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phantasmagoria and other poems-第4部分

小说: phantasmagoria and other poems 字数: 每页4000字

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And the corner of a table;

Of a rosewood dining…table。

He would hold a scroll of something;

Hold it firmly in his left…hand;

He would keep his right…hand buried

(Like Napoleon) in his waistcoat;

He would contemplate the distance

With a look of pensive meaning;

As of ducks that die ill tempests。



Grand; heroic was the notion:

Yet the picture failed entirely:

Failed; because he moved a little;

Moved; because he couldn't help it。



Next; his better half took courage;

SHE would have her picture taken。

She came dressed beyond description;

Dressed in jewels and in satin

Far too gorgeous for an empress。

Gracefully she sat down sideways;

With a simper scarcely human;

Holding in her hand a bouquet

Rather larger than a cabbage。

All the while that she was sitting;

Still the lady chattered; chattered;

Like a monkey in the forest。

〃Am I sitting still?〃 she asked him。

〃Is my face enough in profile?

Shall I hold the bouquet higher?

Will it came into the picture?〃

And the picture failed completely。



Next the Son; the Stunning…Cantab:

He suggested curves of beauty;

Curves pervading all his figure;

Which the eye might follow onward;

Till they centered in the breast…pin;

Centered in the golden breast…pin。

He had learnt it all from Ruskin

(Author of 'The Stones of Venice;'

'Seven Lamps of Architecture;'

'Modern Painters;' and some others);

And perhaps he had not fully

Understood his author's meaning;

But; whatever was the reason;

All was fruitless; as the picture

Ended in an utter failure。



Next to him the eldest daughter:

She suggested very little;

Only asked if he would take her

With her look of 'passive beauty。'



Her idea of passive beauty

Was a squinting of the left…eye;

Was a drooping of the right…eye;

Was a smile that went up sideways

To the corner of the nostrils。



Hiawatha; when she asked him;

Took no notice of the question;

Looked as if he hadn't heard it;

But; when pointedly appealed to;

Smiled in his peculiar manner;

Coughed and said it 'didn't matter;'

Bit his lip and changed the subject。



Nor in this was he mistaken;

As the picture failed completely。



So in turn the other sisters。



Last; the youngest son was taken:

Very rough and thick his hair was;

Very round and red his face was;

Very dusty was his jacket;

Very fidgety his manner。

And his overbearing sisters

Called him names he disapproved of:

Called him Johnny; 'Daddy's Darling;'

Called him Jacky; 'Scrubby School…boy。'

And; so awful was the picture;

In comparison the others

Seemed; to one's bewildered fancy;

To have partially succeeded。



Finally my Hiawatha

Tumbled all the tribe together;

('Grouped' is not the right expression);

And; as happy chance would have it

Did at last obtain a picture

Where the faces all succeeded:

Each came out a perfect likeness。



Then they joined and all abused it;

Unrestrainedly abused it;

As the worst and ugliest picture

They could possibly have dreamed of。

'Giving one such strange expressions …

Sullen; stupid; pert expressions。

Really any one would take us

(Any one that did not know us)

For the most unpleasant people!'

(Hiawatha seemed to think so;

Seemed to think it not unlikely)。

All together rang their voices;

Angry; loud; discordant voices;

As of dogs that howl in concert;

As of cats that wail in chorus。



But my Hiawatha's patience;

His politeness and his patience;

Unaccountably had vanished;

And he left that happy party。

Neither did he leave them slowly;

With the calm deliberation;

The intense deliberation

Of a photographic artist:

But he left them in a hurry;

Left them in a mighty hurry;

Stating that he would not stand it;

Stating in emphatic language

What he'd be before he'd stand it。

Hurriedly he packed his boxes:

Hurriedly the porter trundled

On a barrow all his boxes:

Hurriedly he took his ticket:

Hurriedly the train received him:

Thus departed Hiawatha。







MELANCHOLETTA







WITH saddest music all day long

She soothed her secret sorrow:

At night she sighed 〃I fear 'twas wrong

Such cheerful words to borrow。

Dearest; a sweeter; sadder song

I'll sing to thee to…morrow。〃



I thanked her; but I could not say

That I was glad to hear it:

I left the house at break of day;

And did not venture near it

Till time; I hoped; had worn away

Her grief; for nought could cheer it!



My dismal sister!  Couldst thou know

The wretched home thou keepest!

Thy brother; drowned in daily woe;

Is thankful when thou sleepest;

For if I laugh; however low;

When thou'rt awake; thou weepest!



I took my sister t'other day

(Excuse the slang expression)

To Sadler's Wells to see the play

In hopes the new impression

Might in her thoughts; from grave to gay

Effect some slight digression。



I asked three gay young dogs from town

To join us in our folly;

Whose mirth; I thought; might serve to drown

My sister's melancholy:

The lively Jones; the sportive Brown;

And Robinson the jolly。



The maid announced the meal in tones

That I myself had taught her;

Meant to allay my sister's moans

Like oil on troubled water:

I rushed to Jones; the lively Jones;

And begged him to escort her。



Vainly he strove; with ready wit;

To joke about the weather …

To ventilate the last 'ON DIT' …

To quote the price of leather …

She groaned 〃Here I and Sorrow sit:

Let us lament together!〃



I urged 〃You're wasting time; you know:

Delay will spoil the venison。〃

〃My heart is wasted with my woe!

There is no rest … in Venice; on

The Bridge of Sighs!〃 she quoted low

From Byron and from Tennyson。



I need not tell of soup and fish

In solemn silence swallowed;

The sobs that ushered in each dish;

And its departure followed;

Nor yet my suicidal wish

To BE the cheese I hollowed。



Some desperate attempts were made

To start a conversation;

〃Madam;〃 the sportive Brown essayed;

〃Which kind of recreation;

Hunting or fishing; have you made

Your special occupation?〃



Her lips curved downwards instantly;

As if of india…rubber。

〃Hounds IN FULL CRY I like;〃 said she:

(Oh how I longed to snub her!)

〃Of fish; a whale's the one for me;

IT IS SO FULL OF BLUBBER!〃



The night's performance was 〃King John。〃

〃It's dull;〃 she wept; 〃and so…so!〃

Awhile I let her tears flow on;

She said they soothed her woe so!

At length the curtain rose upon

'Bombastes Furioso。'



In vain we roared; in vain we tried

To rouse her into laughter:

Her pensive glances wandered wide

From orchestra to rafter …

〃TIER UPON TIER!〃 she said; and sighed;

And silence followed after。







A VALENTINE







'Sent to a friend who had complained that I was glad enough to see 

him when he came; but didn't seem to miss him if he stayed away。'





And cannot pleasures; while they last;

Be actual unless; when past;

They leave us shuddering and aghast;

With anguish smarting?

And cannot friends be firm and fast;

And yet bear parting?



And must I then; at Friendship's call;

Calmly resign the little all

(Trifling; I grant; it is and small)

I have of gladness;

And lend my being to the thrall

Of gloom and sadness?



And think you that I should be dumb;

And full DOLORUM OMNIUM;

Excepting when YOU choose to come

And share my dinner?

At other times be sour and glum

And daily thinner?



Must he then only live to weep;

Who'd prove his friendship true and deep

By day a lonely shadow creep;

At night…time languish;

Oft raising in his broken sleep

The moan of anguish?



The lover; if for certain days

His fair one be denied his gaze;

Sinks not in grief and wild amaze;

But; wiser wooer;

He spends the time in writing lays;

And posts them to her。



And if the verse flow free and fast;

Till even the poet is aghast;

A touching Valentine at last

The post shall carry;

When thirteen days are gone and past

Of February。



Farewell; dear friend; and when we meet;

In desert waste or crowded street;

Perhaps before this week shall fleet;

Perhaps to…morrow。

I trust to find YOUR heart the seat

Of wasting sorrow。







THE THREE VOICES







The First Voice





HE trilled a carol fresh and free;

He laughed aloud for very glee:

There came a breeze from off the sea:



It passed athwart the glooming flat …

It fanned his forehead as he sat …

It lightly bore away his hat;



All to the feet of one who stood

Like maid enchanted in a wood;

Frowning as darkly as she could。



With huge umbrella; lank and brown;

Unerringly she pinned it down;

Right through the centre of the crown。



Then; with an aspect cold and grim;

Regardless of its battered rim;

She took it up and gave it him。



A while like one in dreams he stood;

Then faltered forth his gratitude

In words just short of being rude:



For it had lost its shape and shine;

And it had cost him four…and…nine;

And he was going out to dine。



〃To dine!〃 she sneered in acid tone。

〃To bend thy being to a bone

Clothed in a radiance not its own!〃



The tear…drop trickled to his chin:

There was a meaning in her grin

That made him feel on fire within。



〃Term it not 'radiance;'〃 said he:

〃'Tis solid nutriment to me。

Dinner is Dinner:  Tea is Tea。〃



And she 〃Yea so?  Yet wherefore cease?

Let thy scant knowledge find increase。

Say 'Men are Men; and Geese are Geese。'〃



He moaned:  he knew not what to say。

The thought 〃That I could get away!〃

Strove with the thought 〃But I must stay。



〃To dine!〃 she shrieked in dragon…wrath。

〃To swallow wines all foam and froth!

To simper at a table…cloth!



〃Say; can thy noble spirit stoop

To join the gormandising troup

Who find a solace in the soup?



〃Canst thou desire or pie or puff?

Thy well…bred manners were enough;

Without such gross material stuff。〃



〃Yet well…bred men;〃 he faintly said;

〃Are not willing to be fed:

Nor are they well without the bread。〃



Her visage scorched him ere she spoke:

〃There are;〃 she said; 〃a kind of folk

Who have no horror of a joke。



〃Such wretches live:

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