embassy he sped。



'T was at thy door; O friend! and not at mine;

  The angel with the amaranthine wreath;

Pausing; descended; and with voice divine;

  Whispered a word that had a sound like Death。



Then fell upon the house a sudden gloom;

  A shadow on those features fair and thin;

And softly; from that hushed and darkened room;

  Two angels issued; where but one went in。



All is of God!  If he but wave his hand;

  The mists collect; the rain falls thick and loud;

Till; with a smile of light on sea and land;

  Lo! he looks back from the departing cloud。



Angels of Life and Death alike are his;

  Without his leave they pass no threshold o'er;

Who; then; would wish or dare; believing this;

  Against his messengers to shut the door?







DAYLIGHT AND MOONLIGHT



In broad daylight; and at noon;

Yesterday I saw the moon

Sailing high; but faint and white;

As a school…boy's paper kite。



In broad daylight; yesterday;

I read a Poet's mystic lay;

And it seemed to me at most

As a phantom; or a ghost。



But at length the feverish day

Like a passion died away;

And the night; serene and still;

Fell on village; vale; and hill。



Then the moon; in all her pride;

Like a spirit glorified;

Filled and overflowed the night

With revelations of her light。



And the Poet's song again

Passed like music through my brain;

Night interpreted to me

All its grace and mystery。







THE JEWISH CEMETERY AT NEWPORT



How strange it seems!  These Hebrews in their graves;

  Close by the street of this fair seaport town;

Silent beside the never…silent waves;

  At rest in all this moving up and down!



The trees are white with dust; that o'er their sleep

  Wave their broad curtains in the south…wind's breath;

While underneath such leafy tents they keep

  The long; mysterious Exodus of Death。



And these sepulchral stones; so old and brown;

  That pave with level flags their burial…place;

Seem like the tablets of the Law; thrown down

  And broken by Moses at the mountain's base。



The very names recorded h

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