第 17 节
作者:老是不进球      更新:2021-02-19 17:49      字数:9322
  And the sweet content
  Which must ever belong
  To a life well spent。
  And what bread would I break
  With my wine; think you?
  The bread of a love
  That is pure and true。
  George Essex Evans。
  An Australian Symphony
  Not as the songs of other lands
  Her song shall be
  Where dim Her purple shore…line stands
  Above the sea!
  As erst she stood; she stands alone;
  Her inspiration is her own。
  From sunlit plains to mangrove strands
  Not as the songs of other lands
  Her song shall be。
  O Southern Singers!  Rich and sweet;
  Like chimes of bells;
  The cadence swings with rhythmic beat
  The music swells;
  But undertones; weird; mournful; strong;
  Sweep like swift currents thro' the song。
  In deepest chords; with passion fraught;
  In softest notes of sweetest thought;
  This sadness dwells。
  Is this her song; so weirdly strange;
  So mixed with pain;
  That whereso'er her poets range
  Is heard the strain?
  Broods there no spell upon the air
  But desolation and despair?
  No voice; save Sorrow's; to intrude
  Upon her mountain solitude
  Or sun…kissed plain?
  The silence and the sunshine creep
  With soft caress
  O'er billowy plain and mountain steep
  And wilderness
  A velvet touch; a subtle breath;
  As sweet as love; as calm as death;
  On earth; on air; so soft; so fine;
  Till all the soul a spell divine
  O'ershadoweth。
  The gray gums by the lonely creek;
  The star…crowned height;
  The wind…swept plain; the dim blue peak;
  The cold white light;
  The solitude spread near and far
  Around the camp…fire's tiny star;
  The horse…bell's melody remote;
  The curlew's melancholy note
  Across the night。
  These have their message; yet from these
  Our songs have thrown
  O'er all our Austral hills and leas
  One sombre tone。
  Whence doth the mournful keynote start?
  From the pure depths of Nature's heart?
  Or from the heart of him who sings
  And deems his hand upon the strings
  Is Nature's own?
  Could tints be deeper; skies less dim;
  More soft and fair;
  Dappled with milk…white clouds that swim
  In faintest air?
  The soft moss sleeps upon the stone;
  Green scrub…vine traceries enthrone
  The dead gray trunks; and boulders red;
  Roofed by the pine and carpeted
  With maidenhair。
  But far and near; o'er each; o'er all;
  Above; below;
  Hangs the great silence like a pall
  Softer than snow。
  Not sorrow is the spell it brings;
  But thoughts of calmer; purer things;
  Like the sweet touch of hands we love;
  A woman's tenderness above
  A fevered brow。
  These purple hills; these yellow leas;
  These forests lone;
  These mangrove shores; these shimmering seas;
  This summer zone
  Shall they inspire no nobler strain
  Than songs of bitterness and pain?
  Strike her wild harp with firmer hand;
  And send her music thro' the land;
  With loftier tone!
  。    。    。    。    。
  Her song is silence; unto her
  Its mystery clings。
  Silence is the interpreter
  Of deeper things。
  O for sonorous voice and strong
  To change that silence into song;
  To give that melody release
  Which sleeps in the deep heart of peace
  With folded wings!
  A Nocturne
  Like weary sea…birds spent with flight
  And faltering;
  The slow hours beat across the night
  On leaden wing。
  The wild bird knows where rest shall be
  Soe'er he roam。
  Heart of my heart! apart from thee
  I have no home。
  Afar from thee; yet not alone;
  Heart of my heart!
  Like some soft haunting whisper blown
  From Heaven thou art。
  I hear the magic music roll
  Its waves divine;
  The subtle fragrance of thy soul
  Has passed to mine。
  Nor dawn nor Heaven my heart can know
  Save that which lies
  In lights and shades that come and go
  In thy soft eyes。
  Here in the night I dream the day;
  By love upborne;
  When thy sweet eyes shall shine and say
  〃It is the morn!〃
  A Pastoral
  Nature feels the touch of noon;
  Not a rustle stirs the grass;
  Not a shadow flecks the sky;
  Save the brown hawk hovering nigh;
  Not a ripple dims the glass
  Of the wide lagoon。
  Darkly; like an armed host
  Seen afar against the blue;
  Rise the hills; and yellow…grey
  Sleeps the plain in cove and bay;
  Like a shining sea that dreams
  Round a silent coast。
  From the heart of these blue hills;
  Like the joy that flows from peace;
  Creeps the river far below
  Fringed with willow; sinuous; slow。
  Surely here there seems surcease
  From the care that kills。
  Surely here might radiant Love
  Fill with happiness his cup;
  Where the purple lucerne…bloom
  Floods the air with sweet perfume;
  Nature's incense floating up
  To the Gods above。
  'Neath the gnarled…boughed apple trees
  Motionless the cattle stand;
  Chequered cornfield; homestead white;
  Sleeping in the streaming light;
  For deep trance is o'er the land;
  And the wings of peace。
  Here; O Power that moves the heart;
  Thou art in the quiet air;
  Here; unvexed of code or creed;
  Man may breathe his bitter need;
  Nor with impious lips declare
  What Thou wert and art。
  All the strong souls of the race
  Thro' the aeons that have run;
  They have cried aloud to Thee
  〃Thou art that which stirs in me!〃
  As the flame leaps towards the sun
  They have sought Thy face。
  But the faiths have flowered and flown;
  And the truth is but in part;
  Many a creed and many a grade
  For Thy purpose Thou hast made。
  None can know Thee what Thou art;
  Fathomless!  Unknown!
  The Women of the West
  They left the vine…wreathed cottage and the mansion on the hill;
  The houses in the busy streets where life is never still;
  The pleasures of the city; and the friends they cherished best:
  For love they faced the wilderness  the Women of the West。
  The roar; and rush; and fever of the city died away;
  And the old…time joys and faces  they were gone for many a day;
  In their place the lurching coach…wheel; or the creaking bullock chains;
  O'er the everlasting sameness of the never…ending plains。
  In the slab…built; zinc…roofed homestead of some lately taken run;
  In the tent beside the bankment of a railway just begun;
  In the huts on new selections; in the camps of man's unrest;
  On the frontiers of the Nation; live the Women of the West。
  The red sun robs their beauty; and; in weariness and pain;
  The slow years steal the nameless grace that never comes again;
  And there are hours men cannot soothe; and words men cannot say
  The nearest woman's face may be a hundred miles away。
  The wide bush holds the secrets of their longing and desires;
  When the white stars in reverence light their holy altar fires;
  And silence; like the touch of God; sinks deep into the breast
  Perchance He hears and understands the Women of the West。
  For them no trumpet sounds the call; no poet plies his arts
  They only hear the beating of their gallant; loving hearts。
  But they have sung with silent lives the song all songs above
  The holiness of sacrifice; the dignity of love。
  Well have we held our father's creed。  No call has passed us by。
  We faced and fought the wilderness; we sent our sons to die。
  And we have hearts to do and dare; and yet; o'er all the rest;
  The hearts that made the Nation were the Women of the West。
  Mary Colborne…Veel。
  ‘What Look hath She?'
  What look hath she;
  What majestie;
  That must so high approve her?
  What graces move
  That I so love;
  That I so greatly love her?
  No majestie
  But Truth hath She;
  Thoughts sweet and gracious move her;
  That straight approve
  My heart to love;
  And all my life to love her!
  Saturday Night
  Saturday night in the crowded town;
  Pleasure and pain going up and down;
  Murmuring low on the ear there beat
  Echoes unceasing of voice and feet。
  Withered age; with its load of care;
  Come in this tumult of life to share;
  Childhood glad in its radiance brief;
  Happiest…hearted or bowed with grief;
  Meet alike; as the stars look down
  Week by week on the crowded town。
  ~And in a kingdom of mystery;
  Rapt from this weariful world to see
  Magic sights in the yellow glare;
  Breathing delight in the gas…lit air;
  Careless of sorrow; of grief or pain;
  Two by two; again and again;
  Strephon and Chloe together move;
  Walking in Arcady; land of love。~
  What are the meanings that burden all
  These murmuring voices that rise and fall?
  Tragedies whispered of; secrets told;
  Over the baskets of bought and sold;
  Joyous speech of the lately wed;
  Broken lamentings that name the dead:
  Endless runes of the gossip's rede;
  And gathered home with the weekly need;
  Kindly greetings as neighbours meet
  Th