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the complete poetical works-第70部分

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My heart goes back to wander there;

And among the dreams of the days that were;

  I find my lost youth again。

    And the strange and beautiful song;

    The groves are repeating it still:

  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;

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







THE ROPEWALK



In that building; long and low;

With its windows all a…row;

  Like the port…holes of a hulk;

Human spiders spin and spin;

Backward down their threads so thin

  Dropping; each a hempen bulk。



At the end; an open door;

Squares of sunshine on the floor

  Light the long and dusky lane;

And the whirring of a wheel;

Dull and drowsy; makes me feel

  All its spokes are in my brain。



As the spinners to the end

Downward go and reascend;

  Gleam the long threads in the sun;

While within this brain of mine

Cobwebs brighter and more fine

  By the busy wheel are spun。



Two fair maidens in a swing;

Like white doves upon the wing;

  First before my vision pass;

Laughing; as their gentle hands

Closely clasp the twisted strands;

  At their shadow on the grass。



Then a booth of mountebanks;

With its smell of tan and planks;

  And a girl poised high in air

On a cord; in spangled dress;

With a faded loveliness;

  And a weary look of care。



Then a homestead among farms;

And a woman with bare arms

  Drawing water from a well;

As the bucket mounts apace;

With it mounts her own fair face;

  As at some magician's spell。



Then an old man in a tower;

Ringing loud the noontide hour;

  While the rope coils round and round

Like a serpent at his feet;

And again; in swift retreat;

  Nearly lifts him from the ground。



Then within a prison…yard;

Faces fixed; and stern; and hard;

  Laughter and indecent mirth;

Ah! it is the gallows…tree!

Breath of Christian charity;

  Blow; and sweep it from the earth!



Then a school…boy; with his kite

Gleaming in a sky of light;

  And an eager; upward look;

Steeds pursued through lane and field;

Fowlers with their snares concealed;

  And an angler by a brook。



Ships rejoicing in the breeze;

Wrecks that float o'er unknown seas;

  Anchors dragged through faithless sand;

Sea…fog drifting overhead;

And; with lessening line and lead;

  Sailors feeling for the land。



All these scenes do I behold;

These; and many left untold;

  In that building long and low;

While the wheel goes round and round;

With a drowsy; dreamy sound;

  And the spinners backward go。







THE GOLDEN MILE…STONE



Leafless are the trees; their purple branches

Spread themselves abroad; like reefs of coral;

      Rising silent

In the Red Sea of the Winter sunset。



From the hundred chimneys of the village;

Like the Afreet in the Arabian story;

      Smoky columns

Tower aloft into the air of amber。



At the window winks the flickering fire…light;

Here and there the lamps of evening glimmer;

      Social watch…fires

Answering one another through the darkness。



On the hearth the lighted logs are glowing;

And like Ariel in the cloven pine…tree

      For its freedom

Groans and sighs the air imprisoned in them。



By the fireside there are old men seated;

Seeing ruined cities in the ashes;

      Asking sadly

Of the Past what it can ne'er restore them。



By the fireside there are youthful dreamers;

Building castles fair; with stately stairways;

      Asking blindly

Of the Future what it cannot give them。



By the fireside tragedies are acted

In whose scenes appear two actors only;

      Wife and husband;

And above them God the sole spectator。



By the fireside there are peace and comfort;

Wives and children; with fair; thoughtful faces;

      Waiting; watching

For a well…known footstep in the passage。



Each man's chimney is his Golden Mile…stone;

Is the central point; from which he measures

      Every distance

Through the gateways of the world around him。



In his farthest wanderings still he sees it;

Hears the talking flame; the answering night…wind;

      As he heard them

When he sat with those who were; but are not。



Happy he whom neither wealth nor fashion;

Nor the march of the encroaching city;

      Drives an exile

From the hearth of his ancestral homestead。



We may build more splendid habitations;

Fill our rooms with paintings and with sculptures;

      But we cannot

Buy with gold the old associations!







CATAWBA WINE



    This song of mine

    Is a Song of the Vine;

To be sung by the glowing embers

    Of wayside inns;

    When the rain begins

To darken the drear Novembers。



    It is not a song

    Of the Scuppernong;

From warm Carolinian valleys;

    Nor the Isabel

    And the Muscadel

That bask in our garden alleys。



    Nor the red Mustang;

    Whose clusters hang

O'er the waves of the Colorado;

    And the fiery flood

    Of whose purple blood

Has a dash of Spanish bravado。



    For richest and best

    Is the wine of the West;

That grows by the Beautiful River;

    Whose sweet perfume

    Fills all the room

With a benison on the giver。



    And as hollow trees

    Are the haunts of bees;

For ever going and coming;

    So this crystal hive

    Is all alive

With a swarming and buzzing and humming。



    Very good in its way

    Is the Verzenay;

Or the Sillery soft and creamy;

    But Catawba wine

    Has a taste more divine;

More dulcet; delicious; and dreamy。



    There grows no vine

    By the haunted Rhine;

By Danube or Guadalquivir;

    Nor on island or cape;

    That bears such a grape

As grows by the Beautiful River。



    Drugged is their juice

    For foreign use;

When shipped o'er the reeling Atlantic;

    To rack our brains

    With the fever pains;

That have driven the Old World frantic。



    To the sewers and sinks

    With all such drinks;

And after them tumble the mixer;

    For a poison malign

    Is such Borgia wine;

Or at best but a Devil's Elixir。



    While pure as a spring

    Is the wine I sing;

And to praise it; one needs but name it;

    For Catawba wine

    Has need of no sign;

No tavern…bush to proclaim it。



    And this Song of the Vine;

    This greeting of mine;

The winds and the birds shall deliver

    To the Queen of the West;

    In her garlands dressed;

On the banks of the Beautiful River。







SANTA FILOMENA



Whene'er a noble deed is wrought;

Whene'er is spoken a noble thought;

   Our hearts; in glad surprise;

   To higher levels rise。



The tidal wave of deeper souls

Into our inmost being rolls;

   And lifts us unawares

   Out of all meaner cares。



Honor to those whose words or deeds

Thus help us in our daily needs;

   And by their overflow

   Raise us from what is low!



Thus thought I; as by night I read

Of the great army of the dead;

   The trenches cold and damp;

   The starved and frozen camp;



The wounded from the battle…plain;

In dreary hospitals of pain;

   The cheerless corridors;

   The cold and stony floors。



Lo! in that house of misery

A lady with a lamp I see

   Pass through the glimmering gloom;

   And flit from room to room。



And slow; as in a dream of bliss;

The speechless sufferer turns to kiss

   Her shadow; as it falls

   Upon the darkening walls。



As if a door in heaven should be

Opened and then closed suddenly;

   The vision came and went;

   The light shone and was spent。



On England's annals; through the long

Hereafter of her speech and song;

   That light its rays shall cast

   From portals of the past。



A Lady with a Lamp shall stand

In the great history of the land;

   A noble type of good;

   Heroic womanhood。



Nor even shall be wanting here

The palm; the lily; and the spear;

   The symbols that of yore

   Saint Filomena bore。







THE DISCOVERER OF THE NORTH CAPE



A LEAF FROM KING ALFRED'S OROSIUS



Othere; the old sea…captain;

  Who dwelt in Helgoland;

To King Alfred; the Lover of Truth;

Brought a snow…white walrus…tooth;

  Which he held in his brown right hand。



His figure was tall and stately;

  Like a boy's his eye appeared;

His hair was yellow as hay;

But threads of a silvery gray

  Gleamed in his tawny beard。



Hearty and hale was Othere;

  His cheek had the color of oak;

With a kind of laugh in his speech;

Like the sea…tide on a beach;

  As unto the King he spoke。



And Alfred; King of the Saxons;

  Had a book upon his knees;

And wrote down the wondrous tale

Of him who was first to sail

   Into the Arctic seas。



〃So far I live to the northward;

  No man lives north of me;

To the east are wild mountain…chains;

And beyond them meres and plains;

  To the westward all is sea。



〃So far I live to the northward;

  From the harbor of Skeringes…hale;

If you only sailed by day;

With a fair wind all the way;

  More than a month would you sail。



〃I own six hundred reindeer;

  With sheep and swine beside;

I have tribute from the Finns;

Whalebone and reindeer…skins;

  And ropes of walrus…hide。



〃I ploughed the land with horses;

  But my heart was ill at ease;

For the old seafaring men

Came to me now and then;

  With their sagas of the seas;



〃Of Iceland and of Greenland;

  And the stormy Hebrides;

And the undiscovered deep;

I could not eat nor sleep

  For thinking of those seas。



〃To the northward stretched the desert;

  How far I fain would know;

So at last I sallied forth;

And three days sailed due north;

  As far as the whale…ships go。



〃To the west of me was the ocean;

  To the right the desolate shore;

But I did not slacken sail

For the walrus or the whale;

  Till after three days 

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