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第6章

sword blades & poppy seed-第6章

小说: sword blades & poppy seed 字数: 每页4000字

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 To guard your steps securely up; where streams

A faery moonshine washing pale the crowds

 Of pointed stars。  Remember not whereby

 You mount; protected; to the far…flung sky。









A Blockhead







Before me lies a mass of shapeless days;

 Unseparated atoms; and I must

 Sort them apart and live them。  Sifted dust

Covers the formless heap。  Reprieves; delays;

There are none; ever。  As a monk who prays

 The sliding beads asunder; so I thrust

 Each tasteless particle aside; and just

Begin again the task which never stays。

 And I have known a glory of great suns;

When days flashed by; pulsing with joy and fire!

Drunk bubbled wine in goblets of desire;

 And felt the whipped blood laughing as it runs!

Spilt is that liquor; my too hasty hand

Threw down the cup; and did not understand。









Stupidity







Dearest; forgive that with my clumsy touch

 I broke and bruised your rose。

 I hardly could suppose

It were a thing so fragile that my clutch

    Could kill it; thus。



It stood so proudly up upon its stem;

 I knew no thought of fear;

 And coming very near

Fell; overbalanced; to your garment's hem;

    Tearing it down。



Now; stooping; I upgather; one by one;

 The crimson petals; all

 Outspread about my fall。

They hold their fragrance still; a blood…red cone

    Of memory。



And with my words I carve a little jar

 To keep their scented dust;

 Which; opening; you must

Breathe to your soul; and; breathing; know me far

    More grieved than you。









Irony







An arid daylight shines along the beach

 Dried to a grey monotony of tone;

 And stranded jelly…fish melt soft upon

The sun…baked pebbles; far beyond their reach

Sparkles a wet; reviving sea。  Here bleach

 The skeletons of fishes; every bone

 Polished and stark; like traceries of stone;

The joints and knuckles hardened each to each。

 And they are dead while waiting for the sea;

 The moon…pursuing sea; to come again。

Their hearts are blown away on the hot breeze。

 Only the shells and stones can wait to be

 Washed bright。  For living things; who suffer pain;

May not endure till time can bring them ease。









Happiness







Happiness; to some; elation;

Is; to others; mere stagnation。

Days of passive somnolence;

At its wildest; indolence。

Hours of empty quietness;

No delight; and no distress。



Happiness to me is wine;

Effervescent; superfine。

Full of tang and fiery pleasure;

Far too hot to leave me leisure

For a single thought beyond it。

Drunk!  Forgetful!  This the bond:  it

Means to give one's soul to gain

Life's quintessence。  Even pain

Pricks to livelier living; then

Wakes the nerves to laugh again;

Rapture's self is three parts sorrow。

Although we must die to…morrow;

Losing every thought but this;

Torn; triumphant; drowned in bliss。



Happiness:  We rarely feel it。

I would buy it; beg it; steal it;

Pay in coins of dripping blood

For this one transcendent good。









The Last Quarter of the Moon







How long shall I tarnish the mirror of life;

A spatter of rust on its polished steel!

 The seasons reel

 Like a goaded wheel。

Half…numb; half…maddened; my days are strife。



The night is sliding towards the dawn;

And upturned hills crouch at autumn's knees。

 A torn moon flees

 Through the hemlock trees;

The hours have gnawed it to feed their spawn。



Pursuing and jeering the misshapen thing

A rabble of clouds flares out of the east。

 Like dogs unleashed

 After a beast;

They stream on the sky; an outflung string。



A desolate wind; through the unpeopled dark;

Shakes the bushes and whistles through empty nests;

 And the fierce unrests

 I keep as guests

Crowd my brain with corpses; pallid and stark。



Leave me in peace; O Spectres; who haunt

My labouring mind; I have fought and failed。

 I have not quailed;

 I was all unmailed

And naked I strove; 'tis my only vaunt。



The moon drops into the silver day

As waking out of her swoon she comes。

 I hear the drums

 Of millenniums

Beating the mornings I still must stay。



The years I must watch go in and out;

While I build with water; and dig in air;

 And the trumpets blare

 Hollow despair;

The shuddering trumpets of utter rout。



An atom tossed in a chaos made

Of yeasting worlds; which bubble and foam。

 Whence have I come?

 What would be home?

I hear no answer。  I am afraid!



I crave to be lost like a wind…blown flame。

Pushed into nothingness by a breath;

 And quench in a wreath

 Of engulfing death

This fight for a God; or this devil's game。









A Tale of Starvation







There once was a man whom the gods didn't love;

 And a disagreeable man was he。

He loathed his neighbours; and his neighbours hated him;

 And he cursed eternally。



He damned the sun; and he damned the stars;

 And he blasted the winds in the sky。

He sent to Hell every green; growing thing;

 And he raved at the birds as they fly。



His oaths were many; and his range was wide;

 He swore in fancy ways;

But his meaning was plain:  that no created thing

 Was other than a hurt to his gaze。



He dwelt all alone; underneath a leaning hill;

 And windows toward the hill there were none;

And on the other side they were white…washed thick;

 To keep out every spark of the sun。



When he went to market he walked all the way

 Blaspheming at the path he trod。

He cursed at those he bought of; and swore at those he sold to;

 By all the names he knew of God。



For his heart was soured in his weary old hide;

 And his hopes had curdled in his breast。

His friend had been untrue; and his love had thrown him over

 For the chinking money…bags she liked best。



The rats had devoured the contents of his grain…bin;

 The deer had trampled on his corn;

His brook had shrivelled in a summer drought;

 And his sheep had died unshorn。



His hens wouldn't lay; and his cow broke loose;

 And his old horse perished of a colic。

In the loft his wheat…bags were nibbled into holes

 By little; glutton mice on a frolic。



So he slowly lost all he ever had;

 And the blood in his body dried。

Shrunken and mean he still lived on;

 And cursed that future which had lied。



One day he was digging; a spade or two;

 As his aching back could lift;

When he saw something glisten at the bottom of the trench;

 And to get it out he made great shift。



So he dug; and he delved; with care and pain;

 And the veins in his forehead stood taut。

At the end of an hour; when every bone cracked;

 He gathered up what he had sought。



A dim old vase of crusted glass;

 Prismed while it lay buried deep。

Shifting reds and greens; like a pigeon's neck;

 At the touch of the sun began to leap。



It was dull in the tree…shade; but glowing in the light;

 Flashing like an opal…stone;

Carved into a flagon; and the colours glanced and ran;

 Where at first there had seemed to be none。



It had handles on each side to bear it up;

 And a belly for the gurgling wine。

Its neck was slender; and its mouth was wide;

 And its lip was curled and fine。



The old man saw it in the sun's bright stare

 And the colours started up through the crust;

And he who had cursed at the yellow sun

 Held the flask to it and wiped away the dust。



And he bore the flask to the brightest spot;

 Where the shadow of the hill fell clear;

And he turned the flask; and he looked at the flask;

 And the sun shone without his sneer。



Then he carried it home; and put it on a shelf;

 But it was only grey in the gloom。

So he fetched a pail; and a bit of cloth;

 And he went outside with a broom。



And he washed his windows just to let the sun

 Lie upon his new…found vase;

And when evening came; he moved it down

 And put it on a table near the place



Wher

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