第 76 节
作者:空白协议书      更新:2021-02-21 16:29      字数:9322
  Thus as to and fro they went;
  Over upland and through hollow;
  Giving their impatience vent;
  Perched upon the Emperor's tent;
  In her nest; they spied a swallow。
  Yes; it was a swallow's nest;
  Built of clay and hair of horses;
  Mane; or tail; or dragoon's crest;
  Found on hedge…rows east and west;
  After skirmish of the forces。
  Then an old Hidalgo said;
  As he twirled his gray mustachio;
  〃Sure this swallow overhead
  Thinks the Emperor's tent a shed;
  And the Emperor but a Macho!〃
  Hearing his imperial name
  Coupled with those words of malice;
  Half in anger; half in shame;
  Forth the great campaigner came
  Slowly from his canvas palace。
  〃Let no hand the bird molest;〃
  Said he solemnly; 〃nor hurt her!〃
  Adding then; by way of jest;
  〃Golondrina is my guest;
  'Tis the wife of some deserter!〃
  Swift as bowstring speeds a shaft;
  Through the camp was spread the rumor;
  And the soldiers; as they quaffed
  Flemish beer at dinner; laughed
  At the Emperor's pleasant humor。
  So unharmed and unafraid
  Sat the swallow still and brooded;
  Till the constant cannonade
  Through the walls a breach had made;
  And the siege was thus concluded。
  Then the army; elsewhere bent;
  Struck its tents as if disbanding;
  Only not the Emperor's tent;
  For he ordered; ere he went;
  Very curtly; 〃Leave it standing!〃
  So it stood there all alone;
  Loosely flapping; torn and tattered;
  Till the brood was fledged and flown;
  Singing o'er those walls of stone
  Which the cannon…shot had shattered。
  THE TWO ANGELS
  Two angels; one of Life and one of Death;
  Passed o'er our village as the morning broke;
  The dawn was on their faces; and beneath;
  The sombre houses hearsed with plumes of smoke。
  Their attitude and aspect were the same;
  Alike their features and their robes of white;
  But one was crowned with amaranth; as with flame;
  And one with asphodels; like flakes of light。
  I saw them pause on their celestial way;
  Then said I; with deep fear and doubt oppressed;
  〃Beat not so loud; my heart; lest thou betray
  The place where thy beloved are at rest!〃
  And he who wore the crown of asphodels;
  Descending; at my door began to knock;
  And my soul sank within me; as in wells
  The waters sink before an earthquake's shock。
  I recognized the nameless agony;
  The terror and the tremor and the pain;
  That oft before had filled or haunted me;
  And now returned with threefold strength again。
  The door I opened to my heavenly guest;
  And listened; for I thought I heard God's voice;
  And; knowing whatsoe'er he sent was best;
  Dared neither to lament nor to rejoice。
  Then with a smile; that filled the house with light;
  〃My errand is not Death; but Life;〃 he said;
  And ere I answered; passing out of sight;
  On his celestial embassy he sped。
  'T was at thy door; O friend! and not at mine;
  The angel with the amaranthine wreath;
  Pausing; descended; and with voice divine;
  Whispered a word that had a sound like Death。
  Then fell upon the house a sudden gloom;
  A shadow on those features fair and thin;
  And softly; from that hushed and darkened room;
  Two angels issued; where but one went in。
  All is of God!  If he but wave his hand;
  The mists collect; the rain falls thick and loud;
  Till; with a smile of light on sea and land;
  Lo! he looks back from the departing cloud。
  Angels of Life and Death alike are his;
  Without his leave they pass no threshold o'er;
  Who; then; would wish or dare; believing this;
  Against his messengers to shut the door?
  DAYLIGHT AND MOONLIGHT
  In broad daylight; and at noon;
  Yesterday I saw the moon
  Sailing high; but faint and white;
  As a school…boy's paper kite。
  In broad daylight; yesterday;
  I read a Poet's mystic lay;
  And it seemed to me at most
  As a phantom; or a ghost。
  But at length the feverish day
  Like a passion died away;
  And the night; serene and still;
  Fell on village; vale; and hill。
  Then the moon; in all her pride;
  Like a spirit glorified;
  Filled and overflowed the night
  With revelations of her light。
  And the Poet's song again
  Passed like music through my brain;
  Night interpreted to me
  All its grace and mystery。
  THE JEWISH CEMETERY AT NEWPORT
  How strange it seems!  These Hebrews in their graves;
  Close by the street of this fair seaport town;
  Silent beside the never…silent waves;
  At rest in all this moving up and down!
  The trees are white with dust; that o'er their sleep
  Wave their broad curtains in the south…wind's breath;
  While underneath such leafy tents they keep
  The long; mysterious Exodus of Death。
  And these sepulchral stones; so old and brown;
  That pave with level flags their burial…place;
  Seem like the tablets of the Law; thrown down
  And broken by Moses at the mountain's base。
  The very names recorded here are strange;
  Of foreign accent; and of different climes;
  Alvares and Rivera interchange
  With Abraham and Jacob of old times。
  〃Blessed be God! for he created Death!〃
  The mourners said; 〃and Death is rest and peace〃;
  Then added; in the certainty of faith;
  〃And giveth Life that never more shall cease。〃
  Closed are the portals of their Synagogue;
  No Psalms of David now the silence break;
  No Rabbi reads the ancient Decalogue
  In the grand dialect the Prophets spake。
  Gone are the living; but the dead remain;
  And not neglected; for a hand unseen;
  Scattering its bounty; like a summer rain;
  Still keeps their graves and their remembrance green。
  How came they here?  What burst of Christian hate;
  What persecution; merciless and blind;
  Drove o'er the seathat desert desolate
  These Ishmaels and Hagars of mankind?
  They lived in narrow streets and lanes obscure;
  Ghetto and Judenstrass; in mirk and mire;
  Taught in the school of patience to endure
  The life of anguish and the death of fire。
  All their lives long; with the unleavened bread
  And bitter herbs of exile and its fears;
  The wasting famine of the heart they fed;
  And slaked its thirst with marah of their tears。
  Anathema maranatha! was the cry
  That rang from town to town; from street to street;
  At every gate the accursed Mordecai
  Was mocked and jeered; and spurned by Christian feet。
  Pride and humiliation hand in hand
  Walked with them through the world where'er they went;
  Trampled and beaten were they as the sand;
  And yet unshaken as the continent。
  For in the background figures vague and vast
  Of patriarchs and of prophets rose sublime;
  And all the great traditions of the Past
  They saw reflected in the coming time。
  And thus for ever with reverted look
  The mystic volume of the world they read;
  Spelling it backward; like a Hebrew book;
  Till life became a Legend of the Dead。
  But ah! what once has been shall be no more!
  The groaning earth in travail and in pain
  Brings forth its races; but does not restore;
  And the dead nations never rise again。
  OLIVER BASSELIN
  In the Valley of the Vire
  Still is seen an ancient mill;
  With its gables quaint and queer;
  And beneath the window…sill;
  On the stone;
  These words alone:
  〃Oliver Basselin lived here。〃
  Far above it; on the steep;
  Ruined stands the old Chateau;
  Nothing but the donjon…keep
  Left for shelter or for show。
  Its vacant eyes
  Stare at the skies;
  Stare at the valley green and deep。
  Once a convent; old and brown;
  Looked; but ah! it looks no more;
  From the neighboring hillside down
  On the rushing and the roar
  Of the stream
  Whose sunny gleam
  Cheers the little Norman town。
  In that darksome mill of stone;
  To the water's dash and din;
  Careless; humble; and unknown;
  Sang the poet Basselin
  Songs that fill
  That ancient mill
  With a splendor of its own。
  Never feeling of unrest
  Broke the pleasant dream he dreamed;
  Only made to be his nest;
  All the lovely valley seemed;
  No desire
  Of soaring higher
  Stirred or fluttered in his breast。
  True; his songs were not divine;
  Were not songs of that high art;
  Which; as winds do in the pine;
  Find an answer in each heart;
  But the mirth
  Of this green earth
  Laughed and revelled in his line。
  From the alehouse and the inn;
  Opening on the narrow street;
  Came the loud; convivial din;
  Singing and applause of feet;
  The laughing lays
  That in those days
  Sang the poet Basselin。
  In the castle; cased in steel;
  Knights; who fought at Agincourt;
  Watched and waited; spur on heel;
  But the poet sang for sport
  Songs that rang
  Another clang;
  Songs that lowlier hearts could feel。