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anthology of massachusetts poets-第3部分
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And languid Follies smiled from every nook。
I saw an artist in a world of dreams;
His rainbow rising from his radiant task;
To throw its magic prism beams
O'er Fancy's changeful masque and counter…
masque。
I saw Toilstooping underneath a world
Whereon his foster…brothers lighter tread;
His skyward pinions ever closer furled
Before the grim necessity of bread!
I saw a sinner working hard to be
Worthy his death…wage from the mint of time;
I saw a sailor; unto whom the sea
Was hearth and hope and love and wedding…
chime。
I saw a mother living in her child
I saw a saint among his fellow men
Brave soldiery before my eyes defiled
And solemn…hearted scholarsSudden then
I cried: 〃The stars are no less neighborly
In their ethereal remoteness swung;
Than these near human orbits wherein we
Live out our lives and speak our chosen tongue!
〃Love seek through allless there be one
Least soul unlit within the night
And over all; the selfsame sun
Give each creation light!〃
MARTHA GILBERT DICKINSON BIANCHI
THE RIOT
YOU may think my life is quiet。
I find it full of change;
An ever…varied diet;
As piquant as 'tis strange。
Wild thoughts are always flying;
Like sparks across my brain;
Now flashing out; now dying;
To kindle soon again。
Fine fancies set me thrilling;
And subtle monsters creep
Before my sight unwilling:
They even haunt my sleep。
One broad; perpetual riot
Enfolds me night and day。
You think my life is quiet?
You don't know what you say。
GAMALIEL BRADFORD
HUNGER
I'VE been a hopeless sinner; but I understand a
saint;
Their bend of weary knees and their con…
tortions long and faint;
And the endless pricks of conscience; like a hundred
thousand pins;
A real perpetual penance for imaginary sins。
I love to wander widely; but I understand a cell;
Where you tell and tell your beads because you've
nothing else to tell;
Where the crimson joy of flesh; with all its wild
fantastic tricks;
Is forgotten in the blinding glory of the crucifix。
I cannot speak for others; but my inmost soul is
torn
With a battle of desires making all my life forlorn。
There are moments when I would untread the paths
that I have trod。
I'm a haunter of the devil; but I hunger after God。
GAMALIEL BRADFORD
EXIT GOD
Of old our father's God was real;
Something they almost saw;
Which kept them to a stern ideal
And scourged them into awe。
They walked the narrow path of right
Most vigilantly well;
Because they feared eternal night
And boiling depths of Hell。
Now Hell has wholly boiled away
And God become a shade。
There is no place for him to stay
In all the world He made。
The followers of William James
Still let the Lord exist;
And call Him by imposing names;
A venerable list。
But nerve and muscle only count;
Gray matter of the brain;
And an astonishing amount
Of inconvenient pain。
I sometimes wish that God were back
In this dark world and wide;
For though sonic virtues He might lack;
He had his pleasant side。
GAMALIEL BRADFORD
ROUSSEAU
THAT odd; fantastic ass; Rousseau;
Declared himself unique。
How men persist in doing so;
Puzzles me more than Greek。
The sins that tarnish whore and thief
Beset me every day。
My most ethereal belief
Inhabits common clay。
GAMALIEL BRADFORD
JOHN MASEFIELD
I
MASEFIELD (HIMSELF)
GOD said; and frowned; as He looked on
Shropshire clay:
〃Alone; 'twont do; composite; would I make
This man…child rare; 'twere well; methinks; to take
A handful from the Stratford tomb; and weigh
A few of Shelley's ashes; Bunyan may
Contribute; too; and; for my sweet Son's sake;
I'll visit Avalon; then; let me slake
The whole with Wyclif…water from the Bay。
A sailor; he! Too godly; though; I fear;
Offset it with tobacco! Next; I'll find
Hedge…roses; star…dust; and a vagrant's mind;
His mother's heart now let me breathe upon;
When west winds blow; I'll whisper in her ear:
〃Apocalypse awaits him; call him John!〃
II
HIS PORTRAIT
A Man of Sorrows! with such haunted eyes;
I trow; the Master looked across the lake;
Looked from the Judas…heart; so soon to make
Of Him the world's historic sacrifice;
Moreover; as I gaze; do more arise;
Great souls; great pallid ghosts of pain; who wake
And wander yet; all; weary men who brake
Their hearts; all hemlock…drunk; with growing
wise:
Hudson adrift; Defoe; the Wandering Jew;
Tannhauser; Faust; Andrea; phantoms; all;
In Masefield's eyes you lodge; and to the wall
I turn you;hand a…tremble;lest you make
Of mine own stricken eyes a mirror; too。
Wherein the sad world's sadder for your sake。
III
HIS 〃DAUBER〃
O Masefield's 〃Dauber!〃 You; who being dead;
Yet speak: heroic; dauntless; flaming soul;
Too suddenly snuffed out! Here take fresh toll
Of cognizance; and; in your ocean bed;
Serenely rest; assured that who has read
What you would fain have pictured of the Pole
Would gladly match your part against the whole
Of many a modern artist; Paris…bred。
And more than this: if you; indeed; are his;
Then; by a dual truth; he; too; is yours;
For; marked and credited by what endures;
Were it the only thing; which bears his name;
(O deathless Soul; I speak you true in this!)
〃The Dauber〃 has brought Masefield to his fame。
IV
HIS 〃GALLIPOLI〃
〃Small wonder;〃 speaks my pensive self; 〃that he
Whose passion 'tis to sing of men who fail;
(Belabored; broken by The Unseen Flail)
Small wonder that be makes Gallipoli
His fervent text; for could there be
A costlier failure in Earth's shuddering tale?
Think of heroic Sulva's bloody swale;
Of Anzac's tortured thirst and agony!〃
But as I read; protesting voices cry: 〃Not we;
Not we; who fell among the daffodils;
Who conquered Death among those blistered hills;
And found our glory after mortal pain;
Not we; who failed and lost Gallipoli;
The sad; strange failure theirs who mourn in vain!〃
V
HIS MEAD
So; Masefield; have your royal words once more
Called forth the praise of men; where praise is due;
Your great elegiac; tragically true;
Must leave all Britain prouder than before;
And; in spite of all that breaking hearts deplore;
And all that anguished consciences must rue;
One arrowed gladness surely pierces through
》From London's centre to Canadian shore:
When England; sobbing; mourns Gallipoli;
When warm tears flow for Rupert Brooke
And all the splendid Youth her error took
As hostage from the fields of daffodils;
Let this a present; living solace be:
You are not sleeping in those cruel hills!
AMY BRIDGEMAN
1620…1920
BEFORE him rolls the dark; relentless ocean;
Behind him stretch the cold and barren sands;
Wrapt in the ma
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