太子爷小说网 > 英语电子书 > the man against the sky >

第8节

the man against the sky-第8节

小说: the man against the sky 字数: 每页4000字

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



I've tried the world; and found it good;

 For more than twenty years this fall。



〃And what the world has left of me

 Will go now in a little while。〃

And what the world had left of him

 Was partly an unholy guile。



〃That I have paid for being calm

 Is what you see; if you have eyes;

For let a man be calm too long;

 He pays for much before he dies。



〃Be calm when you are growing old

 And you have nothing else to do;

Pour not the wine of life too thin

 If water means the death of you。



〃You say I might have learned at home

 The truth in season to be strong?

Not so; I took the wine of life

 Too thin; and I was calm too long。



〃Like others who are strong too late;

 For me there was no going back;

For I had found another speed;

 And I was on the other track。



〃God knows how far I might have gone

 Or what there might have been to see;

But my speed had a sudden end;

 And here you have the end of me。〃



The end or not; it may be now

 But little farther from the truth

To say those worn satiric eyes

 Had something of immortal youth。



He may among the millions here

 Be one; or he may; quite as well;

Be gone to find again the Tree

 Of Knowledge; out of which he fell。



He may be near us; dreaming yet

 Of unrepented rouge and coral;

Or in a grave without a name

 May be as far off as a moral。









Bewick Finzer







Time was when his half million drew

 The breath of six per cent;

But soon the worm of what…was…not

 Fed hard on his content;

And something crumbled in his brain

 When his half million went。



Time passed; and filled along with his

 The place of many more;

Time came; and hardly one of us

 Had credence to restore;

From what appeared one day; the man

 Whom we had known before。



The broken voice; the withered neck;

 The coat worn out with care;

The cleanliness of indigence;

 The brilliance of despair;

The fond imponderable dreams

 Of affluence;  all were there。



Poor Finzer; with his dreams and schemes;

 Fares hard now in the race;

With heart and eye that have a task

 When he looks in the face

Of one who might so easily

 Have been in Finzer's place。



He comes unfailing for the loan

 We give and then forget;

He comes; and probably for years

 Will he be coming yet; 

Familiar as an old mistake;

 And futile as regret。









Bokardo







Well; Bokardo; here we are;

 Make yourself at home。

Look around  you haven't far

 To look  and why be dumb?

Not the place that used to be;

Not so many things to see;

But there's room for you and me。

 And you  you've come。



Talk a little; or; if not;

 Show me with a sign

Why it was that you forgot

 What was yours and mine。

Friends; I gather; are small things

In an age when coins are kings;

Even at that; one hardly flings

 Friends before swine。



Rather strong?  I knew as much;

 For it made you speak。

No offense to swine; as such;

 But why this hide…and…seek?

You have something on your side;

And you wish you might have died;

So you tell me。  And you tried

 One night last week?



You tried hard?  And even then

 Found a time to pause?

When you try as hard again;

 You'll have another cause。

When you find yourself at odds

With all dreamers of all gods;

You may smite yourself with rods 

 But not the laws。



Though they seem to show a spite

 Rather devilish;

They move on as with a might

 Stronger than your wish。

Still; however strong they be;

They bide man's authority:

Xerxes; when he flogged the sea;

 May've scared a fish。



It's a comfort; if you like;

 To keep honor warm;

But as often as you strike

 The laws; you do no harm。

To the laws; I mean。  To you 

That's another point of view;

One you may as well indue

 With some alarm。



Not the most heroic face

 To present; I grant;

Nor will you insure disgrace

 By fearing what you want。

Freedom has a world of sides;

And if reason once derides

Courage; then your courage hides

 A deal of cant。



Learn a little to forget

 Life was once a feast;

You aren't fit for dying yet;

 So don't be a beast。

Few men with a mind will say;

Thinking twice; that they can pay

Half their debts of yesterday;

 Or be released。



There's a debt now on your mind

 More than any gold?

And there's nothing you can find

 Out there in the cold?

Only  what's his name?  Remorse?

And Death riding on his horse?

Well; be glad there's nothing worse

 Than you have told。



Leave Remorse to warm his hands

 Outside in the rain。

As for Death; he understands;

 And he will come again。

Therefore; till your wits are clear;

Flourish and be quiet  here。

But a devil at each ear

 Will be a strain?



Past a doubt they will indeed;

 More than you have earned。

I say that because you need

 Ablution; being burned?

Well; if you must have it so;

Your last flight went rather low。

Better say you had to know

 What you have learned。



And that's over。  Here you are;

 Battered by the past。

Time will have his little scar;

 But the wound won't last。

Nor shall harrowing surprise

Find a world without its eyes

If a star fades when the skies

 Are overcast。



God knows there are lives enough;

 Crushed; and too far gone

Longer to make sermons of;

 And those we leave alone。

Others; if they will; may rend

The worn patience of a friend

Who; though smiling; sees the end;

 With nothing done。



But your fervor to be free

 Fled the faith it scorned;

Death demands a decency

 Of you; and you are warned。

But for all we give we get

Mostly blows?  Don't be upset;

You; Bokardo; are not yet

 Consumed or mourned。



There'll be falling into view

 Much to rearrange;

And there'll be a time for you

 To marvel at the change。

They that have the least to fear

Question hardest what is here;

When long…hidden skies are clear;

 The stars look strange。









The Man against the Sky







Between me and the sunset; like a dome

Against the glory of a world on fire;

Now burned a sudden hill;

Bleak; round; and high; by flame…lit height made higher;

With nothing on it for the flame to kill

Save one who moved and was alone up there

To loom before the chaos and the glare

As if he were the last god going home

Unto his last desire。

Dark; marvelous; and inscrutable he moved on

Till down the fiery distance he was gone; 

Like one of those eternal; remote things

That range across a man's imaginings

When a sure music fills him and he knows

What he may say thereafter to few men; 

The touch of ages having wrought

An echo and a glimpse of what he thought

A phantom or a legend until then;

For whether lighted over ways that save;

Or lured from all repose;

If he go on too far to find a grave;

Mostly alone he goes。



Even he; who stood where I had found him;

On high with fire all round him; 

Who moved along the molten west;

And over the round hill's crest

That seemed half ready with him to go down;

Flame…bitten and flame…cleft; 

As if there were to be no last thing left

Of a nameless unimaginable town; 

Even he who climbed and vanished may have taken

Down to the perils of a depth not known;

From death defended though by men forsaken;

The bread that every man must eat alone;

He may have walked while others hardly dared

Look on to see him stand where many fell;

And upward out of that; as out of hell;

He may have sung and striven

To mount where more of him shall yet be given;

Bereft of all retreat;

To sevenfold heat; 

As on a day when three in Dura shared

The furnace; and were spared

For glory by that king of Babylon

Who made himself so great that God; who heard;

Covered him with long feathers; like a bird。



Again; he may have gone down easily;

By comfortable altitudes; and found;

As always; underneath him solid ground

Whereon to be sufficient and to stand

Possessed already of the promised land;

Far stretched and fair to see:

A good sight; verily;

And one to make the eyes of her who bore him

Shine glad with hidden tears。

Why question of his ease of who before him;

In one place or another where they left

Their names as far behind them as their bones;

And yet by dint of slaughter toil and theft;

And shrewdly sharpened stones;

Carved hard the way for his ascendency

Through deserts of lost years?

Why trouble him now who sees and hears

No more than what his innocence requires;

And therefore to no other height aspires

Than one at which he neither quails nor tires?

He may do more by seeing what he sees

Than others eager for iniquities;

He may; by seeing all things for the best;

Incite futurity to do the rest。



Or with an even likelihood;

He may have met with atrabilious eyes

The fires of time on equal terms and

返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0

你可能喜欢的