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第9节

moments of vision and miscellaneous verses-第9节

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

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      It was pruned; and bled …
Then overgrew the wound。  But now; at last;
   Its growings all have stagnated。

   My fellow…climber rises dim
      From her chilly grave …
Just as she was; her foot near mine on the bending limb;
   Laughing; her young brown hand awave。

December 1915。



THE SUNSHADE



Ahit's the skeleton of a lady's sunshade;
   Here at my feet in the hard rock's chink;
   Merely a naked sheaf of wires! …
   Twenty years have gone with their livers and diers
   Since it was silked in its white or pink。

Noonshine riddles the ribs of the sunshade;
   No more a screen from the weakest ray;
   Nothing to tell us the hue of its dyes;
   Nothing but rusty bones as it lies
   In its coffin of stone; unseen till to…day。

Where is the woman who carried that sun…shade
   Up and down this seaside place? …
   Little thumb standing against its stem;
   Thoughts perhaps bent on a love…stratagem;
   Softening yet more the already soft face!

Is the fair woman who carried that sunshade
   A skeleton just as her property is;
   Laid in the chink that none may scan?
   And does she regretif regret dust can …
   The vain things thought when she flourished this?

SWANAGE CLIFFS。



THE AGEING HOUSE



   When the walls were red
   That now are seen
   To be overspread
   With a mouldy green;
   A fresh fair head
   Would often lean
   From the sunny casement
   And scan the scene;
While blithely spoke the wind to the little sycamore tree。

   But storms have raged
   Those walls about;
   And the head has aged
   That once looked out;
   And zest is suaged
   And trust is doubt;
   And slow effacement
   Is rife throughout;
While fiercely girds the wind at the long…limbed sycamore tree!



THE CAGED GOLDFINCH



Within a churchyard; on a recent grave;
   I saw a little cage
That jailed a goldfinch。  All was silence save
   Its hops from stage to stage。

There was inquiry in its wistful eye;
   And once it tried to sing;
Of him or her who placed it there; and why;
   No one knew anything。



AT MADAME TUSSAUD'S IN VICTORIAN YEARS



〃That same first fiddler who leads the orchestra to…night
   Here fiddled four decades of years ago;
He bears the same babe…like smile of self…centred delight;
Same trinket on watch…chain; same ring on the hand with the bow。

〃But his face; if regarded; is woefully wanner; and drier;
   And his once dark beard has grown straggling and gray;
Yet a blissful existence he seems to have led with his lyre;
In a trance of his own; where no wearing or tearing had sway。

〃Mid these wax figures; who nothing can do; it may seem
   That to do but a little thing counts a great deal;
To be watched by kings; councillors; queens; may be flattering to him

With their glass eyes longing they too could wake notes that appeal。〃

* * *

Ah; but he played staunchlythat fiddlerwhoever he was;
   With the innocent heart and the soul…touching string:
May he find the Fair Haven!  For did he not smile with good cause?
Yes; gamuts that graced forty years'…flight were not a small thing!



THE BALLET



They crush togethera rustling heap of flesh …
Of more than flesh; a heap of souls; and then
      They part; enmesh;
   And crush together again;
Like the pink petals of a too sanguine rose
   Frightened shut just when it blows。

Though all alike in their tinsel livery;
And indistinguishable at a sweeping glance;
      They muster; maybe;
   As lives wide in irrelevance;
A world of her own has each one underneath;
   Detached as a sword from its sheath。

Daughters; wives; mistresses; honest or false; sold; bought;
Hearts of all sizes; gay; fond; gushing; or penned;
      Various in thought
      Of lover; rival; friend;
Links in a one…pulsed chain; all showing one smile;
   Yet severed so many a mile!



THE FIVE STUDENTS



      The sparrow dips in his wheel…rut bath;
         The sun grows passionate…eyed;
   And boils the dew to smoke by the paddock…path;
         As strenuously we stride; …
Five of us; dark He; fair He; dark She; fair She; I;
            All beating by。

      The air is shaken; the high…road hot;
         Shadowless swoons the day;
   The greens are sobered and cattle at rest; but not
         We on our urgent way; …
Four of us; fair She; dark She; fair He; I; are there;
            But oneelsewhere。

      Autumn moulds the hard fruit mellow;
         And forward still we press
   Through moors; briar…meshed plantations; clay…pits yellow;
         As in the spring hoursyes;
Three of us:  fair He; fair She; I; as heretofore;
            Butfallen one more。

      The leaf drops:  earthworms draw it in
         At night…time noiselessly;
   The fingers of birch and beech are skeleton…thin;
            And yet on the beat are we; …
Two of us; fair She; I。  But no more left to go
               The track we know。

      Icicles tag the church…aisle leads;
         The flag…rope gibbers hoarse;
   The home…bound foot…folk wrap their snow…flaked heads;
            Yet I still stalk the course; …
One of us 。 。 。 Dark and fair He; dark and fair She; gone:
               The restanon。



THE WIND'S PROPHECY



I travel on by barren farms;
And gulls glint out like silver flecks
Against a cloud that speaks of wrecks;
And bellies down with black alarms。
I say:  〃Thus from my lady's arms
I go; those arms I love the best!〃
The wind replies from dip and rise;
〃Nay; toward her arms thou journeyest。〃

A distant verge morosely gray
Appears; while clots of flying foam
Break from its muddy monochrome;
And a light blinks up far away。
I sigh:  〃My eyes now as all day
Behold her ebon loops of hair!〃
Like bursting bonds the wind responds;
〃Nay; wait for tresses flashing fair!〃

From tides the lofty coastlands screen
Come smitings like the slam of doors;
Or hammerings on hollow floors;
As the swell cleaves through caves unseen。
Say I:  〃Though broad this wild terrene;
Her city home is matched of none!〃
From the hoarse skies the wind replies:
〃Thou shouldst have said her sea…bord one。〃

The all…prevailing clouds exclude
The one quick timorous transient star;
The waves outside where breakers are
Huzza like a mad multitude。
〃Where the sun ups it; mist…imbued;〃
I cry; 〃there reigns the star for me!〃
The wind outshrieks from points and peaks:
〃Here; westward; where it downs; mean ye!〃

Yonder the headland; vulturine;
Snores like old Skrymer in his sleep;
And every chasm and every steep
Blackens as wakes each pharos…shine。
〃I roam; but one is safely mine;〃
I say。  〃God grant she stay my own!〃
Low laughs the wind as if it grinned:
〃Thy Love is one thou'st not yet known。〃

Rewritten from an old copy。



DURING WIND AND RAIN



   They sing their dearest songs …
   He; she; all of themyea;
   Treble and tenor and bass;
      And one to play;
   With the candles mooning each face 。 。 。
      Ah; no; the years O!
How the sick leaves reel down in throngs!

   They clear the creeping moss …
   Elders and juniorsaye;
   Making the pathways neat
      And the garden gay;
   And they build a shady seat 。 。 。
      Ah; no; the years; the years;
See; the white storm…birds wing across!

   They are blithely breakfasting all …
   Men and maidensyea;
   Under the summer tree;
      With a glimpse of the bay;
   While pet fowl come to the knee 。 。 。
      Ah; no; the years O!
And the rotten rose is ript from the wall。

   They change to a high new house;
   He; she; all of themaye;
   Clocks and carpets and chairs
      On the lawn all day;
   And brightest things that are theirs 。 。 。
      Ah; no; the years; the years;
Down their carved names the rain…drop ploughs。



HE PREFERS HER EARTHLY



This after…sunset is a sight for seeing;
Cliff…heads of craggy cloud surrounding it。
  And dwell you in that glory…show?
You may; for there are strange strange things in being;
      Stranger than I know。

Yet if that chasm of splendour claim your presence
Which glows between the ash cloud and the dun;
   How changed must be your mortal mould!
Changed to a firmament…riding earthless essence
      From what you were of old:

All too unlike the fond and fragile creature
Then known to me 。 。 。 Well; shall I say it plain?
   I would not have you thus and there;
But still would grieve on; missing you; still feature
      You as the one you were。



THE DOLLS



〃Whenever you dress me dolls; mammy;
   Why do you dress them so;
And make them gallant soldiers;
   When never a one I know;
And not as gentle ladies
   With frills and frocks and curls;
As people dress the dollies
   Of other little girls?〃

Ahwhy did she not answer:…
   〃Because your mammy's heed
Is always gallant soldiers;
   As well may be; indeed。
One of them was your daddy;
   His name I must not tell;
He's not the dad who lives here;
   But one I love too well。〃



MOLLY GONE



   No more summer for Molly and me;
      There is snow on the tree;
   And the blackbirds plump large as the rooks are; almost;
      And the water is hard
Where they used to dip bills at the dawn ere her fig

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