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the complete poetical works-第80节

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    Rebounds our heavier hail

    From each iron scale

  Of the monster's hide。



〃Strike your flag!〃 the rebel cries;

  In his arrogant old plantation strain。

〃Never!〃 our gallant Morris replies;

    〃It is better to sink than to yield!〃

    And the whole air pealed

  With the cheers of our men。



Then; like a kraken huge and black;

  She crushed our ribs in her iron grasp!

Down went the Cumberland all a wrack;

    With a sudden shudder of death;

    And the cannon's breath

  For her dying gasp。



Next morn; as the sun rose over the bay;

  Still floated our flag at the mainmast head。

Lord; how beautiful was Thy day!

    Every waft of the air

    Was a whisper of prayer;

  Or a dirge for the dead。



Ho! brave hearts that went down in the seas

  Ye are at peace in the troubled stream;

Ho! brave land! with hearts like these;

    Thy flag; that is rent in twain;

    Shall be one again;

  And without a seam!







SNOW…FLAKES



Out of the bosom of the Air;

  Out of the cloud…folds of her garments shaken;

Over the woodlands brown and bare;

  Over the harvest…fields forsaken;

    Silent; and soft; and slow

    Descends the snow。



Even as our cloudy fancies take

  Suddenly shape in some divine expression;

Even as the troubled heart doth make

  In the white countenance confession;

    The troubled sky reveals

    The grief it feels。



This is the poem of the air;

  Slowly in silent syllables recorded;

This is the secret of despair;

  Long in its cloudy bosom hoarded;

    Now whispered and revealed

    To wood and field。







A DAY OF SUNSHINE



O gift of God!  O perfect day:

Whereon shall no man work; but play;

Whereon it is enough for me;

Not to be doing; but to be!



Through every fibre of my brain;

Through every nerve; through every vein;

I feel the electric thrill; the touch

Of life; that seems almost too much。



I hear the wind among the trees

Playing celestial symphonies;

I see the branches downward bent;

Like keys of some great instrument。



And over me unrolls on high

The splendid scenery of the sky;

Where though a sapphire sea the sun

Sails like a golden galleon;



Towards yonder cloud…land in the West;

Towards yonder Islands of the Blest;

Whose steep sierra far uplifts

Its craggy summits white with drifts。



Blow; winds! and waft through all the rooms

The snow…flakes of the cherry…blooms!

Blow; winds! and bend within my reach

The fiery blossoms of the peach!



O Life and Love! O happy throng

Of thoughts; whose only speech is song!

O heart of man! canst thou not be

Blithe as the air is; and as free?







SOMETHING LEFT UNDONE



Labor with what zeal we will;

  Something still remains undone;

Something uncompleted still

  Waits the rising of the sun。



By the bedside; on the stair;

  At the threshold; near the gates;

With its menace or its prayer;

  Like a mendicant it waits;



Waits; and will not go away;

  Waits; and will not be gainsaid;

By the cares of yesterday

  Each to…day is heavier made;



Till at length the burden seems

  Greater than our strength can bear;

Heavy as the weight of dreams;

  Pressing on us everywhere。



And we stand from day to day;

  Like the dwarfs of times gone by;

Who; as Northern legends say;

  On their shoulders held the sky。







WEARINESS



O little feet! that such long years

Must wander on through hopes and fears;

  Must ache and bleed beneath your load;

I; nearer to the wayside inn

Where toil shall cease and rest begin;

  Am weary; thinking of your road!



O little hands! that; weak or strong;

Have still to serve or rule so long;

  Have still so long to give or ask;

I; who so much with book and pen

Have toiled among my fellow…men;

  Am weary; thinking of your task。



O little hearts! that throb and beat

With such impatient; feverish heat;

  Such limitless and strong desires;

Mine that so long has glowed and burned;

With passions into ashes turned

  Now covers and conceals its fires。



O little souls! as pure and white

And crystalline as rays of light

  Direct from heaven; their source divine;

Refracted through the mist of years;

How red my setting sun appears;

  How lurid looks this soul of mine!





****************





TALES OF A WAYSIDE INN



PART FIRST



PRELUDE



THE WAYSIDE INN



One Autumn night; in Sudbury town;

Across the meadows bare and brown;

The windows of the wayside inn

Gleamed red with fire…light through the leaves

Of woodbine; hanging from the eaves

Their crimson curtains rent and thin。



As ancient is this hostelry

As any in the land may be;

Built in the old Colonial day;

When men lived in a grander way;

With ampler hospitality;

A kind of old Hobgoblin Hall;

Now somewhat fallen to decay;

With weather…stains upon the wall;

And stairways worn; and crazy doors;

And creaking and uneven floors;

And chimneys huge; and tiled and tall。



A region of repose it seems;

A place of slumber and of dreams;

Remote among the wooded hills!

For there no noisy railway speeds;

Its torch…race scattering smoke and gleeds;

But noon and night; the panting teams

Stop under the great oaks; that throw

Tangles of light and shade below;

On roofs and doors and window…sills。

Across the road the barns display

Their lines of stalls; their mows of hay;

Through the wide doors the breezes blow;

The wattled cocks strut to and fro;

And; half effaced by rain and shine;

The Red Horse prances on the sign。

Round this old…fashioned; quaint abode

Deep silence reigned; save when a gust

Went rushing down the county road;

And skeletons of leaves; and dust;

A moment quickened by its breath;

Shuddered and danced their dance of death;

And through the ancient oaks o'erhead

Mysterious voices moaned and fled。



But from the parlor of the inn

A pleasant murmur smote the ear;

Like water rushing through a weir:

Oft interrupted by the din

Of laughter and of loud applause;

And; in each intervening pause;

The music of a violin。

The fire…light; shedding over all

The splendor of its ruddy glow;

Filled the whole parlor large and low;

It gleamed on wainscot and on wall;

It touched with more than wonted grace

Fair Princess Mary's pictured face;

It bronzed the rafters overhead;

On the old spinet's ivory keys

It played inaudible melodies;

It crowned the sombre clock with flame;

The hands; the hours; the maker's name;

And painted with a livelier red

The Landlord's coat…of…arms again;

And; flashing on the window…pane;

Emblazoned with its light and shade

The jovial rhymes; that still remain;

Writ near a century ago;

By the great Major Molineaux;

Whom Hawthorne has immortal made。



Before the blazing fire of wood

Erect the rapt musician stood;

And ever and anon he bent

His head upon his instrument;

And seemed to listen; till he caught

Confessions of its secret thought;

The joy; the triumph; the lament;

The exultation and the pain;

Then; by the magic of his art;

He soothed the throbbings of its heart;

And lulled it into peace again。



Around the fireside at their ease

There sat a group of friends; entranced

With the delicious melodies

Who from the far…off noisy town

Had to the wayside inn come down;

To rest beneath its old oak…trees。

The fire…light on their faces glanced;

Their shadows on the wainscot danced;

And; though of different lands and speech;

Each had his tale to tell; and each

Was anxious to be pleased and please。

And while the sweet musician plays;

Let me in outline sketch them all;

Perchance uncouthly as the blaze

With its uncertain touch portrays

Their shadowy semblance on the wall。



But first the Landlord will I trace;

Grave in his aspect and attire;

A man of ancient pedigree;

A Justice of the Peace was he;

Known in all Sudbury as 〃The Squire。〃

Proud was he of his name and race;

Of old Sir William and Sir Hugh;

And in the parlor; full in view;

His coat…of…arms; well framed and glazed;

Upon the wall in colors blazed;

He beareth gules upon his shield;

A chevron argent in the field;

With three wolf's heads; and for the crest

A Wyvern part…per…pale addressed

Upon a helmet barred; below

The scroll reads; 〃By the name of Howe。〃

And over this; no longer bright;

Though glimmering with a latent light;

Was hung the sword his grandsire bore

In the rebellious days of yore;

Down there at Concord in the fight。



A youth was there; of quiet ways;

A Student of old books and days;

To whom all tongues and lands were known

And yet a lover of his own;

With many a social virtue graced;

And yet a friend of solitude;

A man of such a genial mood

The heart of all things he embraced;

And yet of such fastidious taste;

He never found 

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