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Satires of Circumstance, Lyrics and Reveries, with Miscellaneous Pieces. Томас ХардиЧитать онлайн книгу.

Satires of Circumstance, Lyrics and Reveries, with Miscellaneous Pieces - Томас Харди


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       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      Plunging and labouring on in a tide of visions,

       Dolorous and dear,

       Forward I pushed my way as amid waste waters

       Stretching around,

       Through whose eddies there glimmered the customed landscape

       Yonder and near,

      Blotted to feeble mist. And the coomb and the upland

       Foliage-crowned,

       Ancient chalk-pit, milestone, rills in the grass-flat

       Stroked by the light,

       Seemed but a ghost-like gauze, and no substantial

       Meadow or mound.

      What were the infinite spectacles bulking foremost

       Under my sight,

       Hindering me to discern my paced advancement

       Lengthening to miles;

       What were the re-creations killing the daytime

       As by the night?

      O they were speechful faces, gazing insistent,

       Some as with smiles,

       Some as with slow-born tears that brinily trundled

       Over the wrecked

       Cheeks that were fair in their flush-time, ash now with anguish,

       Harrowed by wiles.

      Yes, I could see them, feel them, hear them, address them—

       Halo-bedecked—

       And, alas, onwards, shaken by fierce unreason,

       Rigid in hate,

       Smitten by years-long wryness born of misprision,

       Dreaded, suspect.

      Then there would breast me shining sights, sweet seasons

       Further in date;

       Instruments of strings with the tenderest passion

       Vibrant, beside

       Lamps long extinguished, robes, cheeks, eyes with the earth’s crust

       Now corporate.

      Also there rose a headland of hoary aspect

       Gnawed by the tide,

       Frilled by the nimb of the morning as two friends stood there

       Guilelessly glad—

       Wherefore they knew not—touched by the fringe of an ecstasy

       Scantly descried.

      Later images too did the day unfurl me,

       Shadowed and sad,

       Clay cadavers of those who had shared in the dramas,

       Laid now at ease,

       Passions all spent, chiefest the one of the broad brow

       Sepulture-clad.

      So did beset me scenes miscalled of the bygone,

       Over the leaze,

       Past the clump, and down to where lay the beheld ones;

      —Yea, as the rhyme

       Sung by the sea-swell, so in their pleading dumbness

       Captured me these.

      For, their lost revisiting manifestations

       In their own time

       Much had I slighted, caring not for their purport,

       Seeing behind

       Things more coveted, reckoned the better worth calling

       Sweet, sad, sublime.

      Thus do they now show hourly before the intenser

       Stare of the mind

       As they were ghosts avenging their slights by my bypast

       Body-borne eyes,

       Show, too, with fuller translation than rested upon them

       As living kind.

      Hence wag the tongues of the passing people, saying

       In their surmise,

       “Ah—whose is this dull form that perambulates, seeing nought

       Round him that looms

       Whithersoever his footsteps turn in his farings,

       Save a few tombs?”

       Table of Contents

      That night your great guns, unawares,

       Shook all our coffins as we lay,

       And broke the chancel window-squares,

       We thought it was the Judgment-day

      And sat upright. While drearisome

       Arose the howl of wakened hounds:

       The mouse let fall the altar-crumb,

       The worms drew back into the mounds,

      The glebe cow drooled. Till God called, “No;

       It’s gunnery practice out at sea

       Just as before you went below;

       The world is as it used to be:

      “All nations striving strong to make

       Red war yet redder. Mad as hatters

       They do no more for Christés sake

       Than you who are helpless in such matters.

      “That this is not the judgment-hour

       For some of them’s a blessed thing,

       For if it were they’d have to scour

       Hell’s floor for so much threatening …

      “Ha, ha. It will be warmer when

       I blow the trumpet (if indeed

       I ever do; for you are men,

       And rest eternal sorely need).”

      So down we lay again. “I wonder,

       Will the world ever saner be,”

       Said one, “than when He sent us under

       In our indifferent century!”

      And many a skeleton shook his head.

       “Instead of preaching forty year,”

       My neighbour Parson Thirdly said,

       “I wish I had stuck to pipes and beer.”

      Again the guns disturbed the hour,

       Roaring their readiness to avenge,

       As far inland as Stourton Tower,

       And Camelot, and starlit Stonehenge.

      April 1914.

       Table of Contents

      (Lines


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