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第2章

50 bab ballads-第2章

小说: 50 bab ballads 字数: 每页4000字

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Why in the world I sing

This tawdry; tinselled thing?



No airy fairy she;

As she hangs in arsenic green

From a highly impossible tree

In a highly impossible scene

(Herself not over…clean)。

For fays don't suffer; I'm told;

From bunions; coughs; or cold。



And stately dames that bring

Their daughters there to see;

Pronounce the 〃dancing thing〃

No better than she should be;

With her skirt at her shameful knee;

And her painted; tainted phiz:

Ah; matron; which of us is?



(And; in sooth; it oft occurs

That while these matrons sigh;

Their dresses are lower than hers;

And sometimes half as high;

And their hair is hair they buy;

And they use their glasses; too;

In a way she'd blush to do。)



But change her gold and green

For a coarse merino gown;

And see her upon the scene

Of her home; when coaxing down

Her drunken father's frown;

In his squalid cheerless den:

She's a fairy truly; then!







Ballad: TO A LITTLE MAID … BY A POLICEMAN。







COME with me; little maid;

Nay; shrink not; thus afraid …

I'll harm thee not!

Fly not; my love; from me …

I have a home for thee …

A fairy grot;

Where mortal eye

Can rarely pry;

There shall thy dwelling be!



List to me; while I tell

The pleasures of that cell;

Oh; little maid!

What though its couch be rude;

Homely the only food

Within its shade?

No thought of care

Can enter there;

No vulgar swain intrude!



Come with me; little maid;

Come to the rocky shade

I love to sing;

Live with us; maiden rare …

Come; for we 〃want〃 thee there;

Thou elfin thing;

To work thy spell;

In some cool cell

In stately Pentonville!







Ballad: THE TROUBADOUR。







A TROUBADOUR he played

Without a castle wall;

Within; a hapless maid

Responded to his call。



〃Oh; willow; woe is me!

Alack and well…a…day!

If I were only free

I'd hie me far away!〃



Unknown her face and name;

But this he knew right well;

The maiden's wailing came

From out a dungeon cell。



A hapless woman lay

Within that dungeon grim …

That fact; I've heard him say;

Was quite enough for him。



〃I will not sit or lie;

Or eat or drink; I vow;

Till thou art free as I;

Or I as pent as thou。〃



Her tears then ceased to flow;

Her wails no longer rang;

And tuneful in her woe

The prisoned maiden sang:



〃Oh; stranger; as you play;

I recognize your touch;

And all that I can say

Is; thank you very much。〃



He seized his clarion straight;

And blew thereat; until

A warden oped the gate。

〃Oh; what might be your will?〃



〃I've come; Sir Knave; to see

The master of these halls:

A maid unwillingly

Lies prisoned in their walls。〃'



With barely stifled sigh

That porter drooped his head;

With teardrops in his eye;

〃A many; sir;〃 he said。



He stayed to hear no more;

But pushed that porter by;

And shortly stood before

SIR HUGH DE PECKHAM RYE。



SIR HUGH he darkly frowned;

〃What would you; sir; with me?〃

The troubadour he downed

Upon his bended knee。



〃I've come; DE PECKHAM RYE;

To do a Christian task;

You ask me what would I?

It is not much I ask。



〃Release these maidens; sir;

Whom you dominion o'er …

Particularly her

Upon the second floor。



〃And if you don't; my lord〃 …

He here stood bolt upright;

And tapped a tailor's sword …

〃Come out; you cad; and fight!〃



SIR HUGH he called … and ran

The warden from the gate:

〃Go; show this gentleman

The maid in Forty…eight。〃



By many a cell they past;

And stopped at length before

A portal; bolted fast:

The man unlocked the door。



He called inside the gate

With coarse and brutal shout;

〃Come; step it; Forty…eight!〃

And Forty…eight stepped out。



〃They gets it pretty hot;

The maidens what we cotch …

Two years this lady's got

For collaring a wotch。〃



〃Oh; ah! … indeed … I see;〃

The troubadour exclaimed …

〃If I may make so free;

How is this castle named?



The warden's eyelids fill;

And sighing; he replied;

〃Of gloomy Pentonville

This is the female side!〃



The minstrel did not wait

The Warden stout to thank;

But recollected straight

He'd business at the Bank。







Ballad: FERDINANDO AND ELVIRA; OR; THE GENTLE PIEMAN。







PART I。





AT a pleasant evening party I had taken down to supper

One whom I will call ELVIRA; and we talked of love and TUPPER;



MR。 TUPPER and the Poets; very lightly with them dealing;

For I've always been distinguished for a strong poetic feeling。



Then we let off paper crackers; each of which contained a motto;

And she listened while I read them; till her mother told her not 

to。



Then she whispered; 〃To the ball…room we had better; dear; be 

walking;

If we stop down here much longer; really people will be talking。〃



There were noblemen in coronets; and military cousins;

There were captains by the hundred; there were baronets by dozens。



Yet she heeded not their offers; but dismissed them with a 

blessing;

Then she let down all her back hair; which had taken long in 

dressing。



Then she had convulsive sobbings in her agitated throttle;

Then she wiped her pretty eyes and smelt her pretty smelling…

bottle。



So I whispered;  〃Dear ELVIRA; say; … what can the matter be with 

you?

Does anything you've eaten; darling POPSY; disagree with you?〃



But spite of all I said; her sobs grew more and more distressing;

And she tore her pretty back hair; which had taken long in 

dressing。



Then she gazed upon the carpet; at the ceiling; then above me;

And she whispered; 〃FERDINANDO; do you really; REALLY love me?〃



〃Love you?〃 said I; then I sighed; and then I gazed upon her 

sweetly …

For I think I do this sort of thing particularly neatly。



〃Send me to the Arctic regions; or illimitable azure;

On a scientific goose…chase; with my COXWELL or my GLAISHER!



〃Tell me whither I may hie me … tell me; dear one; that I may know 



Is it up the highest Andes? down a horrible volcano?〃



But she said; 〃It isn't polar bears; or hot volcanic grottoes:

Only find out who it is that writes those lovely cracker mottoes!〃





PART II。





〃Tell me; HENRY WADSWORTH; ALFRED POET CLOSE; or MISTER TUPPER;

Do you write the bon bon mottoes my ELVIRA pulls at supper?〃



But HENRY WADSWORTH smiled; and said he had not had that honour;

And ALFRED; too; disclaimed the words that told so much upon her。



〃MISTER MARTIN TUPPER; POET CLOSE; I beg of you inform us;〃

But my question seemed to throw them both into a rage enormous。



MISTER CLOSE expressed a wish that he could only get anigh to me;

And MISTER MARTIN TUPPER sent the following reply to me:



〃A fool is bent upon a twig; but wise men dread a bandit;〃 …

Which I know was very clever; but I didn't understand it。



Seven weary years I wandered … Patagonia; China; Norway;

Till at last I sank exhausted at a pastrycook his doorway。



There were fuchsias and geraniums; and daffodils and myrtle;

So I entered; and I ordered half a basin of mock turtle。



He was plump and he was chubby; he was smooth and he was rosy;

And his little wife was pretty and particularly cosy。



And he chirped and sang; and skipped about; and laughed with 

laughter hearty …

He was wonderfully active for so very stout a party。



And I said; 〃O gentle pieman; why so very; very merry?

Is it purity of conscience; or your one…and…seven sherry?〃



But he answered; 〃I'm so happy … no profession could be dearer …

If I am not humming 'Tra! la! la!' I'm singing 'Tirer; lirer!'



〃First I go and make the patties; and the puddings; and the 

jellies;

Then I make a sugar bird…cage; which upon a table swell is;



〃Then I polish all the silver; which a supper…table lacquers;

Then I write the pretty mottoes which you find inside the 

crackers。〃 …




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