第 40 节
作者:空白协议书      更新:2021-02-21 16:29      字数:9322
  Comprehend its mystery!〃
  In each sail that skims the horizon;
  In each landward…blowing breeze;
  I behold that stately galley;
  Hear those mournful melodies;
  Till my soul is full of longing
  For the secret of the sea;
  And the heart of the great ocean
  Sends a thrilling pulse through me。
  TWILIGHT
  The twilight is sad and cloudy;
  The wind blows wild and free;
  And like the wings of sea…birds
  Flash the white caps of the sea。
  But in the fisherman's cottage
  There shines a ruddier light;
  And a little face at the window
  Peers out into the night。
  Close; close it is pressed to the window;
  As if those childish eyes
  Were looking into the darkness;
  To see some form arise。
  And a woman's waving shadow
  Is passing to and fro;
  Now rising to the ceiling;
  Now bowing and bending low。
  What tale do the roaring ocean;
  And the night…wind; bleak and wild;
  As they beat at the crazy casement;
  Tell to that little child?
  And why do the roaring ocean;
  And the night…wind; wild and bleak;
  As they beat at the heart of the mother;
  Drive the color from her cheek?
  SIR HUMPHREY GILBERT
  Southward with fleet of ice
  Sailed the corsair Death;
  Wild and fast blew the blast;
  And the east…wind was his breath。
  His lordly ships of ice
  Glisten in the sun;
  On each side; like pennons wide;
  Flashing crystal streamlets run。
  His sails of white sea…mist
  Dripped with silver rain;
  But where he passed there were cast
  Leaden shadows o'er the main。
  Eastward from Campobello
  Sir Humphrey Gilbert sailed;
  Three days or more seaward he bore;
  Then; alas! the land…wind failed。
  Alas! the land…wind failed;
  And ice…cold grew the night;
  And nevermore; on sea or shore;
  Should Sir Humphrey see the light。
  He sat upon the deck;
  The Book was in his hand
  〃Do not fear!  Heaven is as near;〃
  He said; 〃by water as by land!〃
  In the first watch of the night;
  Without a signal's sound;
  Out of the sea; mysteriously;
  The fleet of Death rose all around。
  The moon and the evening star
  Were hanging in the shrouds;
  Every mast; as it passed;
  Seemed to rake the passing clouds。
  They grappled with their prize;
  At midnight black and cold!
  As of a rock was the shock;
  Heavily the ground…swell rolled。
  Southward through day and dark;
  They drift in close embrace;
  With mist and rain; o'er the open main;
  Yet there seems no change of place。
  Southward; forever southward;
  They drift through dark and day;
  And like a dream; in the Gulf…Stream
  Sinking; vanish all away。
  THE LIGHTHOUSE
  The rocky ledge runs far into the sea;
  And on its outer point; some miles away;
  The Lighthouse lifts its massive masonry;
  A pillar of fire by night; of cloud by day。
  Even at this distance I can see the tides;
  Upheaving; break unheard along its base;
  A speechless wrath; that rises and subsides
  In the white lip and tremor of the face。
  And as the evening darkens; lo! how bright;
  Through the deep purple of the twilight air;
  Beams forth the sudden radiance of its light
  With strange; unearthly splendor in the glare!
  Not one alone; from each projecting cape
  And perilous reef along the ocean's verge;
  Starts into life a dim; gigantic shape;
  Holding its lantern o'er the restless surge。
  Like the great giant Christopher it stands
  Upon the brink of the tempestuous wave;
  Wading far out among the rocks and sands;
  The night…o'ertaken mariner to save。
  And the great ships sail outward and return;
  Bending and bowing o'er the billowy swells;
  And ever joyful; as they see it burn;
  They wave their silent welcomes and farewells。
  They come forth from the darkness; and their sails
  Gleam for a moment only in the blaze;
  And eager faces; as the light unveils;
  Gaze at the tower; and vanish while they gaze。
  The mariner remembers when a child;
  On his first voyage; he saw it fade and sink;
  And when; returning from adventures wild;
  He saw it rise again o'er ocean's brink。
  Steadfast; serene; immovable; the same
  Year after year; through all the silent night
  Burns on forevermore that quenchless flame;
  Shines on that inextinguishable light!
  It sees the ocean to its bosom clasp
  The rocks and sea…sand with the kiss of peace;
  It sees the wild winds lift it in their grasp;
  And hold it up; and shake it like a fleece。
  The startled waves leap over it; the storm
  Smites it with all the scourges of the rain;
  And steadily against its solid form
  Press the great shoulders of the hurricane。
  The sea…bird wheeling round it; with the din
  Of wings and winds and solitary cries;
  Blinded and maddened by the light within;
  Dashes himself against the glare; and dies。
  A new Prometheus; chained upon the rock;
  Still grasping in his hand the fire of Jove;
  It does not hear the cry; nor heed the shock;
  But hails the mariner with words of love。
  〃Sail on!〃 it says; 〃sail on; ye stately ships!
  And with your floating bridge the ocean span;
  Be mine to guard this light from all eclipse;
  Be yours to bring man nearer unto man!〃
  THE FIRE OF DRIFT…WOOD
  DEVEREUX FARM; NEAR MARBLEHEAD
  We sat within the farm…house old;
  Whose windows; looking o'er the bay;
  Gave to the sea…breeze; damp and cold;
  An easy entrance; night and day。
  Not far away we saw the port;
  The strange; old…fashioned; silent town;
  The lighthouse; the dismantled fort;
  The wooden houses; quaint and brown。
  We sat and talked until the night;
  Descending; filled the little room;
  Our faces faded from the sight;
  Our voices only broke the gloom。
  We spake of many a vanished scene;
  Of what we once had thought and said;
  Of what had been; and might have been;
  And who was changed; and who was dead;
  And all that fills the hearts of friends;
  When first they feel; with secret pain;
  Their lives thenceforth have separate ends;
  And never can be one again;
  The first slight swerving of the heart;
  That words are powerless to express;
  And leave it still unsaid in part;
  Or say it in too great excess。
  The very tones in which we spake
  Had something strange; I could but mark;
  The leaves of memory seemed to make
  A mournful rustling in the dark。
  Oft died the words upon our lips;
  As suddenly; from out the fire
  Built of the wreck of stranded ships;
  The flames would leap and then expire。
  And; as their splendor flashed and failed;
  We thought of wrecks upon the main;
  Of ships dismasted; that were hailed
  And sent no answer back again。
  The windows; rattling in their frames;
  The ocean; roaring up the beach;
  The gusty blast; the bickering flames;
  All mingled vaguely in our speech。
  Until they made themselves a part
  Of fancies floating through the brain;
  The long…lost ventures of the heart;
  That send no answers back again。
  O flames that glowed!  O hearts that yearned!
  They were indeed too much akin;
  The drift…wood fire without that burned;
  The thoughts that burned and glowed within。
  BY THE FIRESIDE
  RESIGNATION
  There is no flock; however watched and tended;
  But one dead lamb is there!
  There is no fireside; howsoe'er defended;
  But has one vacant chair!
  The air is full of farewells to the dying;
  And mournings for the dead;
  The heart of Rachel; for her children crying;
  Will not be comforted!
  Let us be patient!  These severe afflictions
  Not from the ground arise;
  But oftentimes celestial benedictions
  Assume this dark disguise。
  We see but dimly through the mists and vapors;
  Amid these earthly damps
  What seem to us but sad; funereal tapers
  May be heaven's distant lamps。
  There is no Death!  What seems so is transition;
  This life of mortal breath
  Is but a suburb of the life elysian;
  Whose portal we call Death。
  She is not dead;the child of our affection;
  But gone unto that school
  Where she no longer needs our poor protection;
  And Christ himself doth rule。
  In that great cloister's stillness and seclusion;
  By guardian angels led;
  Safe from temptation; safe from sin's pollution;
  She lives; whom we call dead。
  Day after day we think what she is doing
  In those bright realms of air;
  Year after year; her tender steps pursuing;
  Behold her grown more fair。
  Thus do we walk with her; and keep unbroken
  The bond which nature gives;
  Thinking that our remembrance; though unspoken;
  May reach her where she lives。
  Not as a child shall we again behold her;
  For when with raptures wild
  In our embraces we again enfold her;
  She will not be a child;
  But a fair maiden; in her Father's m