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第13章

r. f. murray-his poems with a memoir-第13章

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With folded arms unmoved upon the breast;

Beyond the noise of sorrow and of crying;

Beyond the dread of dreaming; shall we rest?



Or shall there come at last desire of waking;

To walk again on hillsides that we know;

When sunrise through the cold white mist is breaking;

Or in the stillness of the after…glow?



Shall there be yearning for the sound of voices;

The sight of faces; and the touch of hands;

The will that works; the spirit that rejoices;

The heart that feels; the mind that understands?



Shall dreams and memories crowding from the distance;

Shall ghosts of old ambition or of mirth;

Create for us a shadow of existence;

A dim reflection of the life of earth?



And being dead; and powerless to recover

The substance of the show whereon we gaze;

Shall we be likened to the hapless lover;

Who broods upon the unreturning days?



Not so:  for we have known how swift to perish

Is man's delight when youth and health take wing;

Until the winter leaves him nought to cherish

But recollections of a vanished spring。



Dream as we may; desire of life shall never

Disturb our slumbers in the house of sleep。

Yet oh; to think we may not greet for ever

The one or two that; when we leave them; weep!







THE OUTCAST'S FAREWELL







The sun is banished;

The daylight vanished;

No rosy traces

Are left behind。

Here in the meadow

I watch the shadow

Of forms and faces

Upon your blind。



Through swift transitions;

In new positions;

My eyes still follow

One shape most fair。

My heart delaying

Awhile; is playing

With pleasures hollow;

Which mock despair。



I feel so lonely;

I long once only

To pass an hour

With you; O sweet!

To touch your fingers;

Where fragrance lingers

From some rare flower;

And kiss your feet。



But not this even

To me is given。

Of all sad mortals

Most sad am I;

Never to meet you;

Never to greet you;

Nor pass your portals

Before I die。



All men scorn me;

Not one will mourn me;

When from their city

I pass away。

Will you to…morrow

Recall with sorrow

Him whom with pity

You saw to…day?



Outcast and lonely;

One thing only

Beyond misgiving

I hold for true;

That; had you known me;

You would have shown me

A life worth living …

A life for you。



Yes:  five years younger

My manhood's hunger

Had you come filling

With plenty sweet;

My life so nourished;

Had grown and flourished;

Had God been willing

That we should meet。



How vain to fashion

From dreams and passion

The rich existence

Which might have been!

Can God's own power

Recall the hour;

Or bridge the distance

That lies between?



Before the morning;

From pain and scorning

I sail death's river

To sleep or hell。

To you is given

The life of heaven。

Farewell for ever;

Farewell; farewell!







YET A LITTLE SLEEP







Beside the drowsy streams that creep

Within this island of repose;

Oh; let us rest from cares and woes;

Oh; let us fold our hands to sleep!



Is it ignoble; then; to keep

Awhile from where the rough wind blows;

And all is strife; and no man knows

What end awaits him on the deep?



The voyager may rest awhile;

When rest invites; and yet may be

Neither a sluggard nor a craven。

With strength renewed he quits the isle;

And putting out again to sea;

Makes sail for his desired haven。







LOST LIBERTY







Of our own will we are not free;

When freedom lies within our power。

We wait for some decisive hour;

To rise and take our liberty。



Still we delay; content to be

Imprisoned in our own high tower。

What is it but a strong…built bower?

Ours are the warders; ours the key。



But we through indolence grow weak。

Our warders; fed with power so long;

Become at last our lords indeed。

We vainly threaten; vainly seek

To move their ruth。  The bars are strong。

We dash against them till we bleed。







AN AFTERTHOUGHT







You found my life; a poor lame bird

That had no heart to sing;

You would not speak the magic word

To give it voice and wing。



Yet sometimes; dreaming of that hour;

I think; if you had known

How much my life was in your power;

It might have sung and flown。







TO J。 R。







Last Sunday night I read the saddening story

Of the unanswered love of fair Elaine;

The ‘faith unfaithful' and the joyless glory

Of Lancelot; ‘groaning in remorseful pain。'



I thought of all those nights in wintry weather;

Those Sunday nights that seem not long ago;

When we two read our Poet's words together;

Till summer warmth within our hearts did glow。



Ah; when shall we renew that bygone pleasure;

Sit down together at our Merlin's feet;

Drink from one cup the overflowing measure;

And find; in sharing it; the draught more sweet?



That time perchance is far; beyond divining。

Till then we drain the ‘magic cup' apart;

Yet not apart; for hope and memory twining

Smile upon each; uniting heart to heart。







THE TEMPTED SOUL







Weak soul; by sense still led astray;

Why wilt thou parley with the foe?

He seeks to work thine overthrow;

And thou; poor fool! dost point the way。



Hast thou forgotten many a day;

When thou exulting forth didst go;

And ere the noon wert lying low;

A broken and defenceless prey?



If thou wouldst live; avoid his face;

Dwell in the wilderness apart;

And gather force for vanquishing;

Ere thou returnest to his place。

Then arm; and with undaunted heart

Give battle; till he own thee king。







YOUTH RENEWED







When one who has wandered out of the way

Which leads to the hills of joy;

Whose heart has grown both cold and grey;

Though it be but the heart of a boy …

When such a one turns back his feet

From the valley of shadow and pain;

Is not the sunshine passing sweet;

When a man grows young again?



How gladly he mounts up the steep hillside;

With strength that is born anew;

And in his veins; like a full springtide;

The blood streams through and through。

And far above is the summit clear;

And his heart to be there is fain;

And all too slowly it comes more near

When a man grows young again。



He breathes the pure sweet mountain breath;

And it widens all his heart;

And life seems no more kin to death;

Nor death the better part。

And in tones that are strong and rich and deep

He sings a grand refrain;

For the soul has awakened from mortal sleep;

When a man grows young again。







VANITY OF VANITIES







Be ye happy; if ye may;

In the years that pass away。

Ye shall pass and be forgot;

And your place shall know you not。



Other generations rise;

With the same hope in their eyes

That in yours is kindled now;

And the same light on their brow。



They shall see the selfsame sun

That your eyes now gaze upon;

They shall breathe the same sweet air;

And shall reck not who ye were。



Yet they too shall fade at last

In the twilight of the past;

They and you alike shall be

Lost from the world's memory。



Then; while yet ye breathe and live;

Drink the cup that life can give。

Be ye happy; if ye may;

In the years that pass away;



Ere the golden bowl be broken;

Ere ye pass and leave no token;

Ere the silver cord be loosed;

Ere ye turn again to dust。



‘And shall this be all;' ye cry;

‘But to eat and drink and die?

If no more than this there be;

Vanity of vanity!'



Yea; all things are vanity;

And what else but vain are ye?

Ye who boast yourselves the kings

Over all created things。



Kings! whence came your right to reign?

Ye shall be dethroned again。

Yet for this; your one brief hour;

Wield your mockery of power。



Dupes of Fate; that treads you down

Wear awhile your tinsel crown

Be ye happy; if ye may;

In the years that pass away。



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