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moments of vision and miscellaneous verses-第13节

小说: moments of vision and miscellaneous verses 字数: 每页4000字

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Or if the voice so near
Be a soul's voice floating here。



THE SOMETHING THAT SAVED HIM



   It was when
Whirls of thick waters laved me
   Again and again;
That something arose and saved me;
   Yea; it was then。

   In that day
Unseeing the azure went I
   On my way;
And to white winter bent I;
   Knowing no May。

   Reft of renown;
Under the night clouds beating
   Up and down;
In my needfulness greeting
   Cit and clown。

   Long there had been
Much of a murky colour
   In the scene;
Dull prospects meeting duller;
   Nought between。

   Last; there loomed
A closing…in blind alley;
   Though there boomed
A feeble summons to rally
   Where it gloomed。

   The clock rang;
The hour brought a hand to deliver;
   I upsprang;
And looked back at den; ditch and river;
   And sang。



THE ENEMY'S PORTRAIT



He saw the portrait of his enemy; offered
At auction in a street he journeyed nigh;
That enemy; now late dead; who in his life…time
Had injured deeply him the passer…by。
〃To get that picture; pleased be God; I'll try;
And utterly destroy it; and no more
Shall be inflicted on man's mortal eye
A countenance so sinister and sore!〃

And so he bought the painting。  Driving homeward;
〃The frame will come in useful;〃 he declared;
〃The rest is fuel。〃  On his arrival; weary;
Asked what he bore with him; and how he fared;
He said he had bid for a picture; though he cared
For the frame only:  on the morrow he
Would burn the canvas; which could well be spared;
Seeing that it portrayed his enemy。

Next day some other duty found him busy;
The foe was laid his face against the wall;
But on the next he set himself to loosen
The straining…strips。  And then a casual call
Prevented his proceeding therewithal;
And thus the picture waited; day by day;
Its owner's pleasure; like a wretched thrall;
Until a month and more had slipped away。

And then upon a morn he found it shifted;
Hung in a corner by a servitor。
〃Why did you take on you to hang that picture?
You know it was the frame I bought it for。〃
〃It stood in the way of every visitor;
And I just hitched it there。〃〃Well; it must go:
I don't commemorate men whom I abhor。
Remind me 'tis to do。  The frame I'll stow。〃

But things become forgotten。  In the shadow
Of the dark corner hung it by its string;
And there it stayedonce noticed by its owner;
Who said; 〃Ah meI must destroy that thing!〃
But when he died; there; none remembering;
It hung; till moved to prominence; as one sees;
And comers pause and say; examining;
〃I thought they were the bitterest enemies?〃



IMAGININGS



   She saw herself a lady
      With fifty frocks in wear;
And rolling wheels; and rooms the best;
      And faithful maidens' care;
   And open lawns and shady
      For weathers warm or drear。

   She found herself a striver;
      All liberal gifts debarred;
With days of gloom; and movements stressed;
      And early visions marred;
   And got no man to wive her
      But one whose lot was hard。

   Yet in the moony night…time
      She steals to stile and lea
During his heavy slumberous rest
      When homecome wearily;
   And dreams of some blest bright…time
      She knows can never be。



ON THE DOORSTEP



The rain imprinted the step's wet shine
With target…circles that quivered and crossed
As I was leaving this porch of mine;
When from within there swelled and paused
      A song's sweet note;
   And back I turned; and thought;
      〃Here I'll abide。〃

The step shines wet beneath the rain;
Which prints its circles as heretofore;
I watch them from the porch again;
But no song…notes within the door
      Now call to me
   To shun the dripping lea
      And forth I stride。

Jan。 1914。



SIGNS AND TOKENS



Said the red…cloaked crone
In a whispered moan:

〃The dead man was limp
When laid in his chest;
Yea; limp; and why
But to signify
That the grave will crimp
Ere next year's sun
Yet another one
Of those in that house …
It may be the best …
For its endless drowse!〃

Said the brown…shawled dame
To confirm the same:

〃And the slothful flies
On the rotting fruit
Have been seen to wear
While crawling there
Crape scarves; by eyes
That were quick and acute;
As did those that had pitched
On the cows by the pails;
And with flaps of their tails
Were far away switched。〃

Said the third in plaid;
Each word being weighed:

〃And trotting does
In the park; in the lane;
And just outside
The shuttered pane;
Have also been heard …
Quick feet as light
As the feet of a sprite …
And the wise mind knows
What things may betide
When such has occurred。〃

Cried the black…craped fourth;
Cold faced as the north:

〃O; though giving such
Some head…room; I smile
At your falterings
When noting those things
Round your domicile!
For what; what can touch
One whom; riven of all
That makes life gay;
No hints can appal
Of more takings away!〃



PATHS OF FORMER TIME



      No; no;
   It must not be so:
They are the ways we do not go。

      Still chew
   The kine; and moo
In the meadows we used to wander through;

      Still purl
   The rivulets and curl
Towards the weirs with a musical swirl;

      Haymakers
   As in former years
Rake rolls into heaps that the pitchfork rears;

      Wheels crack
   On the turfy track
The waggon pursues with its toppling pack。

      〃Why then shun …
   Since summer's not done …
All this because of the lack of one?〃

      Had you been
   Sharer of that scene
You would not ask while it bites in keen

      Why it is so
   We can no more go
By the summer paths we used to know!

1913。



THE CLOCK OF THE YEARS



〃A spirit passed before my face; the hair of my flesh stood up。〃

   And the Spirit said;
〃I can make the clock of the years go backward;
But am loth to stop it where you will。〃
   And I cried; 〃Agreed
   To that。  Proceed:
   It's better than dead!〃

   He answered; 〃Peace〃;
And called her upas last before me;
Then younger; younger she freshed; to the year
   I first had known
   Her woman…grown;
   And I cried; 〃Cease! …

   〃Thus far is good …
It is enoughlet her stay thus always!〃
But alas for me。  He shook his head:
   No stop was there;
   And she waned child…fair;
   And to babyhood。

   Still less in mien
To my great sorrow became she slowly;
And smalled till she was nought at all
   In his checkless griff;
   And it was as if
   She had never been。

   〃Better;〃 I plained;
〃She were dead as before!  The memory of her
Had lived in me; but it cannot now!〃
   And coldly his voice:
   〃It was your choice
   To mar the ordained。〃

1916。



AT THE PIANO



A woman was playing;
   A man looking on;
   And the mould of her face;
   And her neck; and her hair;
   Which the rays fell upon
   Of the two candles there;
Sent him mentally straying
   In some fancy…place
   Where pain had no trace。

A cowled Apparition
   Came pushing between;
   And her notes seemed to sigh;
   And the lights to burn pale;
   As a spell numbed the scene。
   But the maid saw no bale;
And the man no monition;
   And Time laughed awry;
   And the Phantom hid nigh。



THE SHADOW ON THE STONE



      I went by the Druid stone
   That broods in the garden white and lone;
And I stopped and looked at the shifting shadows
   That at some moments fall thereon
   From the tree hard by with a rhythmic swing;
   And they shaped in my imagining
To the shade that a well…known head and shoulders
   Threw there when she was gardening。

      I thought her behind my back;
   Yea; her I long had learned to lack;
And I said:  〃I am sure you are standing behind me;
   Though how do you get into this old track?〃
   And there was no sound but the fall of a leaf
   As a sad response; and to keep down grief
I would not turn my head to discover
   That there was nothing in my belief。

      Yet I wanted to look and see
   That nobody stood at the back of me;
But I thought once more:  〃Nay; I'll not unvision
   A shape which; somehow; there may be。〃
   So I went on softly from the glade;
   And left her behind me throwing her shade;
As she were indeed an apparition …
   My head unturned lest my dream should fade。

Begun 1913:  finished 1916。



IN THE GARDEN
(M。 H。)



We waited for the sun
To break its cloudy prison
(For day was not yet done;
And night still unbegun)
Leaning by the dial。

After many a trial …
We all silent there …
It burst as new…arisen;
Throwing a shade to where
Time travelled at that minute。

Little saw we in it;
But this much I know;
Of lookers on that shade;
Her towards whom it made
Soonest had to go。

1915。



THE TREE AND THE LADY



      I have done all I could
For that lady I knew!  Through the heats I have shaded her;
Drawn to her songsters when summer has jaded her;
   Home from the heath or the wood。

      At the mirth…time of May;
When my shadow first lured her; I'd donned my new bravery
Of greenth:  'twas my all。  Now I shiver in slavery;
   Icicles grieving me gray。

      Plumed to every twig's end
I could tempt her chair under me。  Much did I t

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