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the complete poetical works-第69部分

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Seem like the tablets of the Law; thrown down

  And broken by Moses at the mountain's base。



The very names recorded here are strange;

  Of foreign accent; and of different climes;

Alvares and Rivera interchange

  With Abraham and Jacob of old times。



〃Blessed be God! for he created Death!〃

  The mourners said; 〃and Death is rest and peace〃;

Then added; in the certainty of faith;

  〃And giveth Life that never more shall cease。〃



Closed are the portals of their Synagogue;

  No Psalms of David now the silence break;

No Rabbi reads the ancient Decalogue

  In the grand dialect the Prophets spake。



Gone are the living; but the dead remain;

  And not neglected; for a hand unseen;

Scattering its bounty; like a summer rain;

  Still keeps their graves and their remembrance green。



How came they here?  What burst of Christian hate;

  What persecution; merciless and blind;

Drove o'er the seathat desert desolate

  These Ishmaels and Hagars of mankind?



They lived in narrow streets and lanes obscure;

  Ghetto and Judenstrass; in mirk and mire;

Taught in the school of patience to endure

  The life of anguish and the death of fire。



All their lives long; with the unleavened bread

  And bitter herbs of exile and its fears;

The wasting famine of the heart they fed;

  And slaked its thirst with marah of their tears。



Anathema maranatha! was the cry

  That rang from town to town; from street to street;

At every gate the accursed Mordecai

  Was mocked and jeered; and spurned by Christian feet。



Pride and humiliation hand in hand

  Walked with them through the world where'er they went;

Trampled and beaten were they as the sand;

  And yet unshaken as the continent。



For in the background figures vague and vast

  Of patriarchs and of prophets rose sublime;

And all the great traditions of the Past

  They saw reflected in the coming time。



And thus for ever with reverted look

  The mystic volume of the world they read;

Spelling it backward; like a Hebrew book;

  Till life became a Legend of the Dead。



But ah! what once has been shall be no more!

  The groaning earth in travail and in pain

Brings forth its races; but does not restore;

  And the dead nations never rise again。







OLIVER BASSELIN



In the Valley of the Vire

  Still is seen an ancient mill;

With its gables quaint and queer;

  And beneath the window…sill;

      On the stone;

      These words alone:

〃Oliver Basselin lived here。〃



Far above it; on the steep;

  Ruined stands the old Chateau;

Nothing but the donjon…keep

  Left for shelter or for show。

      Its vacant eyes

      Stare at the skies;

Stare at the valley green and deep。



Once a convent; old and brown;

  Looked; but ah! it looks no more;

From the neighboring hillside down

  On the rushing and the roar

      Of the stream

      Whose sunny gleam

Cheers the little Norman town。



In that darksome mill of stone;

  To the water's dash and din;

Careless; humble; and unknown;

  Sang the poet Basselin

      Songs that fill

      That ancient mill

With a splendor of its own。



Never feeling of unrest

  Broke the pleasant dream he dreamed;

Only made to be his nest;

  All the lovely valley seemed;

      No desire

      Of soaring higher

Stirred or fluttered in his breast。



True; his songs were not divine;

  Were not songs of that high art;

Which; as winds do in the pine;

  Find an answer in each heart;

      But the mirth

      Of this green earth

Laughed and revelled in his line。



From the alehouse and the inn;

  Opening on the narrow street;

Came the loud; convivial din;

  Singing and applause of feet;

      The laughing lays

      That in those days

Sang the poet Basselin。



In the castle; cased in steel;

  Knights; who fought at Agincourt;

Watched and waited; spur on heel;

  But the poet sang for sport

      Songs that rang

      Another clang;

Songs that lowlier hearts could feel。



In the convent; clad in gray;

  Sat the monks in lonely cells;

Paced the cloisters; knelt to pray;

  And the poet heard their bells;

      But his rhymes

      Found other chimes;

Nearer to the earth than they。



Gone are all the barons bold;

  Gone are all the knights and squires;

Gone the abbot stern and cold;

  And the brotherhood of friars;

      Not a name

      Remains to fame;

From those mouldering days of old!



But the poet's memory here

  Of the landscape makes a part;

Like the river; swift and clear;

  Flows his song through many a heart;

      Haunting still

      That ancient mill;

In the Valley of the Vire。







VICTOR GALBRAITH



Under the walls of Monterey

At daybreak the bugles began to play;

      Victor Galbraith!

In the mist of the morning damp and gray;

These were the words they seemed to say:

      〃Come forth to thy death;

      Victor Galbraith!〃



Forth he came; with a martial tread;

Firm was his step; erect his head;

      Victor Galbraith;

He who so well the bugle played;

Could not mistake the words it said:

      〃Come forth to thy death;

      Victor Galbraith!〃



He looked at the earth; he looked at the sky;

He looked at the files of musketry;

      Victor Galbraith!

And he said; with a steady voice and eye;

〃Take good aim; I am ready to die!〃

      Thus challenges death

      Victor Galbraith。



Twelve fiery tongues flashed straight and red;

Six leaden balls on their errand sped;

      Victor Galbraith

Falls to the ground; but he is not dead;

His name was not stamped on those balls of lead;

      And they only scath

      Victor Galbraith。



Three balls are in his breast and brain;

But he rises out of the dust again;

      Victor Galbraith!

The water he drinks has a bloody stain;

〃O kill me; and put me out of my pain!〃

      In his agony prayeth

      Victor Galbraith。



Forth dart once more those tongues of flame;

And the bugler has died a death of shame;

      Victor Galbraith!

His soul has gone back to whence it came;

And no one answers to the name;

      When the Sergeant saith;

      〃Victor Galbraith!〃



Under the walls of Monterey

By night a bugle is heard to play;

      Victor Galbraith!

Through the mist of the valley damp and gray

The sentinels hear the sound; and say;

      〃That is the wraith

      Of Victor Galbraith!〃







MY LOST YOUTH



Often I think of the beautiful town

  That is seated by the sea;

Often in thought go up and down

The pleasant streets of that dear old town;

  And my youth comes back to me。

    And a verse of a Lapland song

    Is haunting my memory still:

  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;

And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃



I can see the shadowy lines of its trees;

  And catch; in sudden gleams;

The sheen of the far…surrounding seas;

And islands that were the Hersperides

  Of all my boyish dreams。

    And the burden of that old song;

    It murmurs and whispers still:

  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;

And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃



I remember the black wharves and the slips;

  And the sea…tides tossing free;

And Spanish sailors with bearded lips;

And the beauty and mystery of the ships;

  And the magic of the sea。

    And the voice of that wayward song

    Is singing and saying still:

  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;

And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃



I remember the bulwarks by the shore;

  And the fort upon the hill;

The sunrise gun; with its hollow roar;

The drum…beat repeated o'er and o'er;

  And the bugle wild and shrill。

    And the music of that old song

    Throbs in my memory still:

  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;

And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃



I remember the sea…fight far away;

  How it thundered o'er the tide!

And the dead captains; as they lay

In their graves; o'erlooking the tranquil bay;

  Where they in battle died。

    And the sound of that mournful song

    Goes through me with a thrill:

  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;

And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃



I can see the breezy dome of groves;

  The shadows of Deering's Woods;

And the friendships old and the early loves

Come back with a sabbath sound; as of doves

  In quiet neighborhoods。

    And the verse of that sweet old song;

    It flutters and murmurs still:

  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;

And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃



I remember the gleams and glooms that dart

  Across the schoolboy's brain;

The song and the silence in the heart;

That in part are prophecies; and in part

  Are longings wild and vain。

    And the voice of that fitful song

    Sings on; and is never still:

  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;

And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃



There are things of which I may not speak;

  There are dreams that cannot die;

There are thoughts that make the strong heart weak;

And bring a pallor into the cheek;

  And a mist before the eye。

    And the words of that fatal song

    Come over me like a chill:

  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;

And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃



Strange to me now are the forms I meet

  When I visit the dear old town;

But the native air is pure and sweet;

And the trees that o'ershadow each well…known street;

  As they balance up and down;

    Are singing the beautiful song;

    Are sighing and whispering still:

  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;

And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃



And Deering's Woods are fresh and fair;

  And with joy that is almost pain

My heart goes back to wander there;

And among the dreams of the days that were;

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