an anthology of australian verse-第16章
按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
Beyond the smoke of Asian capes;
The nameless; dauntless; dead ones lie;
And where Sierran morning shines
On summits rolling out like waves;
By many a brow of royal pines
The noisiest find quiet graves。
By lust of flesh and lust of gold;
And depth of loins and hairy breadth
Of breast; and hands to take and hold;
And boastful scorn of pain and death;
And something more of manliness
Than tamer men; and growing shame
Of shameful things; and something less
Of final faith in sword and flame
By many a battle fought for wrong;
And many a battle fought for right;
So have you grown august and strong;
Magnificent in all men's sight
A voice for which the kings have ears;
A face the craftiest statesmen scan;
A mind to mould the after years;
And mint the destinies of man!
Red sins were yours: the avid greed
Of pirate fathers; smocked as Grace;
Sent Judas missioners to read
Christ's Word to many a feebler race
False priests of Truth who made their tryst
At Mammon's shrine; and reft or slew
Some hands you taught to pray to Christ
Have prayed His curse to rest on you!
Your way has been to pluck the blade
Too readily; and train the guns。
We here; apart and unafraid
Of envious foes; are but your sons:
We stretched a heedless hand to smutch
Our spotless flag with Murder's blight
For one less sacrilegious touch
God's vengeance blasted Uzza white!
You vaunted most of forts and fleets;
And courage proved in battle…feasts;
The courage of the beast that eats
His torn and quivering fellow…beasts;
Your pride of deadliest armament
What is it but the self…same dint
Of joy with which the Caveman bent
To shape a bloodier axe of flint?
But praise to you; and more than praise
And thankfulness; for some things done;
And blessedness; and length of days
As long as earth shall last; or sun!
You first among the peoples spoke
Sharp words and angry questionings
Which burst the bonds and shed the yoke
That made your men the slaves of Kings!
You set and showed the whole world's school
The lesson it will surely read;
That each one ruled has right to rule
The alphabet of Freedom's creed
Which slowly wins it proselytes
And makes uneasier many a throne;
You taught them all to prate of Rights
In language growing like your own!
And now your holiest and best
And wisest dream of such a tie
As; holding hearts from East to West;
Shall strengthen while the years go by:
And of a time when every man
For every fellow…man will do
His kindliest; working by the plan
God set him。 May the dream come true!
And greater dreams! O Englishmen;
Be sure the safest time of all
For even the mightiest State is when
Not even the least desires its fall!
Make England stand supreme for aye;
Because supreme for peace and good;
Warned well by wrecks of yesterday
That strongest feet may slip in blood!
Arthur Patchett Martin。
Bushland
Not sweeter to the storm…tossed mariner
Is glimpse of home; where wife and children wait
To welcome him with kisses at the gate;
Than to the town…worn man the breezy stir
Of mountain winds on rugged pathless heights:
His long…pent soul drinks in the deep delights
That Nature hath in store。 The sun…kissed bay
Gleams thro' the grand old gnarled gum…tree boughs
Like burnished brass; the strong…winged bird of prey
Sweeps by; upon his lonely vengeful way
While over all; like breath of holy vows;
The sweet airs blow; and the high…vaulted sky
Looks down in pity this fair Summer day
On all poor earth…born creatures doomed to die。
Douglas Brooke Wheelton Sladen。
Under the Wattle
〃Why should not wattle do
For mistletoe?〃
Asked one they were but two
Where wattles grow。
He was her lover; too;
Who urged her so
〃Why should not wattle do
For mistletoe?〃
A rose…cheek rosier grew;
Rose…lips breathed low;
〃Since it is here; and YOU;
I hardly know
Why wattle should not do。〃
Victor James Daley。
Players
And after all and after all;
Our passionate prayers; and sighs; and tears;
Is life a reckless carnival?
And are they lost; our golden years?
Ah; no; ah; no; for; long ago;
Ere time could sear; or care could fret;
There was a youth called Romeo;
There was a maid named Juliet。
The players of the past are gone;
The races rise; the races pass;
And softly over all is drawn
The quiet Curtain of the Grass。
But when the world went wild with Spring;
What days we had! Do you forget?
When I of all the world was King;
And you were my Queen Juliet?
The things that are; the things that seem
Who shall distinguish shape from show?
The great processional; splendid dream
Of life is all I wish to know。
The gods their faces turn away
From nations and their little wars;
But we our golden drama play
Before the footlights of the stars。
There lives though Time should cease to flow;
And stars their courses should forget
There lives a grey…haired Romeo;
Who loves a golden Juliet。
Anna
The pale discrowned stacks of maize;
Like spectres in the sun;
Stand shivering nigh Avonaise;
Where all is dead and gone。
The sere leaves make a music vain;
With melancholy chords;
Like cries from some old battle…plain;
Like clash of phantom swords。
But when the maize was lush and green
With musical green waves;
She went; its plumed ranks between;
Unto the hill of graves。
There you may see sweet flowers set
O'er damsels and o'er dames
Rose; Ellen; Mary; Margaret
The sweet old quiet names。
The gravestones show in long array;
Though white or green with moss;
How linked in Life and Death are they
The Shamrock and the Cross。
The gravestones face the Golden East;
And in the morn they take
The blessing of the Great High Priest;
Before the living wake。
Who was she? Never ask her name;
Her beauty and her grace
Have passed; with her poor little shame;
Into the Silent Place。
In Avonaise; in Avonaise;
Where all is dead and done;
The folk who rest there all their days
Care not for moon or sun。
They care not; when the living pass;
Whether they sigh or smile;
They hear above their graves the grass
That sighs 〃A little while!〃
A white stone marks her small green bed
With 〃Anna〃 and 〃Adieu〃。
Madonna Mary; rest her head
On your dear lap of blue!
The Night Ride
The red sun on the lonely lands
Gazed; under clouds of rose;
As one who under knitted hands
Takes one last look and goes。
Then Pain; with her white sister Fear;
Crept nearer to my bed:
〃The sands are running; dost thou hear
Thy sobbing heart?〃 she said。
There came a rider to the gate;
And stern and clear spake he:
〃For meat or drink thou must not wait;
But rise and ride with me。〃
I waited not for meat or drink;
Or kiss; or farewell kind
But oh! my heart was sore to think
Of friends I left behind。
We rode o'er hills that seemed to sweep
Skyward like swelling waves;
The living stirred not in their sleep;
The dead slept in their graves。
And ever as we rode I heard
A moan of anguish sore
No voice of man or beast or bird;
But all of these and more。
〃Is it the moaning of the Earth?
Dark Rider; answer me!〃
〃It is the cry of life at birth〃
He answered quietly:
〃But thou canst turn a face of cheer
To good days still in store;
Thou needst not care for Pain or Fear
They cannot harm thee more。〃
Yet I rode on with sullen heart;
And said with breaking breath;
〃If thou art he I think thou art;
Then slay me now; O Death!〃
The veil was from my eyesight drawn