第 167 节
作者:空白协议书      更新:2021-02-21 16:30      字数:9322
  Receive my prayer of praise and thanksgiving!
  Let the hands that bore our Saviour bear it
  Into the awful presence of God;
  For thy feet with holiness are shod;
  And if thou hearest it He will hear it。
  Our child who was dead again is living!
  FORESTER。
  I did not tell you she was dead;
  If you thought so 't was no fault of mine;
  At this very moment while I speak;
  They are sailing homeward down the Rhine;
  In a splendid barge; with golden prow;
  And decked with banners white and red
  As the colors on your daughter's cheek。
  They call her the Lady Alicia now;
  For the Prince in Salerno made a vow
  That Elsie only would he wed。
  URSULA。
  Jesu Maria! what a change!
  All seems to me so weird and strange!
  FORESTER。
  I saw her standing on the deck;
  Beneath an awning cool and shady;
  Her cap of velvet could not hold
  The tresses of her hair of gold;
  That flowed and floated like the stream;
  And fell in masses down her neck。
  As fair and lovely did she seem
  As in a story or a dream
  Some beautiful and foreign lady。
  And the Prince looked so grand and proud;
  And waved his hand thus to the crowd
  That gazed and shouted from the shore;
  All down the river; long and loud。
  URSULA。
  We shall behold our child once more;
  She is not dead!  She is not dead!
  God; listening; must have overheard
  The prayers; that; without sound or word;
  Our hearts in secrecy have said!
  Oh; bring me to her; for mine eyes
  Are hungry to behold her face;
  My very soul within me cries;
  My very hands seem to caress her;
  To see her; gaze at her; and bless her;
  Dear Elsie; child of God and grace!
  Goes out toward the garden。
  FORESTER。
  There goes the good woman out of her head;
  And Gottlieb's supper is waiting here;
  A very capacious flagon of beer;
  And a very portentous loaf of bread。
  One would say his grief did not much oppress him。
  Here's to the health of the Prince; God bless him!
  He drinks。
  Ha! it buzzes and stings like a hornet!
  And what a scene there; through the door!
  The forest behind and the garden before;
  And midway an old man of threescore;
  With a wife and children that caress him。
  Let me try still further to cheer and adorn it
  With a merry; echoing blast of my cornet!
  Goes out blowing his horn。
  THE CASTLE OF VAUTSBERG ON THE RHINE
  PRINCE HENRY and ELSIE standing on the terrace at evening。
  The sound of tells heard from a distance。
  PRINCE HENRY。
  We are alone。  The wedding guests
  Ride down the hill; with plumes and cloaks;
  And the descending dark invests
  The Niederwald; and all the nests
  Among its hoar and haunted oaks。
  ELSIE。
  What bells are those; that ring so slow;
  So mellow; musical; and low?
  PRINCE HENRY。
  They are the bells of Geisenheim;
  That with their melancholy chime
  Ring out the curfew of the sun。
  ELSIE。
  Listen; beloved。
  PRINCE HENRY。
  They are done!
  Dear Elsie! many years ago
  Those same soft bells at eventide
  Rang in the ears of Charlemagne;
  As; seated by Fastrada's side
  At Ingelheim; in all his pride
  He heard their sound with secret pain。
  ELSIE。
  Their voices only speak to me
  Of peace and deep tranquillity;
  And endless confidence in thee!
  PRINCE HENRY。
  Thou knowest the story of her ring;
  How; when the court went back to Aix;
  Fastrada died; and how the king
  Sat watching by her night and day;
  Till into one of the blue lakes;
  Which water that delicious land;
  They cast the ring; drawn from her hand:
  And the great monarch sat serene
  And sad beside the fated shore;
  Nor left the land forevermore。
  ELSIE。
  That was true love。
  PRINCE HENRY。
  For him the queen
  Ne'er did what thou hast done for me。
  ELSIE。
  Wilt thou as fond and faithful be?
  Wilt thou so love me after death?
  PRINCE HENRY。
  In life's delight; in death's dismay;
  In storm and sunshine; night and day;
  In health; in sickness; in decay;
  Here and hereafter; I am thine!
  Thou hast Fastrada's ring。  Beneath
  the calm; blue waters of thine eyes;
  Deep in thy steadfast soul it lies;
  And; undisturbed by this world's breath;
  With magic light its jewels shine!
  This golden ring; which thou hast worn
  Upon thy finger since the morn;
  Is but a symbol and a semblance;
  An outward fashion; a remembrance;
  Of what thou wearest within unseen;
  O my Fastrada; O my queen!
  Behold! the hill…trips all aglow
  With purple and with amethyst;
  While the whole valley deep below
  Is filled; and seems to overflow;
  With a fast…rising tide of mist。
  The evening air grows damp and chill;
  Let us go in。
  ELSIE。
  Ah; not so soon。
  See yonder fire!  It is the moon
  Slow rising o'er the eastern hill。
  It glimmers on the forest tips
  And through the dewy foliage drips
  In little rivulets of light;
  And makes the heart in love with night。
  PRINCE HENRY。
  Oft on this terrace; when the day
  Was closing; have I stood and gazed;
  And seen the landscape fade away;
  And the white vapors rise and drown
  Hamlet and vineyard; tower and town;
  While far above the hill…tops blazed。
  But then another hand than thine
  Was gently held and clasped in mine;
  Another head upon my breast
  Was laid; as thine is now; at rest。
  Why dost thou lift those tender eyes
  With so much sorrow and surprise?
  A minstrel's; not a maiden's hand;
  Was that which in my own was pressed;
  A manly form usurped thy place;
  A beautiful; but bearded face;
  That now is in the Holy Land;
  Yet in my memory from afar
  Is shining on us like a star。
  But linger not。  For while I speak;
  A sheeted spectre white and tall;
  The cold mist climbs the castle wall;
  And lays his hand upon thy cheek!
  They go in。
  EPILOGUE
  THE TWO RECORDING ANGELS ASCENDING
  THE ANGEL OF GOOD DEEDS; with closed book。
  God sent his messenger the rain;
  And said unto the mountain brook;
  〃Rise up; and from thy caverns look
  And leap; with naked; snow…white feet;
  From the cool hills into the heat
  Of the broad; arid plain。
  God sent his messenger of faith;
  And whispered in the maiden's heart;
  〃Rise up and look from where thou art;
  And scatter with unselfish hands
  Thy freshness on the barren sands
  And solitudes of Death。
  O beauty of holiness;
  Of self…forgetfulness; of lowliness!
  O power of meekness;
  Whose very gentleness and weakness
  Are like the yielding; but irresistible air!
  Upon the pages
  Of the sealed volume that I bear;
  The deed divine
  Is written in characters of gold;
  That never shall grow old;
  But through all ages
  Burn and shine;
  With soft effulgence!
  O God! it is thy indulgence
  That fills the world with the bliss
  Of a good deed like this!
  THE ANGEL OF EVIL DEEDS; with open book。
  Not yet; not yet
  Is the red sun wholly set;
  But evermore recedes;
  While open still I bear
  The Book of Evil Deeds;
  To let the breathings of the upper air
  Visit its pages and erase
  The records from its face!
  Fainter and fainter as I gaze
  In the broad blaze
  The glimmering landscape shines;
  And below me the black river
  Is hidden by wreaths of vapor!
  Fainter and fainter the black lines
  Begin to quiver
  Along the whitening surface of the paper;
  Shade after shade
  The terrible words grow faint and fade;
  And in their place
  Runs a white space!
  Down goes the sun!
  But the soul of one;
  Who by repentance
  hath escaped the dreadful sentence;
  Shines bright below me as I look。
  It is the end!
  With closed Book
  To God do I ascend。
  Lo! over the mountain steeps
  A dark; gigantic shadow sweeps
  Beneath my feet;
  A blackness inwardly brightening
  With sullen heat;
  As a storm…cloud lurid with lightning。
  And a cry of lamentation;
  Repeated and again repeated;
  Deep and loud
  As the reverberation
  Of cloud answering unto cloud;
  Swells and rolls away in the distance;
  As if the sheeted
  Lightning retreated。
  Baffled and thwarted by the wind's resistance。
  It is Lucifer;
  The son of mystery;
  And since God suffers him to be;
  He; too; is God's minister。
  And labors for some good
  By us not understood!
  SECOND INTERLUDE
  MARTIN LUTHER
  A CHAMBER IN THE WARTBURG。  MORNING。  MARTIN LUTHER WRITING。
  MARTIN LUTHER。
  Our God; a Tower of Strength is He;
  A goodly wall and weapon;
  From all our need He helps us free;
  That now to us doth happen。
  The old evil foe
  Doth in earnest grow;
  In grim armor dight;
  Much guile and great might;
  On earth there is none like him。
  Oh yes; a tower of strength indeed;
  A present help in all our need;
  A sword and buckler is our God。
  Innocent men have walked unshod
  O'er burning ploughshares; and have trod
  Unharmed on serpents in their path;
  And laughed to scorn the Devil's wrath!
  Safe in this Wartburg tower I stan