第 79 节
作者:空白协议书      更新:2021-02-21 16:29      字数:9322
  He stretched his brown hand; and said;
  〃Behold this walrus…tooth!〃
  DAYBREAK
  A wind came up out of the sea;
  And said; 〃O mists; make room for me。〃
  It hailed the ships; and cried; 〃Sail on;
  Ye mariners; the night is gone。〃
  And hurried landward far away;
  Crying; 〃Awake! it is the day。〃
  It said unto the forest; 〃Shout!
  Hang all your leafy banners out!〃
  It touched the wood…bird's folded wing;
  And said; 〃O bird; awake and sing。〃
  And o'er the farms; 〃O chanticleer;
  Your clarion blow; the day is near。〃
  It whispered to the fields of corn;
  〃Bow down; and hail the coming morn。〃
  It shouted through the belfry…tower;
  〃Awake; O bell! proclaim the hour。〃
  It crossed the churchyard with a sigh;
  And said; 〃Not yet! in quiet lie。〃
  THE FIFTIETH BIRTHDAY OF AGASSIZ
  MAY 28; 1857
  It was fifty years ago
  In the pleasant month of May;
  In the beautiful Pays de Vaud;
  A child in its cradle lay。
  And Nature; the old nurse; took
  The child upon her knee;
  Saying: 〃Here is a story…book
  Thy Father has written for thee。〃
  〃Come; wander with me;〃 she said;
  〃Into regions yet untrod;
  And read what is still unread
  In the manuscripts of God。〃
  And he wandered away and away
  With Nature; the dear old nurse;
  Who sang to him night and day
  The rhymes of the universe。
  And whenever the way seemed long;
  Or his heart began to fail;
  She would sing a more wonderful song;
  Or tell a more marvellous tale。
  So she keeps him still a child;
  And will not let him go;
  Though at times his heart beats wild
  For the beautiful Pays de Vaud;
  Though at times he hears in his dreams
  The Ranz des Vaches of old;
  And the rush of mountain streams
  From glaciers clear and cold;
  And the mother at home says; 〃Hark!
  For his voice I listen and yearn;
  It is growing late and dark;
  And my boy does not return!〃
  CHILDREN
  Come to me; O ye children!
  For I hear you at your play;
  And the questions that perplexed me
  Have vanished quite away。
  Ye open the eastern windows;
  That look towards the sun;
  Where thoughts are singing swallows
  And the brooks of morning run。
  In your hearts are the birds and the sunshine;
  In your thoughts the brooklet's flow;
  But in mine is the wind of Autumn
  And the first fall of the snow。
  Ah! what would the world be to us
  If the children were no more?
  We should dread the desert behind us
  Worse than the dark before。
  What the leaves are to the forest;
  With light and air for food;
  Ere their sweet and tender juices
  Have been hardened into wood;
  That to the world are children;
  Through them it feels the glow
  Of a brighter and sunnier climate
  Than reaches the trunks below。
  Come to me; O ye children!
  And whisper in my ear
  What the birds and the winds are singing
  In your sunny atmosphere。
  For what are all our contrivings;
  And the wisdom of our books;
  When compared with your caresses;
  And the gladness of your looks?
  Ye are better than all the ballads
  That ever were sung or said;
  For ye are living poems;
  And all the rest are dead。
  SANDALPHON
  Have you read in the Talmud of old;
  In the Legends the Rabbins have told
  Of the limitless realms of the air;
  Have you read it;the marvellous story
  Of Sandalphon; the Angel of Glory;
  Sandalphon; the Angel of Prayer?
  How; erect; at the outermost gates
  Of the City Celestial he waits;
  With his feet on the ladder of light;
  That; crowded with angels unnumbered;
  By Jacob was seen; as he slumbered
  Alone in the desert at night?
  The Angels of Wind and of Fire
  Chant only one hymn; and expire
  With the song's irresistible stress;
  Expire in their rapture and wonder;
  As harp…strings are broken asunder
  By music they throb to express。
  But serene in the rapturous throng;
  Unmoved by the rush of the song;
  With eyes unimpassioned and slow;
  Among the dead angels; the deathless
  Sandalphon stands listening breathless
  To sounds that ascend from below;
  From the spirits on earth that adore;
  From the souls that entreat and implore
  In the fervor and passion of prayer;
  From the hearts that are broken with losses;
  And weary with dragging the crosses
  Too heavy for mortals to bear。
  And he gathers the prayers as he stands;
  And they change into flowers in his hands;
  Into garlands of purple and red;
  And beneath the great arch of the portal;
  Through the streets of the City Immortal
  Is wafted the fragrance they shed。
  It is but a legend; I know;
  A fable; a phantom; a show;
  Of the ancient Rabbinical lore;
  Yet the old mediaeval tradition;
  The beautiful; strange superstition;
  But haunts me and holds me the more。
  When I look from my window at night;
  And the welkin above is all white;
  All throbbing and panting with stars;
  Among them majestic is standing
  Sandalphon the angel; expanding
  His pinions in nebulous bars。
  And the legend; I feel; is a part
  Of the hunger and thirst of the heart;
  The frenzy and fire of the brain;
  That grasps at the fruitage forbidden;
  The golden pomegranates of Eden;
  To quiet its fever and pain。
  FLIGHT THE SECOND
  THE CHILDREN'S HOUR
  Between the dark and the daylight;
  When the night is beginning to lower;
  Comes a pause in the day's occupations;
  That is known as the Children's Hour。
  I hear in the chamber above me
  The patter of little feet;
  The sound of a door that is opened;
  And voices soft and sweet。
  From my study I see in the lamplight;
  Descending the broad hall stair;
  Grave Alice; and laughing Allegra;
  And Edith with golden hair。
  A whisper; and then a silence:
  Yet I know by their merry eyes
  They are plotting and planning together
  To take me by surprise。
  A sudden rush from the stairway;
  A sudden raid from the hall!
  By three doors left unguarded
  They enter my castle wall!
  They climb up into my turret
  O'er the arms and back of my chair;
  If I try to escape; they surround me;
  They seem to be everywhere。
  They almost devour me with kisses;
  Their arms about me entwine;
  Till I think of the Bishop of Bingen
  In his Mouse…Tower on the Rhine!
  Do you think; o blue…eyed banditti;
  Because you have scaled the wall;
  Such an old mustache as I am
  Is not a match for you all!
  I have you fast in my fortress;
  And will not let you depart;
  But put you down into the dungeon
  In the round…tower of my heart。
  And there will I keep you forever;
  Yes; forever and a day;
  Till the walls shall crumble to ruin;
  And moulder in dust away!
  ENCELADUS
  Under Mount Etna he lies;
  It is slumber; it is not death;
  For he struggles at times to arise;
  And above him the lurid skies
  Are hot with his fiery breath。
  The crags are piled on his breast;
  The earth is heaped on his head;
  But the groans of his wild unrest;
  Though smothered and half suppressed;
  Are heard; and he is not dead。
  And the nations far away
  Are watching with eager eyes;
  They talk together and say;
  〃To…morrow; perhaps to…day;
  Euceladus will arise!
  And the old gods; the austere
  Oppressors in their strength;
  Stand aghast and white with fear
  At the ominous sounds they hear;
  And tremble; and mutter; 〃At length!〃
  Ah me! for the land that is sown
  With the harvest of despair!
  Where the burning cinders; blown
  From the lips of the overthrown
  Enceladus; fill the air。
  Where ashes are heaped in drifts
  Over vineyard and field and town;
  Whenever he starts and lifts
  His head through the blackened rifts
  Of the crags that keep him down。
  See; see! the red light shines!
  'T is the glare of his awful eyes!
  And the storm…wind shouts through the pines
  Of Alps and of Apennines;
  〃Enceladus; arise!〃
  THE CUMBERLAND
  At anchor in Hampton Roads we lay;
  On board of the cumberland; sloop…of…war;
  And at times from the fortress across the bay
  The alarum of drums swept past;
  Or a bugle blast
  From the camp on the shore。
  Then far away to the south uprose
  A little feather of snow…white smoke;
  And we knew that the iron ship of our foes
  Was steadily steering its course
  To try the force
  Of our ribs of oak。
  Down upon us heavily runs;
  Silent and sullen; the floating fort;
  Then comes a puff of smoke from her guns;
  And leaps the terrible death;
  With fiery breath;
  From each open port。
  We are not idle; but send her straight
  Defiance back in a full broadside!
  As hail rebounds from a roof of slate;
  Rebounds our heavier hail
  From each iron scale
  Of the monster's hide。
  〃Str