第 42 节
作者:空白协议书      更新:2021-02-21 16:29      字数:9294
  Pure and bright; a fountain flowing
  From the hoof…marks in the sod。
  From that hour; the fount unfailing
  Gladdens the whole region round;
  Strengthening all who drink its waters;
  While it soothes them with its sound。
  TEGNER'S DRAPA
  I heard a voice; that cried;
  〃Balder the Beautiful
  Is dead; is dead!〃
  And through the misty air
  Passed like the mournful cry
  Of sunward sailing cranes。
  I saw the pallid corpse
  Of the dead sun
  Borne through the Northern sky。
  Blasts from Niffelheim
  Lifted the sheeted mists
  Around him as he passed。
  And the voice forever cried;
  〃Balder the Beautiful
  Is dead; is dead!〃
  And died away
  Through the dreary night;
  In accents of despair。
  Balder the Beautiful;
  God of the summer sun;
  Fairest of all the Gods!
  Light from his forehead beamed;
  Runes were upon his tongue;
  As on the warrior's sword。
  All things in earth and air
  Bound were by magic spell
  Never to do him harm;
  Even the plants and stones;
  All save the mistletoe;
  The sacred mistletoe!
  Hoeder; the blind old God;
  Whose feet are shod with silence;
  Pierced through that gentle breast
  With his sharp spear; by fraud
  Made of the mistletoe;
  The accursed mistletoe!
  They laid him in his ship;
  With horse and harness;
  As on a funeral pyre。
  Odin placed
  A ring upon his finger;
  And whispered in his ear。
  They launched the burning ship!
  It floated far away
  Over the misty sea;
  Till like the sun it seemed;
  Sinking beneath the waves。
  Balder returned no more!
  So perish the old Gods!
  But out of the sea of Time
  Rises a new land of song;
  Fairer than the old。
  Over its meadows green
  Walk the young bards and sing。
  Build it again;
  O ye bards;
  Fairer than before!
  Ye fathers of the new race;
  Feed upon morning dew;
  Sing the new Song of Love!
  The law of force is dead!
  The law of love prevails!
  Thor; the thunderer;
  Shall rule the earth no more;
  No more; with threats;
  Challenge the meek Christ。
  Sing no more;
  O ye bards of the North;
  Of Vikings and of Jarls!
  Of the days of Eld
  Preserve the freedom only;
  Not the deeds of blood!
  SONNET
  ON MRS。 KEMBLE'S READINGS FROM SHAKESPEARE
  O precious evenings! all too swiftly sped!
  Leaving us heirs to amplest heritages
  Of all the best thoughts of the greatest sages;
  And giving tongues unto the silent dead!
  How our hearts glowed and trembled as she read;
  Interpreting by tones the wondrous pages
  Of the great poet who foreruns the ages;
  Anticipating all that shall be said!
  O happy Reader! having for thy text
  The magic book; whose Sibylline leaves have caught
  The rarest essence of all human thought!
  O happy Poet! by no critic vext!
  How must thy listening spirit now rejoice
  To be interpreted by such a voice!
  THE SINGERS
  God sent his Singers upon earth
  With songs of sadness and of mirth;
  That they might touch the hearts of men;
  And bring them back to heaven again。
  The first; a youth; with soul of fire;
  Held in his hand a golden lyre;
  Through groves he wandered; and by streams;
  Playing the music of our dreams。
  The second; with a bearded face;
  Stood singing in the market…place;
  And stirred with accents deep and loud
  The hearts of all the listening crowd。
  A gray old man; the third and last;
  Sang in cathedrals dim and vast;
  While the majestic organ rolled
  Contrition from its mouths of gold。
  And those who heard the Singers three
  Disputed which the best might be;
  For still their music seemed to start
  Discordant echoes in each heart;
  But the great Master said; 〃I see
  No best in kind; but in degree;
  I gave a various gift to each;
  To charm; to strengthen; and to teach。
  〃These are the three great chords of might;
  And he whose ear is tuned aright
  Will hear no discord in the three;
  But the most perfect harmony。〃
  SUSPIRIA
  Take them; O Death! and bear away
  Whatever thou canst call thine own!
  Thine image; stamped upon this clay;
  Doth give thee that; but that alone!
  Take them; O Grave! and let them lie
  Folded upon thy narrow shelves;
  As garments by the soul laid by;
  And precious only to ourselves!
  Take them; O great Eternity!
  Our little life is but a gust
  That bends the branches of thy tree;
  And trails its blossoms in the dust!
  HYMN
  FOR MY BROTHER'S ORDINATION
  Christ to the young man said: 〃Yet one thing more;
  If thou wouldst perfect be;
  Sell all thou hast and give it to the poor;
  And come and follow me!〃
  Within this temple Christ again; unseen;
  Those sacred words hath said;
  And his invisible hands to…day have been
  Laid on a young man's head。
  And evermore beside him on his way
  The unseen Christ shall move;
  That he may lean upon his arm and say;
  〃Dost thou; dear Lord; approve?〃
  Beside him at the marriage feast shall be;
  To make the scene more fair;
  Beside him in the dark Gethsemane
  Of pain and midnight prayer。
  O holy trust!  O endless sense of rest!
  Like the beloved John
  To lay his head upon the Saviour's breast;
  And thus to journey on!
  ***************
  THE SONG OF HIAWATHA
  INTRODUCTION
  Should you ask me; whence these stories?
  Whence these legends and traditions;
  With the odors of the forest
  With the dew and damp of meadows;
  With the curling smoke of wigwams;
  With the rushing of great rivers;
  With their frequent repetitions;
  And their wild reverberations
  As of thunder in the mountains?
  I should answer; I should tell you;
  〃From the forests and the prairies;
  From the great lakes of the Northland;
  From the land of the Ojibways;
  From the land of the Dacotahs;
  From the mountains; moors; and fen…lands
  Where the heron; the Shuh…shuh…gah;
  Feeds among the reeds and rushes。
  I repeat them as I heard them
  From the lips of Nawadaha;
  The musician; the sweet singer。〃
  Should you ask where Nawadaha
  Found these songs so wild and wayward;
  Found these legends and traditions;
  I should answer; I should tell you;
  〃In the bird's…nests of the forest;
  In the lodges of the beaver;
  In the hoof…prints of the bison;
  In the eyry of the eagle!
  〃All the wild…fowl sang them to him;
  In the moorlands and the fen…lands;
  In the melancholy marshes;
  Chetowaik; the plover; sang them;
  Mahng; the loon; the wild…goose; Wawa;
  The blue heron; the Shuh…shuh…gah;
  And the grouse; the Mushkodasa!〃
  If still further you should ask me;
  Saying; 〃Who was Nawadaha?
  Tell us of this Nawadaha;〃
  I should answer your inquiries
  Straightway in such words as follow。
  〃In the vale of Tawasentha;
  In the green and silent valley;
  By the pleasant water…courses;
  Dwelt the singer Nawadaha。
  Round about the Indian village
  Spread the meadows and the corn…fields;
  And beyond them stood the forest;
  Stood the groves of singing pine…trees;
  Green in Summer; white in Winter;
  Ever sighing; ever singing。
  〃And the pleasant water…courses;
  You could trace them through the valley;
  By the rushing in the Spring…time;
  By the alders in the Summer;
  By the white fog in the Autumn;
  By the black line in the Winter;
  And beside them dwelt the singer;
  In the vale of Tawasentha;
  In the green and silent valley。
  〃There he sang of Hiawatha;
  Sang the Song of Hiawatha;
  Sang his wondrous birth and being;
  How he prayed and how be fasted;
  How he lived; and toiled; and suffered;
  That the tribes of men might prosper;
  That he might advance his people!〃
  Ye who love the haunts of Nature;
  Love the sunshine of the meadow;
  Love the shadow of the forest;
  Love the wind among the branches;
  And the rain…shower and the snow…storm;
  And the rushing of great rivers
  Through their palisades of pine…trees;
  And the thunder in the mountains;
  Whose innumerable echoes
  Flap like eagles in their eyries;
  Listen to these wild traditions;
  To this Song of Hiawatha!
  Ye who love a nation's legends;
  Love the ballads of a people;
  That like voices from afar off
  Call to us to pause and listen;
  Speak in tones so plain and childlike;
  Scarcely can the ear distinguish
  Whether they are sung or spoken;
  Listen to this Indian Legend;
  To this Song of Hiawatha!
  Ye whose hearts are fresh and simple;
  Who have faith in God and Nature;
  Who believe that in all ages
  Every human heart is human;
  That in even savage bosoms
  There are longings; yearnings; strivings
  For the good they comprehend not;
  That the feeble hands and helpless;
  Groping blindly in the darkness;
  Touch God's right hand in that darkness
  And are lifted up and strengthened;
  Listen to this simple story;
  To this Song of Hiawatha!
  Ye; who sometimes; in your rambles
  Through the green lanes of the countr