第 66 节
作者:乐乐陶陶      更新:2021-02-20 05:16      字数:9321
  Must yet in this thy praise abate;
  That; through thine erring humbleness
  And disregard of thy degree;
  Mainly; has man been so much less
  Than fits his fellowship with thee。
  High thoughts had shaped the foolish brow;
  The coward had grasped the hero's sword;
  The vilest had been great; hadst thou;
  Just to thyself; been worth's reward。
  But lofty honors undersold
  Seller and buyer both disgrace;
  And favors that make folly bold
  Banish the light from virtue's face。
  III
  THE ROSE OF THE WORLD
  Lo; when the Lord made North and South;
  And sun and moon ordained; He;
  Forthbringing each by word of mouth
  In order of its dignity
  Did man from the crude clay express
  By sequence; and all else decreed;
  He formed the woman; nor might less
  Than Sabbath such a work succeed。
  And still with favor singled out;
  Marred less than man by mortal fall;
  Her disposition is devout;
  Her countenance angelical:
  The best things that the best believe
  Are in her face so kindly writ
  The faithless; seeing her; conceive
  Not only heaven; but hope of it;
  No idle thought her instinct shrouds;
  But fancy chequers settled sense;
  Like alteration of the clouds
  On noonday's azure permanence。
  Pure dignity; composure; ease;
  Declare affections nobly fixed;
  And impulse sprung from due degrees
  Of sense and spirit sweetly mixed。
  Her modesty; her chiefest grace;
  The cestus clasping Venus' side;
  How potent to deject the face
  Of him who would affront its pride!
  Wrong dares not in her presence speak;
  Nor spotted thought its taint disclose
  Under the protest of a cheek
  Outbragging Nature's boast; the rose。
  In mind and manners how discreet;
  How artless in her very art;
  How candid in discourse; how sweet
  The concord of her lips and heart!
  How simple and how circumspect;
  How subtle and how fancy…free;
  Though sacred to her love; how decked
  With unexclusive courtesy;
  How quick in talk to see from far
  The way to vanquish or evade;
  How able her persuasions are
  To prove; her reasons to persuade。
  How (not to call true instinct's bent
  And woman's very nature; harm);
  How amiable and innocent
  Her pleasure in her power to charm;
  How humbly careful to attract;
  Though crowned with all the soul desires;
  Connubial aptitude exact;
  Diversity that never tires!
  IV
  THE TRIBUTE
  Boon Nature to the woman bows;
  She walks in earth's whole glory clad;
  And; chiefest far herself of shows;
  All others help her and are glad:
  No splendor 'neath the sky's proud dome
  But serves her for familiar wear;
  The far…fetched diamond finds its home
  Flashing and smouldering in her hair;
  For her the seas their pearls reveal;
  Art and strange lands her pomp supply
  With purple; chrome; and cochineal;
  Ochre; and lapis lazuli;
  The worm its golden woof presents;
  Whatever runs; flies; dives; or delves;
  All doff for her their ornaments;
  Which suit her better than themselves;
  And all; by this their power to give;
  Proving her right to take; proclaim
  Her beauty's clear prerogative
  To profit so by Eden's blame。
  V
  NEAREST THE DEAREST
  Till Eve was brought to Adam; he
  A solitary desert trod;
  Though in the great society
  Of nature; angels; and of God。
  If one slight column counterweighs
  The ocean; 'tis the Maker's law;
  Who deems obedience better praise
  Than sacrifice of erring awe。
  VI
  THE FOREIGN LAND
  A woman is a foreign land;
  Of which; though there he settle young;
  A man will ne'er quite understand
  The customs; politics; and tongue。
  The foolish hie them post…haste through;
  See fashions odd and prospects fair;
  Learn of the language; 〃How d'ye do;〃
  And go and brag they have been there。
  The most for leave to trade apply;
  For once; at Empire's seat; her heart;
  Then get what knowledge ear and eye
  Glean chancewise in the life…long mart。
  And certain others; few and fit;
  Attach them to the Court; and see
  The Country's best; its accent hit;
  And partly sound its polity。
  Coventry Patmore '1823…1896'
  A HEALTH
  I fill this cup to one made up
  Of loveliness alone;
  A woman; of her gentle sex
  The seeming paragon;
  To whom the better elements
  And kindly stars have given
  A form so fair; that; like the air;
  'Tis less of earth than heaven。
  Her every tone is music's own;
  Like those of morning birds;
  And something more than melody
  Dwells ever in her words;
  The coinage of her heart are they;
  And from her lips each flows
  As one may see the burdened bee
  Forth issue from the rose。
  Affections are as thoughts to her;
  The measures of her hours;
  Her feelings have the fragrancy;
  The freshness of young flowers;
  And lovely passions; changing oft;
  So fill her; she appears
  The image of themselves by turns; …
  The idol of past years!
  Of her bright face one glance will trace
  A picture on the brain;
  And of her voice in echoing hearts
  A sound must long remain;
  But memory; such as mine of her;
  So very much endears;
  When death is nigh my latest sigh
  Will not be life's; but hers。
  I fill this cup to one made up
  Of loveliness alone;
  A woman; of her gentle sex
  The seeming paragon …
  Her health! and would on earth there stood
  Some more of such a frame;
  That life might be all poetry;
  And weariness a name。
  Edward Coote Pinkney '1802…1828'
  OUR SISTER
  Her face was very fair to see;
  So luminous with purity: …
  It had no roses; but the hue
  Of lilies lustrous with their dew …
  Her very soul seemed shining through!
  Her quiet nature seemed to be
  Tuned to each season's harmony。
  The holy sky bent near to her;
  She saw a spirit in the stir
  Of solemn woods。  The rills that beat
  Their mosses with voluptuous feet;
  Went dripping music through her thought。
  Sweet impulse came to her unsought
  From graceful things; and beauty took
  A sacred meaning in her look。
  In the great Master's steps went she
  With patience and humility。
  The casual gazer could not guess
  Half of her veiled loveliness;
  Yet ah! what precious things lay hid
  Beneath her bosom's snowy lid: …
  What tenderness and sympathy;
  What beauty of sincerity;
  What fancies chaste; and loves; that grew
  In heaven's own stainless light and dew!
  True woman was she day by day
  In suffering; toil; and victory。
  Her life; made holy and serene
  By faith; was hid with things unseen。
  She knew what they alone can know
  Who live above but dwell below。
  Horatio Nelson Powers '1826…1890'
  FROM LIFE
  Her thoughts are like a flock of butterflies。
  She has a merry love of little things;
  And a bright flutter of speech; whereto she brings
  A threefold eloquence … voice; hands and eyes。
  Yet under all a subtle silence lies
  As a bird's heart is hidden by its wings;
  And you shall search through many wanderings
  The fairyland of her realities。
  She hides herself behind a busy brain …
  A woman; with a child's laugh in her blood;
  A maid; wearing the shadow of motherhood …
  Wise with the quiet memory of old pain;
  As the soft glamor of remembered rain
  Hallows the gladness of a sunlit wood。
  Brian Hooker '1880…
  THE ROSE OF THE WORLD
  Who dreamed that beauty passes like a dream?
  For these red lips; with all their mournful pride;
  Mournful that no new wonder may betide;
  Troy passed away in one high funeral gleam;
  And Usna's children died。
  We and the laboring world are passing by:
  Amid men's souls; that waver and give place;
  Like the pale waters in their wintry race;
  Under the passing stars; foam of the sky;
  Lives on this lonely face。
  Bow down; archangels; in your dim abode:
  Before you were; or any hearts to beat;
  Weary and kind one lingered by His seat;
  He made the world to be a grassy road
  Before her wandering feet。
  William Butler Yeats '1865…
  DAWN OF WOMANHOOD
  Thus will I have the woman of my dream。
  Strong must she be and gentle; like a star
  Her soul burn whitely; nor its arrowy beam
  May any cloud of superstition mar:
  True to the earth she is; patient and calm。
  Her tranquil eyes shall penetrate afar
  Through centuries; and her maternal arm
  Enfold the generations yet unborn;
  Nor she; by passing glamor nor alarm;
  Will from the steadfast way of life be drawn。
  Gray…eyed and fearless; I behold her gaze
  Outward into the furnace of the dawn。
  Sacred shall be the purport of her days;
  Yet human; and the passion of the earth
  Shall be for her adornment and her praise。
  She is most often joyous; with a mirth
  That rings true…tempered holy womanhood;
  She cannot fear the agonies of birth;
  Nor sit in pallid lethargy and brood
  Upon the coming seasons of her pain:
  By her the mystery is understood
  Of harvest; and fulfilment in the grain。
  Yea; she is wont to labor in the field;
  Delights to heap; at sunset; on the