the complete poetical works-第101节
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The Curate is waiting in the hall;
Most eager and alive of all
To welcome the Baron and Baroness;
But his mind is full of vague distress;
For he hath read in Jesuit books
Of those children of the wilderness;
And now; good; simple man! he looks
To see a painted savage stride
Into the room; with shoulders bare;
And eagle feathers in her hair;
And around her a robe of panther's hide。
Instead; he beholds with secret shame
A form of beauty undefined;
A loveliness with out a name;
Not of degree; but more of kind;
Nor bold nor shy; nor short nor tall;
But a new mingling of them all。
Yes; beautiful beyond belief;
Transfigured and transfused; he sees
The lady of the Pyrenees;
The daughter of the Indian chief。
Beneath the shadow of her hair
The gold…bronze color of the skin
Seems lighted by a fire within;
As when a burst of sunlight shines
Beneath a sombre grove of pines;
A dusky splendor in the air。
The two small hands; that now are pressed
In his; seem made to be caressed;
They lie so warm and soft and still;
Like birds half hidden in a nest;
Trustful; and innocent of ill。
And ah! he cannot believe his ears
When her melodious voice he hears
Speaking his native Gascon tongue;
The words she utters seem to be
Part of some poem of Goudouli;
They are not spoken; they are sung!
And the Baron smiles; and says; 〃You see;
I told you but the simple truth;
Ah; you may trust the eyes of youth!〃
Down in the village day by day
The people gossip in their way;
And stare to see the Baroness pass
On Sunday morning to early Mass;
And when she kneeleth down to pray;
They wonder; and whisper together; and say;
〃Surely this is no heathen lass!〃
And in course of time they learn to bless
The Baron and the Baroness。
And in course of time the Curate learns
A secret so dreadful; that by turns
He is ice and fire; he freezes and burns。
The Baron at confession hath said;
That though this woman be his wife;
He bath wed her as the Indians wed;
He hath bought her for a gun and a knife!
And the Curate replies: 〃O profligate;
O Prodigal Son! return once more
To the open arms and the open door
Of the Church; or ever it be too late。
Thank God; thy father did not live
To see what he could not forgive;
On thee; so reckless and perverse;
He left his blessing; not his curse。
But the nearer the dawn the darker the night;
And by going wrong all things come right;
Things have been mended that were worse;
And the worse; the nearer they are to mend。
For the sake of the living and the dead;
Thou shalt be wed as Christians wed;
And all things come to a happy end。〃
O sun; that followest the night;
In yon blue sky; serene and pure;
And pourest thine impartial light
Alike on mountain and on moor;
Pause for a moment in thy course;
And bless the bridegroom and the bride!
O Gave; that from thy hidden source
In you mysterious mountain…side
Pursuest thy wandering way alone;
And leaping down its steps of stone;
Along the meadow…lands demure
Stealest away to the Adour;
Pause for a moment in thy course
To bless the bridegroom and the bride!
The choir is singing the matin song;
The doors of the church are opened wide;
The people crowd; and press; and throng
To see the bridegroom and the bride。
They enter and pass along the nave;
They stand upon the father's grave;
The bells are ringing soft and slow;
The living above and the dead below
Give their blessing on one and twain;
The warm wind blows from the hills of Spain;
The birds are building; the leaves are green;
And Baron Castine of St。 Castine
Hath come at last to his own again。
FINALE
〃Nunc plaudite!〃 the Student cried;
When he had finished; 〃now applaud;
As Roman actors used to say
At the conclusion of a play〃;
And rose; and spread his hands abroad;
And smiling bowed from side to side;
As one who bears the palm away。
And generous was the applause and loud;
But less for him than for the sun;
That even as the tale was done
Burst from its canopy of cloud;
And lit the landscape with the blaze
Of afternoon on autumn days;
And filled the room with light; and made
The fire of logs a painted shade。
A sudden wind from out the west
Blew all its trumpets loud and shrill;
The windows rattled with the blast;
The oak…trees shouted as it passed;
And straight; as if by fear possessed;
The cloud encampment on the hill
Broke up; and fluttering flag and tent
Vanished into the firmament;
And down the valley fled amain
The rear of the retreating rain。
Only far up in the blue sky
A mass of clouds; like drifted snow
Suffused with a faint Alpine glow;
Was heaped together; vast and high;
On which a shattered rainbow hung;
Not rising like the ruined arch
Of some aerial aqueduct;
But like a roseate garland plucked
From an Olympian god; and flung
Aside in his triumphal march。
Like prisoners from their dungeon gloom;
Like birds escaping from a snare;
Like school…boys at the hour of play;
All left at once the pent…up room;
And rushed into the open air;
And no more tales were told that day。
PART THIRD
PRELUDE
The evening came; the golden vane
A moment in the sunset glanced;
Then darkened; and then gleamed again;
As from the east the moon advanced
And touched it with a softer light;
While underneath; with flowing mane;
Upon the sign the Red Horse pranced;
And galloped forth into the night。
But brighter than the afternoon
That followed the dark day of rain;
And brighter than the golden vane
That glistened in the rising moon;
Within the ruddy fire…light gleamed;
And every separate window…pane;
Backed by the outer darkness; showed
A mirror; where the flamelets gleamed
And flickered to and fro; and seemed
A bonfire lighted in the road。
Amid the hospitable glow;
Like an old actor on the stage;
With the uncertain voice of age;
The singing chimney chanted low
The homely songs of long ago。
The voice that Ossian heard of yore;
When midnight winds were in his hall;
A ghostly and appealing call;
A sound of days that are no more!
And dark as Ossian sat the Jew;
And listened to the sound; and knew
The passing of the airy hosts;
The gray and misty cloud of ghosts
In their interminable flight;
And listening muttered in his beard;
With accent indistinct and weird;
〃Who are ye; children of the Night?〃
Beholding his mysterious face;
〃Tell me;〃 the gay Sicilian said;
〃Why was it that in breaking bread
At supper; you bent down your head
And; musing; paused a little space;
As one who says a silent grace?〃
The Jew replied; with solemn air;
〃I said the Manichaean's prayer。
It was his faith;perhaps is mine;
That life in all its forms is one;
And that its secret conduits run
Unseen; but in unbroken line;
From the great fountain…head divine
Through man and beast; through grain and grass。
Howe'er we struggle; strive; and cry;
From death there can be no escape;
And no escape from life; alas
Because we cannot die; but pass
From one into another shape:
It is but into life we die。
〃Therefore the Manichaean said
This simple prayer on breaking bread;
Lest he with hasty hand or knife
Might wound the incarcerated life;
The soul in things that we call dead:
'I did not reap thee; did not bind thee;
I did not thrash thee; did not grind thee;
Nor did I in the oven bake thee!
It was not I; it was another
Did these things unto thee; O brother;
I only have thee; hold thee; break thee!'〃
〃That birds have souls I can concede;〃
The poet cried; with glowing cheeks;
〃The flocks that from their beds of reed
Uprising north or southward fly;
And flying write upon the sky
The biforked letter of the Greeks;
As hath been said by Rucellai;
All birds that sing or chirp or cry;
Even those migratory bands;
The minor poets of the air;
The plover; peep; and sanderling;
That hardly can be said to sing;
But pipe along the barren sands;
All these have souls akin to ours;
So hath the lovely race of flowers:
Thus much I grant; but nothing more。
The rusty hinges of a door
Are not alive because they creak;
This chimney; with its dreary roar;
These rattling windows; do not speak!〃
〃To me they speak;〃 the Jew replied;
〃And in the sounds that sink and soar;
I hear the voices of a tide
That breaks upon an unknown shore!〃
Here the Sicilian interfered:
〃That was your dream; then; as you dozed
A moment since; with eyes half…closed;
And murmured something in your beard。〃
The Hebrew smiled; and answered; 〃Nay;
Not that; but something very near;
Like; and yet not the same; may seem
The vision of my waking dream;
Before it wholly dies away;
Listen to me; and you shall hear。〃
THE SPANISH JEW'S TALE
AZRAEL
King S