第 62 节
作者:空白协议书      更新:2021-02-21 16:29      字数:9322
  And his bursting heart within him
  Uttered such a cry of anguish;
  That the forest moaned and shuddered;
  That the very stars in heaven
  Shook and trembled with his anguish。
  Then he sat down; still and speechless;
  On the bed of Minnehaha;
  At the feet of Laughing Water;
  At those willing feet; that never
  More would lightly run to meet him;
  Never more would lightly follow。
  With both hands his face he covered;
  Seven long days and nights he sat there;
  As if in a swoon he sat there;
  Speechless; motionless; unconscious
  Of the daylight or the darkness。
  Then they buried Minnehaha;
  In the snow a grave they made her
  In the forest deep and darksome
  Underneath the moaning hemlocks;
  Clothed her in her richest garments
  Wrapped her in her robes of ermine;
  Covered her with snow; like ermine;
  Thus they buried Minnehaha。
  And at night a fire was lighted;
  On her grave four times was kindled;
  For her soul upon its journey
  To the Islands of the Blessed。
  From his doorway Hiawatha
  Saw it burning in the forest;
  Lighting up the gloomy hemlocks;
  From his sleepless bed uprising;
  From the bed of Minnehaha;
  Stood and watched it at the doorway;
  That it might not be extinguished;
  Might not leave her in the darkness。
  〃Farewell!〃 said he; 〃Minnehaha!
  Farewell; O my Laughing Water!
  All my heart is buried with you;
  All my thoughts go onward with you!
  Come not back again to labor;
  Come not back again to suffer;
  Where the Famine and the Fever
  Wear the heart and waste the body。
  Soon my task will be completed;
  Soon your footsteps I shall follow
  To the Islands of the Blessed;
  To the Kingdom of Ponemah;
  To the Land of the Hereafter!〃
  XXI
  THE WHITE MAN'S FOOT
  In his lodge beside a river;
  Close beside a frozen river;
  Sat an old man; sad and lonely。
  White his hair was as a snow…drift;
  Dull and low his fire was burning;
  And the old man shook and trembled;
  Folded in his Waubewyon;
  In his tattered white…skin…wrapper;
  Hearing nothing but the tempest
  As it roared along the forest;
  Seeing nothing but the snow…storm;
  As it whirled and hissed and drifted。
  All the coals were white with ashes;
  And the fire was slowly dying;
  As a young man; walking lightly;
  At the open doorway entered。
  Red with blood of youth his cheeks were;
  Soft his eyes; as stars in Spring…time;
  Bound his forehead was with grasses;
  Bound and plumed with scented grasses;
  On his lips a smile of beauty;
  Filling all the lodge with sunshine;
  In his hand a bunch of blossoms
  Filling all the lodge with sweetness。
  〃Ah; my son!〃 exclaimed the old man;
  〃Happy are my eyes to see you。
  Sit here on the mat beside me;
  Sit here by the dying embers;
  Let us pass the night together;
  Tell me of your strange adventures;
  Of the lands where you have travelled;
  I will tell you of my prowess;
  Of my many deeds of wonder。〃
  From his pouch he drew his peace…pipe;
  Very old and strangely fashioned;
  Made of red stone was the pipe…head;
  And the stem a reed with feathers;
  Filled the pipe with bark of willow;
  Placed a burning coal upon it;
  Gave it to his guest; the stranger;
  And began to speak in this wise:
  〃When I blow my breath about me;
  When I breathe upon the landscape;
  Motionless are all the rivers;
  Hard as stone becomes the water!〃
  And the young man answered; smiling:
  〃When I blow my breath about me;
  When I breathe upon the landscape;
  Flowers spring up o'er all the meadows;
  Singing; onward rush the rivers!〃
  〃When I shake my hoary tresses;〃
  Said the old man darkly frowning;
  〃All the land with snow is covered;
  All the leaves from all the branches
  Fall and fade and die and wither;
  For I breathe; and lo! they are not。
  From the waters and the marshes;
  Rise the wild goose and the heron;
  Fly away to distant regions;
  For I speak; and lo! they are not。
  And where'er my footsteps wander;
  All the wild beasts of the forest
  Hide themselves in holes and caverns;
  And the earth becomes as flintstone!〃
  〃When I shake my flowing ringlets;〃
  Said the young man; softly laughing;
  〃Showers of rain fall warm and welcome;
  Plants lift up their heads rejoicing;
  Back into their lakes and marshes
  Come the wild goose and the heron;
  Homeward shoots the arrowy swallow;
  Sing the bluebird and the robin;
  And where'er my footsteps wander;
  All the meadows wave with blossoms;
  All the woodlands ring with music;
  All the trees are dark with foliage!〃
  While they spake; the night departed:
  From the distant realms of Wabun;
  From his shining lodge of silver;
  Like a warrior robed and painted;
  Came the sun; and said; 〃Behold me
  Gheezis; the great sun; behold me!〃
  Then the old man's tongue was speechless
  And the air grew warm and pleasant;
  And upon the wigwam sweetly
  Sang the bluebird and the robin;
  And the stream began to murmur;
  And a scent of growing grasses
  Through the lodge was gently wafted。
  And Segwun; the youthful stranger;
  More distinctly in the daylight
  Saw the icy face before him;
  It was Peboan; the Winter!
  From his eyes the tears were flowing;
  As from melting lakes the streamlets;
  And his body shrunk and dwindled
  As the shouting sun ascended;
  Till into the air it faded;
  Till into the ground it vanished;
  And the young man saw before him;
  On the hearth…stone of the wigwam;
  Where the fire had smoked and smouldered;
  Saw the earliest flower of Spring…time;
  Saw the Beauty of the Spring…time;
  Saw the Miskodeed in blossom。
  Thus it was that in the North…land
  After that unheard…of coldness;
  That intolerable Winter;
  Came the Spring with all its splendor;
  All its birds and all its blossoms;
  All its flowers and leaves and grasses。
  Sailing on the wind to northward;
  Flying in great flocks; like arrows;
  Like huge arrows shot through heaven;
  Passed the swan; the Mahnahbezee;
  Speaking almost as a man speaks;
  And in long lines waving; bending
  Like a bow…string snapped asunder;
  Came the white goose; Waw…be…wawa;
  And in pairs; or singly flying;
  Mahng the loon; with clangorous pinions;
  The blue heron; the Shuh…shuh…gah;
  And the grouse; the Mushkodasa。
  In the thickets and the meadows
  Piped the bluebird; the Owaissa;
  On the summit of the lodges
  Sang the robin; the Opechee;
  In the covert of the pine…trees
  Cooed the pigeon; the Omemee;
  And the sorrowing Hiawatha;
  Speechless in his infinite sorrow;
  Heard their voices calling to him;
  Went forth from his gloomy doorway;
  Stood and gazed into the heaven;
  Gazed upon the earth and waters。
  From his wanderings far to eastward;
  From the regions of the morning;
  From the shining land of Wabun;
  Homeward now returned Iagoo;
  The great traveller; the great boaster;
  Full of new and strange adventures;
  Marvels many and many wonders。
  And the people of the village
  Listened to him as he told them
  Of his marvellous adventures;
  Laughing answered him in this wise:
  〃Ugh! it is indeed Iagoo!
  No one else beholds such wonders!〃
  He had seen; he said; a water
  Bigger than the Big…Sea…Water;
  Broader than the Gitche Gumee;
  Bitter so that none could drink it!
  At each other looked the warriors;
  Looked the women at each other;
  Smiled; and said; 〃It cannot be so!〃
  Kaw!〃 they said; it cannot be so!〃
  O'er it; said he; o'er this water
  Came a great canoe with pinions;
  A canoe with wings came flying;
  Bigger than a grove of pine…trees;
  Taller than the tallest tree…tops!
  And the old men and the women
  Looked and tittered at each other;
  〃Kaw!〃 they said; 〃we don't believe it!〃
  From its mouth; he said; to greet him;
  Came Waywassimo; the lightning;
  Came the thunder; Annemeekee!
  And the warriors and the women
  Laughed aloud at poor Iagoo;
  〃Kaw!〃 they said; 〃what tales you tell us!〃
  In it; said he; came a people;
  In the great canoe with pinions
  Came; he said; a hundred warriors;
  Painted white were all their faces
  And with hair their chins were covered!
  And the warriors and the women
  Laughed and shouted in derision;
  Like the ravens on the tree…tops;
  Like the crows upon the hemlocks。
  〃Kaw!〃 they said; 〃what lies you tell us!
  Do not think that we believe them!〃
  Only Hiawatha laughed not;
  But he gravely spake and answered
  To their jeering and their jesting:
  〃True is all Iagoo tells us;
  I have seen it in a vision;
  Seen the great canoe with pinions;
  Seen the people with white faces;
  Seen the coming of this bearded
  People of the wooden vessel
  From the regions of the morning;
  From the shining land of Wabun。
  〃Gitche Manito; the Mighty;
  The Great Spirit; the Creator;
  Sends them hither on his errand。
  Sends them to us with his message。
  Wheresoe'er they move; before them
  Swarms the stinging fly; the Ahmo;
  Swarms the bee; the honey…maker;
  Wheresoe'er they tread; beneath them
  Springs a flower unknown among us;
  Springs the