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The Complete Poetical Works. Томас ХардиЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Complete Poetical Works - Томас Харди


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Amidst thy fellow-thralls

       No friendly shade thy shade shall company!

      Catullus: XXXI

       Table of Contents

      (After passing Sirmione, April 1887.)

      Sirmio, thou dearest dear of strands

       That Neptune strokes in lake and sea,

       With what high joy from stranger lands

       Doth thy old friend set foot on thee!

       Yea, barely seems it true to me

       That no Bithynia holds me now,

       But calmly and assuringly

       Around me stretchest homely Thou.

      Is there a scene more sweet than when

       Our clinging cares are undercast,

       And, worn by alien moils and men,

       The long untrodden sill repassed,

       We press the pined for couch at last,

       And find a full repayment there?

       Then hail, sweet Sirmio; thou that wast,

       And art, mine own unrivalled Fair!

      After Schiller

       Table of Contents

      Knight, a true sister-love

       This heart retains;

       Ask me no other love,

       That way lie pains!

      Calm must I view thee come,

       Calm see thee go;

       Tale-telling tears of thine

       I must not know!

      Song From Heine

       Table of Contents

      I scanned her picture dreaming,

       Till each dear line and hue

       Was imaged, to my seeming,

       As if it lived anew.

      Her lips began to borrow

       Their former wondrous smile;

       Her fair eyes, faint with sorrow,

       Grew sparkling as erstwhile.

      Such tears as often ran not

       Ran then, my love, for thee;

       And O, believe I cannot

       That thou are lost to me!

      From Victor Hugo

       Table of Contents

      Child, were I king, I’d yield my royal rule,

       My chariot, sceptre, vassal-service due,

       My crown, my porphyry-basined waters cool,

       My fleets, whereto the sea is but a pool,

       For a glance from you!

      Love, were I God, the earth and its heaving airs,

       Angels, the demons abject under me,

       Vast chaos with its teeming womby lairs,

       Time, space, all would I give—aye, upper spheres,

       For a kiss from thee!

      Cardinal Bembo’s Epitaph on Raphael

       Table of Contents

      Here’s one in whom Nature feared—faint at such vying—

       Eclipse while he lived, and decease at his dying.

      Retrospect

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      I

      I have lived with shades so long,

       And talked to them so oft,

       Since forth from cot and croft

       I went mankind among,

       That sometimes they

       In their dim style

       Will pause awhile

       To hear my say;

      II

      And take me by the hand,

       And lead me through their rooms

       In the To-be, where Dooms

       Half-wove and shapeless stand:

       And show from there

       The dwindled dust

       And rot and rust

       Of things that were.

      III

      “Now turn,” spake they to me

       One day: “Look whence we came,

       And signify his name

       Who gazes thence at thee.”—

       —“Nor name nor race

       Know I, or can,”

       I said, “Of man

       So commonplace.

      IV

      “He moves me not at all;

       I note no ray or jot

       Of rareness in his lot,

       Or star exceptional.

       Into the dim

       Dead throngs around

       He’ll sink, nor sound

       Be left of him.”

      V

      “Yet,” said they, “his frail speech,

       Hath accents pitched like thine—

       Thy mould and his define

       A likeness each to each—

       But go! Deep pain

       Alas, would be

       His name to thee,

       And told in vain!”

      Feb. 2, 1899.

      Memory and I

       Table of Contents

      “O memory, where is now my youth,

       Who used to say that life was truth?”

      “I saw him in a crumbled cot

       Beneath


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