第 8 节
作者:冬恋      更新:2021-03-08 19:33      字数:9294
  Sink to silence the psalms and the paeans
  The shibboleths shift; and the faiths;
  And the temples that challenged the aeons
  Are tenanted only by wraiths;
  Swoon to silence the cymbals and psalters;
  The worships grow senseless and strange;
  And the mockers ask; 〃Where be thy altars?〃
  Crying; 〃Nothing is changelessbut Change!〃
  Yes; nothing seems changeless; but Change。
  And yet; through the creed…wrecking years;
  One story for ever appears;
  The tale of a City Supernal
  The whisper of Something eternal
  A passion; a hope; and a vision
  That peoples the silence with Powers;
  A fable of meadows Elysian
  Where Time enters not with his Hours;
  Manifold are the tale's variations;
  Race and clime ever tinting the dreams;
  Yet its essence; through endless mutations;
  Immutable gleams。
  Deathless; though godheads be dying;
  Surviving the creeds that expire;
  Illogical; reason…defying;
  Lives that passionate; primal desire;
  Insistent; persistent; forever
  Man cries to the silences; Never
  Shall Death reign the lord of the soul;
  Shall the dust be the ultimate goal
  I will storm the black bastions of Night!
  I will tread where my vision has trod;
  I will set in the darkness a light;
  In the vastness; a god!〃
  As the forehead of Man grows broader; so do
  his creeds;
  And his gods they are shaped in his image; and
  mirror his needs;
  And he clothes them with thunders and beauty;
  he clothes them with music and fire;
  Seeing not; as he bows by their altars; that he
  worships his own desire;
  And mixed with his trust there is terror; and
  mixed with his madness is ruth;
  And every man grovels in error; yet every man
  glimpses a truth。
  For all of the creeds are false; and all of the creeds
  are true;
  And low at the shrines where my brothers bow;
  there will I bow; too;
  For no form of a god; and no fashion
  Man has made in his desperate passion
  But is worthy some worship of mine;
  Not too hot with a gross belief;
  Nor yet too cold with pride;
  I will bow me down where my brothers bow;
  Humblebut open…eyed!
  UNREST
  A FIERCE unrest seethes at the core
  Of all existing things:
  It was the eager wish to soar
  That gave the gods their wings。
  From what flat wastes of cosmic slime;
  And stung by what quick fire;
  Sunward the restless races climb!
  Men risen out of mire!
  There throbs through all the worlds that are
  This heart…beat hot and strong;
  And shaken systems; star by star;
  Awake and glow in song。
  But for the urge of this unrest
  These joyous spheres were mute;
  But for the rebel in his breast
  Had man remained a brute。
  When baffled lips demanded speech;
  Speech trembled into birth
  (One day the lyric word shall reach
  From earth to laughing earth)
  When man's dim eyes demanded light
  The light he sought was born
  His wish; a Titan; scaled the height
  And flung him back the morn!
  From deed to dream; from dream to deed;
  From daring hope to hope;
  The restless wish; the instant need;
  Still lashed him up the slope!
  。     。     。     。     。     。
  I sing no governed firmament;
  Cold; ordered; regular
  I sing the stinging discontent
  That leaps from star to star!
  THE PILTDOWN SKULL
  WHAT was his life; back yonder
  In the dusk where time began;
  This beast uncouth with the jaw of an ape
  And the eye and brain of a man?
  Work; and the wooing of woman;
  Fight; and the lust of fight;
  Play; and the blind beginnings
  Of an Art that groped for light?
  In the wonder of redder mornings;
  By the beauty of brighter seas;
  Did he stand; the world's first thinker;
  Scorning his clan's decrees?
  Seeking; with baffled eyes;
  In the dumb; inscrutable skies;
  A name for the greater glory
  That only the dreamer sees?
  One day; when the afterglows;
  Like quick and sentient things;
  With a rush of their vast; wild wings;
  Rose out of the shaken ocean
  As great birds rise from the sod;
  Did the shock of their sudden splendor
  Stir him and startle and thrill him;
  Grip him and shake him and fill him
  With a sense as of heights untrod?
  Did he tremble with hope and vision;
  And grasp at a hint of God?
  London stands where the mammoth
  Caked shag flanks with slime
  And what are our lives that inherit
  The treasures of all time?
  Work; and the wooing of woman;
  Fight; and the lust of fight;
  A little play (and too much toil!)
  With an Art that gropes for light;
  And now and then a dreamer;
  Rapt; from his lonely sod
  Looks up and is thrilled and startled
  With a fleeting sense of God!
  THE SEEKER
  THE creeds he wrought of dream and thought
  Fall from him at the touch of life;
  His old gods fail him in the strife
  Withdrawn; the heavens he sought!
  Vanished; the miracles that led;
  The cloud at noon; the flame at night;
  The vision that he wing'd and sped
  Falls backward; baffled; from the height;
  Yet in the wreck of these he stands
  Upheld by something grim and strong;
  Some stubborn instinct lifts a song
  And nerves him; heart and hands:
  He does not dare to call it hope;
  It is not aught that seeks reward
  Nor faith; that up some sunward slope
  Runs aureoled to meet its lord;
  It touches something elder far
  Than faith or creed or thought in man;
  It was ere yet these lived and ran
  Like light from star to star;
  It touches that stark; primal need
  That from unpeopled voids and vast
  Fashioned the first crude; childish creed;
  And still shall fashion; till the last!
  For one word is the tale of men:
  They fling their icons to the sod;
  And having trampled down a god
  They seek a god again!
  Stripped of his creeds inherited;
  Bereft of all his sires held true;
  Amid the wreck of visions dead
  He thrills at touch of visions new。 。 。 。
  He wings another Dream for flight。 。 。 。
  He seeks beyond the outmost dawn
  A god he set there 。 。 。 and; anon;
  Drags that god from the height!
  。     。     。     。     。     。
  But aye from ruined faiths and old
  That droop and die; fall bruised seeds;
  And when new flowers and faiths unfold
  They're lovelier flowers; they're kindlier creeds。
  THE AWAKENING
  THE steam; the reek; the fume; of prayer
  Blown outward for a million years;
  Becomes a mist between the spheres;
  And waking Sentience struggles there。
  Prayer still creates the boon we pray;
  And gods we've hoped for; from those hopes
  Will gain sufficient form one day
  And in full godhood storm the slopes
  Where ancient Chaos; stark and gray;
  Already trembles for his sway。
  When that the restless worlds would fly
  Their wish created rapid wings;
  But not till aeons had passed by
  With dower of many idler things;
  And when dumb flesh demanded speech
  Speech struggled to the lips at last;
  Now the unpeopled Void; and vast;
  Clean to that uttermost blank beach
  Whereto the boldest thought may reach
  That voyages from the vaguest past
  (Dim realm and ultimate of space)
  Is vexed and troubled; stirs and shakes;
  In prescience of a god that wakes;
  Born of man's wish to see God's face!
  The endless; groping; dumb desires;
  The climbing incense thick and sweet;
  The lovely purpose that aspires;
  The wraiths of vapor wing'd and fleet
  That rise and run with eager feet
  Forth from a myriad altar fires:
  All these become a mist that fills
  The vales and chasms nebular;
  A shaping Soul that moves and thrills
  The wastes between red star and star!
  A SONG OF MEN
  OUT of the soil and the slime;
  Reeking; they climb;
  Out of the muck and the mire;
  Rank; they aspire;
  Filthy with murder and mud;
  Black with shed blood;
  Lust and passion and clay
  Dying; they slay;
  Stirred by vague hints of a goal;
  Seeking a soul!
  Groping through terror and night
  Up to the light:
  Life in the dust and the clod
  Sensing a God;
  Flushed of the glamor and gleam
  Caught from a dream;
  Stained of the struggle and toil;
  Stained of the soil;
  Ally of God in the end
  Helper and friend
  Hero and prophet and priest
  Out of the beast!
  THE NOBLER LESSON
  CHRIST was of virgin birth; and; being slain;
  The creedists say; He rose from death again。
  Oh; futile age…long talk of death and birth!
  His life; that is the one thing wonder…worth;
  Not how He came; but how He lived on earth。
  For if gods stoop; and with quaint jugglery
  Mock nature's laws; how shall that profit thee?
  The nobler lesson is that mortals can
  Grow godlike through this baffled front of man!
  AT LAST
  EACH race has died and lived and fought for the
  〃true〃 gods o