第 78 节
作者:空白协议书      更新:2021-02-21 16:29      字数:9320
  Social watch…fires
  Answering one another through the darkness。
  On the hearth the lighted logs are glowing;
  And like Ariel in the cloven pine…tree
  For its freedom
  Groans and sighs the air imprisoned in them。
  By the fireside there are old men seated;
  Seeing ruined cities in the ashes;
  Asking sadly
  Of the Past what it can ne'er restore them。
  By the fireside there are youthful dreamers;
  Building castles fair; with stately stairways;
  Asking blindly
  Of the Future what it cannot give them。
  By the fireside tragedies are acted
  In whose scenes appear two actors only;
  Wife and husband;
  And above them God the sole spectator。
  By the fireside there are peace and comfort;
  Wives and children; with fair; thoughtful faces;
  Waiting; watching
  For a well…known footstep in the passage。
  Each man's chimney is his Golden Mile…stone;
  Is the central point; from which he measures
  Every distance
  Through the gateways of the world around him。
  In his farthest wanderings still he sees it;
  Hears the talking flame; the answering night…wind;
  As he heard them
  When he sat with those who were; but are not。
  Happy he whom neither wealth nor fashion;
  Nor the march of the encroaching city;
  Drives an exile
  From the hearth of his ancestral homestead。
  We may build more splendid habitations;
  Fill our rooms with paintings and with sculptures;
  But we cannot
  Buy with gold the old associations!
  CATAWBA WINE
  This song of mine
  Is a Song of the Vine;
  To be sung by the glowing embers
  Of wayside inns;
  When the rain begins
  To darken the drear Novembers。
  It is not a song
  Of the Scuppernong;
  From warm Carolinian valleys;
  Nor the Isabel
  And the Muscadel
  That bask in our garden alleys。
  Nor the red Mustang;
  Whose clusters hang
  O'er the waves of the Colorado;
  And the fiery flood
  Of whose purple blood
  Has a dash of Spanish bravado。
  For richest and best
  Is the wine of the West;
  That grows by the Beautiful River;
  Whose sweet perfume
  Fills all the room
  With a benison on the giver。
  And as hollow trees
  Are the haunts of bees;
  For ever going and coming;
  So this crystal hive
  Is all alive
  With a swarming and buzzing and humming。
  Very good in its way
  Is the Verzenay;
  Or the Sillery soft and creamy;
  But Catawba wine
  Has a taste more divine;
  More dulcet; delicious; and dreamy。
  There grows no vine
  By the haunted Rhine;
  By Danube or Guadalquivir;
  Nor on island or cape;
  That bears such a grape
  As grows by the Beautiful River。
  Drugged is their juice
  For foreign use;
  When shipped o'er the reeling Atlantic;
  To rack our brains
  With the fever pains;
  That have driven the Old World frantic。
  To the sewers and sinks
  With all such drinks;
  And after them tumble the mixer;
  For a poison malign
  Is such Borgia wine;
  Or at best but a Devil's Elixir。
  While pure as a spring
  Is the wine I sing;
  And to praise it; one needs but name it;
  For Catawba wine
  Has need of no sign;
  No tavern…bush to proclaim it。
  And this Song of the Vine;
  This greeting of mine;
  The winds and the birds shall deliver
  To the Queen of the West;
  In her garlands dressed;
  On the banks of the Beautiful River。
  SANTA FILOMENA
  Whene'er a noble deed is wrought;
  Whene'er is spoken a noble thought;
  Our hearts; in glad surprise;
  To higher levels rise。
  The tidal wave of deeper souls
  Into our inmost being rolls;
  And lifts us unawares
  Out of all meaner cares。
  Honor to those whose words or deeds
  Thus help us in our daily needs;
  And by their overflow
  Raise us from what is low!
  Thus thought I; as by night I read
  Of the great army of the dead;
  The trenches cold and damp;
  The starved and frozen camp;
  The wounded from the battle…plain;
  In dreary hospitals of pain;
  The cheerless corridors;
  The cold and stony floors。
  Lo! in that house of misery
  A lady with a lamp I see
  Pass through the glimmering gloom;
  And flit from room to room。
  And slow; as in a dream of bliss;
  The speechless sufferer turns to kiss
  Her shadow; as it falls
  Upon the darkening walls。
  As if a door in heaven should be
  Opened and then closed suddenly;
  The vision came and went;
  The light shone and was spent。
  On England's annals; through the long
  Hereafter of her speech and song;
  That light its rays shall cast
  From portals of the past。
  A Lady with a Lamp shall stand
  In the great history of the land;
  A noble type of good;
  Heroic womanhood。
  Nor even shall be wanting here
  The palm; the lily; and the spear;
  The symbols that of yore
  Saint Filomena bore。
  THE DISCOVERER OF THE NORTH CAPE
  A LEAF FROM KING ALFRED'S OROSIUS
  Othere; the old sea…captain;
  Who dwelt in Helgoland;
  To King Alfred; the Lover of Truth;
  Brought a snow…white walrus…tooth;
  Which he held in his brown right hand。
  His figure was tall and stately;
  Like a boy's his eye appeared;
  His hair was yellow as hay;
  But threads of a silvery gray
  Gleamed in his tawny beard。
  Hearty and hale was Othere;
  His cheek had the color of oak;
  With a kind of laugh in his speech;
  Like the sea…tide on a beach;
  As unto the King he spoke。
  And Alfred; King of the Saxons;
  Had a book upon his knees;
  And wrote down the wondrous tale
  Of him who was first to sail
  Into the Arctic seas。
  〃So far I live to the northward;
  No man lives north of me;
  To the east are wild mountain…chains;
  And beyond them meres and plains;
  To the westward all is sea。
  〃So far I live to the northward;
  From the harbor of Skeringes…hale;
  If you only sailed by day;
  With a fair wind all the way;
  More than a month would you sail。
  〃I own six hundred reindeer;
  With sheep and swine beside;
  I have tribute from the Finns;
  Whalebone and reindeer…skins;
  And ropes of walrus…hide。
  〃I ploughed the land with horses;
  But my heart was ill at ease;
  For the old seafaring men
  Came to me now and then;
  With their sagas of the seas;
  〃Of Iceland and of Greenland;
  And the stormy Hebrides;
  And the undiscovered deep;
  I could not eat nor sleep
  For thinking of those seas。
  〃To the northward stretched the desert;
  How far I fain would know;
  So at last I sallied forth;
  And three days sailed due north;
  As far as the whale…ships go。
  〃To the west of me was the ocean;
  To the right the desolate shore;
  But I did not slacken sail
  For the walrus or the whale;
  Till after three days more。
  〃The days grew longer and longer;
  Till they became as one;
  And southward through the haze
  I saw the sullen blaze
  Of the red midnight sun。
  〃And then uprose before me;
  Upon the water's edge;
  The huge and haggard shape
  Of that unknown North Cape;
  Whose form is like a wedge。
  〃The sea was rough and stormy;
  The tempest howled and wailed;
  And the sea…fog; like a ghost;
  Haunted that dreary coast;
  But onward still I sailed。
  〃Four days I steered to eastward;
  Four days without a night:
  Round in a fiery ring
  Went the great sun; O King;
  With red and lurid light。〃
  Here Alfred; King of the Saxons;
  Ceased writing for a while;
  And raised his eyes from his book;
  With a strange and puzzled look;
  And an incredulous smile。
  But Othere; the old sea…captain;
  He neither paused nor stirred;
  Till the King listened; and then
  Once more took up his pen;
  And wrote down every word。
  〃And now the land;〃 said Othere;
  〃Bent southward suddenly;
  And I followed the curving shore
  And ever southward bore
  Into a nameless sea。
  〃And there we hunted the walrus;
  The narwhale; and the seal;
  Ha! 't was a noble game!
  And like the lightning's flame
  Flew our harpoons of steel。
  〃There were six of us all together;
  Norsemen of Helgoland;
  In two days and no more
  We killed of them threescore;
  And dragged them to the strand!〃
  Here Alfred the Truth…Teller
  Suddenly closed his book;
  And lifted his blue eyes;
  With doubt and strange surmise
  Depicted in their look。
  And Othere the old sea…captain
  Stared at him wild and weird;
  Then smiled; till his shining teeth
  Gleamed white from underneath
  His tawny; quivering beard。
  And to the King of the Saxons;
  In witness of the truth;
  Raising his noble head;
  He stretched his brown hand; and said;
  〃Behold this walrus…tooth!〃
  DAYBREAK
  A wind came up out of the sea;