第 220 节
作者:空白协议书      更新:2021-02-21 16:31      字数:9322
  Speak of foul weather or of fair;
  At every word the maiden smiles!
  Thus the beguiler she beguiles;
  So that; departing at the evening's close;
  She says; 〃She may be saved! she nothing knows!〃
  Poor Jane; the cunning sorceress!
  Now that thou wouldst; thou art no prophetess!
  This morning; in the fulness of thy heart;
  Thou wast so; far beyond thine art!
  III
  Now rings the bell; nine times reverberating;
  And the white daybreak; stealing up the sky;
  Sees in two cottages two maidens waiting;
  How differently!
  Queen of a day; by flatterers caressed;
  The one puts on her cross and crown;
  Decks with a huge bouquet her breast;
  And flaunting; fluttering up and down;
  Looks at herself; and cannot rest;
  The other; blind; within her little room;
  Has neither crown nor flower's perfume;
  But in their stead for something gropes apart;
  That in a drawer's recess doth lie;
  And; 'neath her bodice of bright scarlet dye;
  Convulsive clasps it to her heart。
  The one; fantastic; light as air;
  'Mid kisses ringing;
  And joyous singing;
  Forgets to say her morning prayer!
  The other; with cold drops upon her brow;
  Joins her two hands; and kneels upon the floor;
  And whispers; as her brother opes the door;
  〃O God! forgive me now!〃
  And then the orphan; young and blind;
  Conducted by her brother's hand;
  Towards the church; through paths unscanned;
  With tranquil air; her way doth wind。
  Odors of laurel; making her faint and pale;
  Round her at times exhale;
  And  in the sky as yet no sunny ray;
  But brumal vapors gray。
  Near that castle; fair to see;
  Crowded with sculptures old; in every part;
  Marvels of nature and of art;
  And proud of its name of high degree;
  A little chapel; almost bare
  At the base of the rock; is builded there;
  All glorious that it lifts aloof;
  Above each jealous cottage roof;
  Its sacred summit; swept by autumn gales;
  And its blackened steeple high in air;
  Round which the osprey screams and sails。
  〃Paul; lay thy noisy rattle by!〃
  Thus Margaret said。  〃Where are we? we ascend!〃
  〃Yes; seest thou not our journey's end?
  Hearest not the osprey from the belfry cry?
  The hideous bird; that brings ill luck; we know!
  Dost thou remember when our father said;
  The night we watched beside his bed;
  'O daughter; I am weak and low;
  Take care of Paul; I feel that I am dying!'
  And thou; and he; and I; all fell to crying?
  Then on the roof the osprey screamed aloud;
  And here they brought our father in his shroud。
  There is his grave; there stands the cross we set;
  Why dost thou clasp me so; dear Margaret?
  Come in!  The bride will be here soon:
  Thou tremblest!  O my God! thou art going to swoon!〃
  She could no more;the blind girl; weak and weary!
  A voice seemed crying from that grave so dreary;
  〃What wouldst thou do; my daughter?〃and she started;
  And quick recoiled; aghast; faint…hearted;
  But Paul; impatient; urges evermore
  Her steps towards the open door;
  And when; beneath her feet; the unhappy maid
  Crushes the laurel near the house immortal;
  And with her head; as Paul talks on again;
  Touches the crown of filigrane
  Suspended from the low…arched portal;
  No more restrained; no more afraid;
  She walks; as for a feast arrayed;
  And in the ancient chapel's sombre night
  They both are lost to sight。
  At length the bell;
  With booming sound;
  Sends forth; resounding round。
  Its hymeneal peal o'er rock and down the dell。
  It is broad day; with sunshine and with rain;
  And yet the guests delay not long;
  For soon arrives the bridal train;
  And with it brings the village throng。
  In sooth; deceit maketh no mortal gay;
  For lo! Baptiste on this triumphant day;
  Mute as an idiot; sad as yester…morning;
  Thinks only of the beldame's words of warning。
  And Angela thinks of her cross; I wis;
  To be a bride is all!  The pretty lisper
  Feels her heart swell to hear all round her whisper;
  〃How beautiful! how beautiful she is!〃。
  But she must calm that giddy head;
  For already the Mass is said;
  At the holy table stands the priest;
  The wedding ring is blessed; Baptiste receives it;
  Ere on the finger of the bride he leaves it;
  He must pronounce one word at least!
  'T is spoken; and sudden at the grooms…man's side
  〃'T is he!〃 a well…known voice has cried。
  And while the wedding guests all hold their breath;
  Opes the confessional; and the blind girl; see!
  〃Baptiste;〃 she said; 〃since thou hast wished my death;
  As holy water be my blood for thee!〃
  And calmly in the air a knife suspended!
  Doubtless her guardian angel near attended;
  For anguish did its work so well;
  That; ere the fatal stroke descended;
  Lifeless she fell!
  At eve instead of bridal verse;
  The De Profundis filled the air;
  Decked with flowers a simple hearse
  To the churchyard forth they bear;
  Village girls in robes of snow
  Follow; weeping as they go;
  Nowhere was a smile that day;
  No; ah no! for each one seemed to say:
  〃The road should mourn and be veiled in gloom;
  So fair a corpse shall leave its home!
  Should mourn and should weep; ah; well…away!
  So fair a corpse shall pass to…day!〃
  A CHRISTMAS CAROL
  FROM THE NOEI BOURGUIGNON DE GUI BAROZAI
  I hear along our street
  Pass the minstrel throngs;
  Hark! they play so sweet;
  On their hautboys; Christmas songs!
  Let us by the fire
  Ever higher
  Sing them till the night expire!
  In December ring
  Every day the chimes;
  Loud the gleemen sing
  In the streets their merry rhymes。
  Let us by the fire
  Ever higher
  Sing them till the night expire。
  Shepherds at the grange;
  Where the Babe was born;
  Sang; with many a change;
  Christmas carols until morn。
  Let us by the fire
  Ever higher
  Sing them till the night expire!
  These good people sang
  Songs devout and sweet;
  While the rafters rang;
  There they stood with freezing feet。
  Let us by the fire
  Ever higher
  Sing them till the night expire。
  Nuns in frigid veils
  At this holy tide;
  For want of something else;
  Christmas songs at times have tried。
  Let us by the fire
  Ever higher
  Sing them fill the night expire!
  Washerwomen old;
  To the sound they beat;
  Sing by rivers cold;
  With uncovered heads and feet。
  Let us by the fire
  Ever higher
  Sing them till the night expire。
  Who by the fireside stands
  Stamps his feet and sings;
  But he who blows his hands
  Not so gay a carol brings。
  Let us by the fire
  Ever higher
  Sing them till the night expire!
  CONSOLATION
  To M。 Duperrier; Gentleman of Aix in Provence; on the
  Death of his Daughter。
  BY FRANCOISE MALHERBE
  Will then; Duperrier; thy sorrow be eternal?
  And shall the sad discourse
  Whispered within thy heart; by tenderness paternal;
  Only augment its force?
  Thy daughter's mournful fate; into the tomb descending
  By death's frequented ways;
  Has it become to thee a labyrinth never ending;
  Where thy lost reason strays?
  I know the charms that made her youth a benediction:
  Nor should I be content;
  As a censorious friend; to solace thine affliction
  By her disparagement。
  But she was of the world; which fairest things exposes
  To fates the most forlorn;
  A rose; she too hath lived as long as live the roses;
  The space of one brief morn。
  *    *    *    *    *
  Death has his rigorous laws; unparalleled; unfeeling;
  All prayers to him are vain;
  Cruel; he stops his ears; and; deaf to our appealing;
  He leaves us to complain。
  The poor man in his hut; with only thatch for cover;
  Unto these laws must bend;
  The sentinel that guards the barriers of the Louvre
  Cannot our kings defend。
  To murmur against death; in petulant defiance;
  Is never for the best;
  To will what God doth will; that is the only science
  That gives us any rest。
  TO CARDINAL RICHELIEU
  BY FRANCOIS DE MALHERBE
  Thou mighty Prince of Church and State;
  Richelieu! until the hour of death;
  Whatever road man chooses; Fate
  Still holds him subject to her breath。
  Spun of all silks; our days and nights
  Have sorrows woven with delights;
  And of this intermingled shade
  Our various destiny appears;
  Even as one sees the course of years
  Of summers and of winters made。
  Sometimes the soft; deceitful hours
  Let us enjoy the halcyon wave;
  Sometimes impending peril lowers
  Beyond the s