第 98 节
作者:空白协议书      更新:2021-02-21 16:30      字数:9322
  Black as with forests underneath;
  Above their sharp and jagged teeth
  Were white as drifted snows。
  Unseen behind them sank the sun;
  But flushed each snowy peak
  A little while with rosy light
  That faded slowly from the sight
  As blushes from the cheek。
  Black grew the sky;all black; all black;
  The clouds were everywhere;
  There was a feeling of suspense
  In nature; a mysterious sense
  Of terror in the air。
  And all on board the Valdemar
  Was still as still could be;
  Save when the dismal ship…bell tolled;
  As ever and anon she rolled;
  And lurched into the sea。
  The captain up and down the deck
  Went striding to and fro;
  Now watched the compass at the wheel;
  Now lifted up his hand to feel
  Which way the wind might blow。
  And now he looked up at the sails;
  And now upon the deep;
  In every fibre of his frame
  He felt the storm before it came;
  He had no thought of sleep。
  Eight bells! and suddenly abaft;
  With a great rush of rain;
  Making the ocean white with spume;
  In darkness like the day of doom;
  On came the hurricane。
  The lightning flashed from cloud to cloud;
  And rent the sky in two;
  A jagged flame; a single jet
  Of white fire; like a bayonet
  That pierced the eyeballs through。
  Then all around was dark again;
  And blacker than before;
  But in that single flash of light
  He had beheld a fearful sight;
  And thought of the oath he swore。
  For right ahead lay the Ship of the Dead;
  The ghostly Carmilhan!
  Her masts were stripped; her yards were bare;
  And on her bowsprit; poised in air;
  Sat the Klaboterman。
  Her crew of ghosts was all on deck
  Or clambering up the shrouds;
  The boatswain's whistle; the captain's hail;
  Were like the piping of the gale;
  And thunder in the clouds。
  And close behind the Carmilhan
  There rose up from the sea;
  As from a foundered ship of stone;
  Three bare and splintered masts alone:
  They were the Chimneys Three。
  And onward dashed the Valdemar
  And leaped into the dark;
  A denser mist; a colder blast;
  A little shudder; and she had passed
  Right through the Phantom Bark。
  She cleft in twain the shadowy hulk;
  But cleft it unaware;
  As when; careering to her nest;
  The sea…gull severs with her breast
  The unresisting air。
  Again the lightning flashed; again
  They saw the Carmilhan;
  Whole as before in hull and spar;
  But now on board of the Valdemar
  Stood the Klaboterman。
  And they all knew their doom was sealed;
  They knew that death was near;
  Some prayed who never prayed before;
  And some they wept; and some they swore;
  And some were mute with fear。
  Then suddenly there came a shock;
  And louder than wind or sea
  A cry burst from the crew on deck;
  As she dashed and crashed; a hopeless wreck;
  Upon the Chimneys Three。
  The storm and night were passed; the light
  To streak the east began;
  The cabin…boy; picked up at sea;
  Survived the wreck; and only he;
  To tell of the Carmilhan。
  INTERLUDE
  When the long murmur of applause
  That greeted the Musician's lay
  Had slowly buzzed itself away;
  And the long talk of Spectre Ships
  That followed died upon their lips
  And came unto a natural pause;
  〃These tales you tell are one and all
  Of the Old World;〃 the Poet said;
  〃Flowers gathered from a crumbling wall;
  Dead leaves that rustle as they fall;
  Let me present you in their stead
  Something of our New England earth;
  A tale which; though of no great worth;
  Has still this merit; that it yields
  A certain freshness of the fields;
  A sweetness as of home…made bread。〃
  The Student answered: 〃Be discreet;
  For if the flour be fresh and sound;
  And if the bread be light and sweet;
  Who careth in what mill 't was ground;
  Or of what oven felt the heat;
  Unless; as old Cervantes said;
  You are looking after better bread
  Than any that is made of wheat?
  You know that people nowadays
  To what is old give little praise;
  All must be new in prose and verse:
  They want hot bread; or something worse;
  Fresh every morning; and half baked;
  The wholesome bread of yesterday;
  Too stale for them; is thrown away;
  Nor is their thirst with water slaked。
  As oft we see the sky in May
  Threaten to rain; and yet not rain;
  The Poet's face; before so gay;
  Was clouded with a look of pain;
  But suddenly brightened up again;
  And without further let or stay
  He told his tale of yesterday。
  THE POET'S TALE
  LADY WENTWORTH。
  One hundred years ago; and something more;
  In Queen Street; Portsmouth; at her tavern door;
  Neat as a pin; and blooming as a rose;
  Stood Mistress Stavers in her furbelows;
  Just as her cuckoo…clock was striking nine。
  Above her head; resplendent on the sign;
  The portrait of the Earl of Halifax;
  In scarlet coat and periwig of flax;
  Surveyed at leisure all her varied charms;
  Her cap; her bodice; her white folded arms;
  And half resolved; though he was past his prime;
  And rather damaged by the lapse of time;
  To fall down at her feet and to declare
  The passion that had driven him to despair。
  For from his lofty station he had seen
  Stavers; her husband; dressed in bottle…green;
  Drive his new Flying Stage…coach; four in hand;
  Down the long lane; and out into the land;
  And knew that he was far upon the way
  To Ipswich and to Boston on the Bay!
  Just then the meditations of the Earl
  Were interrupted by a little girl;
  Barefooted; ragged; with neglected hair;
  Eyes full of laughter; neck and shoulders bare;
  A thin slip of a girl; like a new moon;
  Sure to he rounded into beauty soon;
  A creature men would worship and adore;
  Though now in mean habiliments she bore
  A pail of water; dripping; through the street
  And bathing; as she went her naked feet。
  It was a pretty picture; full of grace;
  The slender form; the delicate; thin face;
  The swaying motion; as she hurried by;
  The shining feet; the laughter in her eye;
  That o'er her face in ripples gleamed and glanced;
  As in her pail the shifting sunbeam danced:
  And with uncommon feelings of delight
  The Earl of Halifax beheld the sight。
  Not so Dame Stavers; for he heard her say
  These words; or thought he did; as plain as day:
  〃O Martha Hilton!  Fie! how dare you go
  About the town half dressed; and looking so!〃
  At which the gypsy laughed; and straight replied:
  〃No matter how I look; I yet shall ride
  In my own chariot; ma'am。〃  And on the child
  The Earl of Halifax benignly smiled;
  As with her heavy burden she passed on;
  Looked back; then turned the corner; and was gone。
  What next; upon that memorable day;
  Arrested his attention was a gay
  And brilliant equipage; that flashed and spun;
  The silver harness glittering in the sun;
  Outriders with red jackets; lithe and lank;
  Pounding the saddles as they rose and sank;
  While all alone within the chariot sat
  A portly person with three…cornered hat;
  A crimson velvet coat; head high in air;
  Gold…headed cane; and nicely powdered hair;
  And diamond buckles sparkling at his knees;
  Dignified; stately; florid; much at ease。
  Onward the pageant swept; and as it passed;
  Fair Mistress Stavers courtesied low and fast;
  For this was Governor Wentworth; driving down
  To Little Harbor; just beyond the town;
  Where his Great House stood looking out to sea;
  A goodly place; where it was good to be。
  It was a pleasant mansion; an abode
  Near and yet hidden from the great high…road;
  Sequestered among trees; a noble pile;
  Baronial and colonial in its style;
  Gables and dormer…windows everywhere;
  And stacks of chimneys rising high in air;
  Pandaean pipes; on which all winds that blew
  Made mournful music the whole winter through。
  Within; unwonted splendors met the eye;
  Panels; and floors of oak; and tapestry;
  Carved chimney…pieces; where on brazen dogs
  Revelled and roared the Christmas fires of logs;
  Doors opening into darkness unawares;
  Mysterious passages; and flights of stairs;
  And on the walls; in heavy gilded frames;
  The ancestral Wentworths with Old…Scripture names。
  Such was the mansion where the great man dwelt。
  A widower and childless; and he felt
  The loneliness; the uncongenial gloom;
  That like a presence haunted ever room;
  For though not given to weakness; he could feel
  The pain of wounds; that ache because they heal。
  The years came and the years went;seven in all;
  And passed in cloud and sunshine o'er the Hall;
  The dawns their splendor through its chambers shed;
  The sunsets flushed its western windows red;
  The snow was on its roofs; the wind; the rain;
  Its woodlands were in leaf and bare again;
  Moons waxed and waned; the lilacs bloomed and died;
  In the broad river ebbed and flowed the tide;
  Ships went to sea; and ships came home from sea;
  And the slow years sailed by and ceased to be。
  And all these yea