第 5 节
作者:随便看看      更新:2022-07-12 16:18      字数:9322
  A master passed in mastership;
  He learned; without the spur of need;
  To write; to cipher; and to read;
  From all that touch on his prone shore
  Augments his treasury of lore;
  Eager in age as erst in youth
  To catch an art; to learn a truth;
  To paint on the internal page
  A clearer picture of the age。
  His age; you say?  But ah; not so!
  In his lone isle of long ago;
  A royal Lady of Shalott;
  Sea…sundered; he beholds it not;
  He only hears it far away。
  The stress of equatorial day
  He suffers; he records the while
  The vapid annals of the isle;
  Slaves bring him praise of his renown;
  Or cackle of the palm…tree town;
  The rarer ship and the rare boat
  He marks; and only hears remote;
  Where thrones and fortunes rise and reel;
  The thunder of the turning wheel。
  V
  For the unexpected tears he shed
  At my departing; may his lion head
  Not whiten; his revolving years
  No fresh occasion minister of tears;
  At book or cards; at work or sport;
  Him may the breeze across the palace court
  For ever fan; and swelling near
  For ever the loud song divert his ear。
  Schooner 'Equator;' at Sea。
  XXXVIII … THE WOODMAN
  IN all the grove; nor stream nor bird
  Nor aught beside my blows was heard;
  And the woods wore their noonday dress …
  The glory of their silentness。
  From the island summit to the seas;
  Trees mounted; and trees drooped; and trees
  Groped upward in the gaps。  The green
  Inarboured talus and ravine
  By fathoms。  By the multitude
  The rugged columns of the wood
  And bunches of the branches stood;
  Thick as a mob; deep as a sea;
  And silent as eternity。
  With lowered axe; with backward head;
  Late from this scene my labourer fled;
  And with a ravelled tale to tell;
  Returned。  Some denizen of hell;
  Dead man or disinvested god;
  Had close behind him peered and trod;
  And triumphed when he turned to flee。
  How different fell the lines with me!
  Whose eye explored the dim arcade
  Impatient of the uncoming shade …
  Shy elf; or dryad pale and cold;
  Or mystic lingerer from of old:
  Vainly。  The fair and stately things;
  Impassive as departed kings;
  All still in the wood's stillness stood;
  And dumb。  The rooted multitude
  Nodded and brooded; bloomed and dreamed;
  Unmeaning; undivined。  It seemed
  No other art; no hope; they knew;
  Than clutch the earth and seek the blue。
  'Mid vegetable king and priest
  And stripling; I (the only beast)
  Was at the beast's work; killing; hewed
  The stubborn roots across; bestrewed
  The glebe with the dislustred leaves;
  And bade the saplings fall in sheaves;
  Bursting across the tangled math
  A ruin that I called a path;
  A Golgotha that; later on;
  When rains had watered; and suns shone;
  And seeds enriched the place; should bear
  And be called garden。  Here and there;
  I spied and plucked by the green hair
  A foe more resolute to live;
  The toothed and killing sensitive。
  He; semi…conscious; fled the attack;
  He shrank and tucked his branches back;
  And straining by his anchor…strand;
  Captured and scratched the rooting hand。
  I saw him crouch; I felt him bite;
  And straight my eyes were touched with sight。
  I saw the wood for what it was:
  The lost and the victorious cause;
  The deadly battle pitched in line;
  Saw silent weapons cross and shine:
  Silent defeat; silent assault;
  A battle and a burial vault。
  Thick round me in the teeming mud
  Brier and fern strove to the blood:
  The hooked liana in his gin
  Noosed his reluctant neighbours in:
  There the green murderer throve and spread;
  Upon his smothering victims fed;
  And wantoned on his climbing coil。
  Contending roots fought for the soil
  Like frightened demons: with despair
  Competing branches pushed for air。
  Green conquerors from overhead
  Bestrode the bodies of their dead:
  The Caesars of the sylvan field;
  Unused to fail; foredoomed to yield:
  For in the groins of branches; lo!
  The cancers of the orchid grow。
  Silent as in the listed ring
  Two chartered wrestlers strain and cling;
  Dumb as by yellow Hooghly's side
  The suffocating captives died;
  So hushed the woodland warfare goes
  Unceasing; and the silent foes
  Grapple and smother; strain and clasp
  Without a cry; without a gasp。
  Here also sound thy fans; O God;
  Here too thy banners move abroad:
  Forest and city; sea and shore;
  And the whole earth; thy threshing…floor!
  The drums of war; the drums of peace;
  Roll through our cities without cease;
  And all the iron halls of life
  Ring with the unremitting strife。
  The common lot we scarce perceive。
  Crowds perish; we nor mark nor grieve:
  The bugle calls … we mourn a few!
  What corporal's guard at Waterloo?
  What scanty hundreds more or less
  In the man…devouring Wilderness?
  What handful bled on Delhi ridge?
  … See; rather; London; on thy bridge
  The pale battalions trample by;
  Resolved to slay; resigned to die。
  Count; rather; all the maimed and dead
  In the unbrotherly war of bread。
  See; rather; under sultrier skies
  What vegetable Londons rise;
  And teem; and suffer without sound:
  Or in your tranquil garden ground;
  Contented; in the falling gloom;
  Saunter and see the roses bloom。
  That these might live; what thousands died!
  All day the cruel hoe was plied;
  The ambulance barrow rolled all day;
  Your wife; the tender; kind; and gay;
  Donned her long gauntlets; caught the spud;
  And bathed in vegetable blood;
  And the long massacre now at end;
  See! where the lazy coils ascend;
  See; where the bonfire sputters red
  At even; for the innocent dead。
  Why prate of peace? when; warriors all;
  We clank in harness into hall;
  And ever bare upon the board
  Lies the necessary sword。
  In the green field or quiet street;
  Besieged we sleep; beleaguered eat;
  Labour by day and wake o' nights;
  In war with rival appetites。
  The rose on roses feeds; the lark
  On larks。  The sedentary clerk
  All morning with a diligent pen
  Murders the babes of other men;
  And like the beasts of wood and park;
  Protects his whelps; defends his den。
  Unshamed the narrow aim I hold;
  I feed my sheep; patrol my fold;
  Breathe war on wolves and rival flocks;
  A pious outlaw on the rocks
  Of God and morning; and when time
  Shall bow; or rivals break me; climb
  Where no undubbed civilian dares;
  In my war harness; the loud stairs
  Of honour; and my conqueror
  Hail me a warrior fallen in war。
  Vailima。
  XXXIX … TROPIC RAIN
  AS the single pang of the blow; when the metal is mingled well;
  Rings and lives and resounds in all the bounds of the bell;
  So the thunder above spoke with a single tongue;
  So in the heart of the mountain the sound of it rumbled and clung。
  Sudden the thunder was drowned … quenched was the levin light …
  And the angel…spirit of rain laughed out loud in the night。
  Loud as the maddened river raves in the cloven glen;
  Angel of rain! you laughed and leaped on the roofs of men;
  And the sleepers sprang in their beds; and joyed and feared as you fell。
  You struck; and my cabin quailed; the roof of it roared like a bell。
  You spoke; and at once the mountain shouted and shook with brooks。
  You ceased; and the day returned; rosy; with virgin looks。
  And methought that beauty and terror are only one; not two;
  And the world has room for love; and death; and thunder; and dew;
  And all the sinews of hell slumber in summer air;
  And the face of God is a rock; but the face of the rock is fair。
  Beneficent streams of tears flow at the finger of pain;
  And out of the cloud that smites; beneficent rivers of rain。
  Vailima。
  XL … AN END OF TRAVEL
  LET now your soul in this substantial world
  Some anchor strike。  Be here the body moored; …
  This spectacle immutably from now
  The picture in your eye; and when time strikes;
  And the green scene goes on the instant blind …
  The ultimate helpers; where your horse to…day
  Conveyed you dreaming; bear your body dead。
  Vailima
  XLI
  WE uncommiserate pass into the night
  From the loud banquet; and departing leave
  A tremor in men's memories; faint and sweet
  And frail as music。  Features of our face;
  The tones of the voice; the touch of the loved hand;
  Perish and vanish; one by one; from earth:
  Meanwhile; in the hall of song; the multitude
  Applauds the new performer。  One; perchance;
  One ultimate survivor lingers on;
  And smiles; and to his ancient heart recalls
  The long forgotten。  Ere the morrow die;
  He too; returning; through the curtain comes;
  And the new age forgets us and goes on。
  XLII
  SING me a song of a lad that is gone;
  Say; could that lad be I?
  Merry of soul he sailed on a day
  Over the sea to Skye。
  Mull was astern; Rum on the port;
  Eigg on the starboard bow;
  Glory of youth glowed in his soul:
  Where is that glory now?
  Sing me a song of a lad that is gone;
  Say; could that lad be I