第 77 节
作者:空白协议书      更新:2021-02-21 16:29      字数:9322
  But the poet sang for sport
  Songs that rang
  Another clang;
  Songs that lowlier hearts could feel。
  In the convent; clad in gray;
  Sat the monks in lonely cells;
  Paced the cloisters; knelt to pray;
  And the poet heard their bells;
  But his rhymes
  Found other chimes;
  Nearer to the earth than they。
  Gone are all the barons bold;
  Gone are all the knights and squires;
  Gone the abbot stern and cold;
  And the brotherhood of friars;
  Not a name
  Remains to fame;
  From those mouldering days of old!
  But the poet's memory here
  Of the landscape makes a part;
  Like the river; swift and clear;
  Flows his song through many a heart;
  Haunting still
  That ancient mill;
  In the Valley of the Vire。
  VICTOR GALBRAITH
  Under the walls of Monterey
  At daybreak the bugles began to play;
  Victor Galbraith!
  In the mist of the morning damp and gray;
  These were the words they seemed to say:
  〃Come forth to thy death;
  Victor Galbraith!〃
  Forth he came; with a martial tread;
  Firm was his step; erect his head;
  Victor Galbraith;
  He who so well the bugle played;
  Could not mistake the words it said:
  〃Come forth to thy death;
  Victor Galbraith!〃
  He looked at the earth; he looked at the sky;
  He looked at the files of musketry;
  Victor Galbraith!
  And he said; with a steady voice and eye;
  〃Take good aim; I am ready to die!〃
  Thus challenges death
  Victor Galbraith。
  Twelve fiery tongues flashed straight and red;
  Six leaden balls on their errand sped;
  Victor Galbraith
  Falls to the ground; but he is not dead;
  His name was not stamped on those balls of lead;
  And they only scath
  Victor Galbraith。
  Three balls are in his breast and brain;
  But he rises out of the dust again;
  Victor Galbraith!
  The water he drinks has a bloody stain;
  〃O kill me; and put me out of my pain!〃
  In his agony prayeth
  Victor Galbraith。
  Forth dart once more those tongues of flame;
  And the bugler has died a death of shame;
  Victor Galbraith!
  His soul has gone back to whence it came;
  And no one answers to the name;
  When the Sergeant saith;
  〃Victor Galbraith!〃
  Under the walls of Monterey
  By night a bugle is heard to play;
  Victor Galbraith!
  Through the mist of the valley damp and gray
  The sentinels hear the sound; and say;
  〃That is the wraith
  Of Victor Galbraith!〃
  MY LOST YOUTH
  Often I think of the beautiful town
  That is seated by the sea;
  Often in thought go up and down
  The pleasant streets of that dear old town;
  And my youth comes back to me。
  And a verse of a Lapland song
  Is haunting my memory still:
  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;
  And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃
  I can see the shadowy lines of its trees;
  And catch; in sudden gleams;
  The sheen of the far…surrounding seas;
  And islands that were the Hersperides
  Of all my boyish dreams。
  And the burden of that old song;
  It murmurs and whispers still:
  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;
  And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃
  I remember the black wharves and the slips;
  And the sea…tides tossing free;
  And Spanish sailors with bearded lips;
  And the beauty and mystery of the ships;
  And the magic of the sea。
  And the voice of that wayward song
  Is singing and saying still:
  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;
  And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃
  I remember the bulwarks by the shore;
  And the fort upon the hill;
  The sunrise gun; with its hollow roar;
  The drum…beat repeated o'er and o'er;
  And the bugle wild and shrill。
  And the music of that old song
  Throbs in my memory still:
  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;
  And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃
  I remember the sea…fight far away;
  How it thundered o'er the tide!
  And the dead captains; as they lay
  In their graves; o'erlooking the tranquil bay;
  Where they in battle died。
  And the sound of that mournful song
  Goes through me with a thrill:
  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;
  And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃
  I can see the breezy dome of groves;
  The shadows of Deering's Woods;
  And the friendships old and the early loves
  Come back with a sabbath sound; as of doves
  In quiet neighborhoods。
  And the verse of that sweet old song;
  It flutters and murmurs still:
  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;
  And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃
  I remember the gleams and glooms that dart
  Across the schoolboy's brain;
  The song and the silence in the heart;
  That in part are prophecies; and in part
  Are longings wild and vain。
  And the voice of that fitful song
  Sings on; and is never still:
  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;
  And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃
  There are things of which I may not speak;
  There are dreams that cannot die;
  There are thoughts that make the strong heart weak;
  And bring a pallor into the cheek;
  And a mist before the eye。
  And the words of that fatal song
  Come over me like a chill:
  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;
  And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃
  Strange to me now are the forms I meet
  When I visit the dear old town;
  But the native air is pure and sweet;
  And the trees that o'ershadow each well…known street;
  As they balance up and down;
  Are singing the beautiful song;
  Are sighing and whispering still:
  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;
  And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃
  And Deering's Woods are fresh and fair;
  And with joy that is almost pain
  My heart goes back to wander there;
  And among the dreams of the days that were;
  I find my lost youth again。
  And the strange and beautiful song;
  The groves are repeating it still:
  〃A boy's will is the wind's will;
  And the thoughts of youth are long; long thoughts。〃
  THE ROPEWALK
  In that building; long and low;
  With its windows all a…row;
  Like the port…holes of a hulk;
  Human spiders spin and spin;
  Backward down their threads so thin
  Dropping; each a hempen bulk。
  At the end; an open door;
  Squares of sunshine on the floor
  Light the long and dusky lane;
  And the whirring of a wheel;
  Dull and drowsy; makes me feel
  All its spokes are in my brain。
  As the spinners to the end
  Downward go and reascend;
  Gleam the long threads in the sun;
  While within this brain of mine
  Cobwebs brighter and more fine
  By the busy wheel are spun。
  Two fair maidens in a swing;
  Like white doves upon the wing;
  First before my vision pass;
  Laughing; as their gentle hands
  Closely clasp the twisted strands;
  At their shadow on the grass。
  Then a booth of mountebanks;
  With its smell of tan and planks;
  And a girl poised high in air
  On a cord; in spangled dress;
  With a faded loveliness;
  And a weary look of care。
  Then a homestead among farms;
  And a woman with bare arms
  Drawing water from a well;
  As the bucket mounts apace;
  With it mounts her own fair face;
  As at some magician's spell。
  Then an old man in a tower;
  Ringing loud the noontide hour;
  While the rope coils round and round
  Like a serpent at his feet;
  And again; in swift retreat;
  Nearly lifts him from the ground。
  Then within a prison…yard;
  Faces fixed; and stern; and hard;
  Laughter and indecent mirth;
  Ah! it is the gallows…tree!
  Breath of Christian charity;
  Blow; and sweep it from the earth!
  Then a school…boy; with his kite
  Gleaming in a sky of light;
  And an eager; upward look;
  Steeds pursued through lane and field;
  Fowlers with their snares concealed;
  And an angler by a brook。
  Ships rejoicing in the breeze;
  Wrecks that float o'er unknown seas;
  Anchors dragged through faithless sand;
  Sea…fog drifting overhead;
  And; with lessening line and lead;
  Sailors feeling for the land。
  All these scenes do I behold;
  These; and many left untold;
  In that building long and low;
  While the wheel goes round and round;
  With a drowsy; dreamy sound;
  And the spinners backward go。
  THE GOLDEN MILE…STONE
  Leafless are the trees; their purple branches
  Spread themselves abroad; like reefs of coral;
  Rising silent
  In the Red Sea of the Winter sunset。
  From the hundred chimneys of the village;
  Like the Afreet in the Arabian story;
  Smoky columns
  Tower aloft into the air of amber。
  At the window winks the flickering fire…light;
  Here and there the lamps of evening glimmer;
  Social watch…fires
  Answering one another through the dar