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The Poetry of D. H. Lawrence. D. H. LawrenceЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Poetry of D. H. Lawrence - D. H. Lawrence


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Of trousers fray

       On the thin bare shins of a man who uneasily lies.

       The balls of five red toes

       As red and dirty, bare

       Young birds forsaken and left in a nest of mud—

       Newspaper sheets enclose

       Some limbs like parcels, and tear

       When the sleeper stirs or turns on the ebb of the

       flood—

       One heaped mound

       Of a woman's knees

       As she thrusts them upward under the ruffled skirt—

       And a curious dearth of sound

       In the presence of these

       Wastrels that sleep on the flagstones without any

       hurt.

       Over two shadowless, shameless faces

       Stark on the heap

       Travels the light as it tilts in its paces

       Gone in one leap.

       At the feet of the sleepers, watching,

       Stand those that wait

       For a place to lie down; and still as they stand,

       they sleep,

       Wearily catching

       The flood's slow gait

       Like men who are drowned, but float erect in the

       deep.

       Oh, the singing mansions,

       Golden-lighted tall

       Trams that pass, blown ruddily down the night!

       The bridge on its stanchions

       Stoops like a pall

       To this human blight.

       On the outer pavement, slowly,

       Theatre people pass,

       Holding aloft their umbrellas that flash and are

       bright

       Like flowers of infernal moly

       Over nocturnal grass

       Wetly bobbing and drifting away on our sight.

       And still by the rotten

       Row of shattered feet,

       Outcasts keep guard.

       Forgotten,

       Forgetting, till fate shall delete

       One from the ward.

       The factories on the Surrey side

       Are beautifully laid in black on a gold-grey sky.

       The river's invisible tide

       Threads and thrills like ore that is wealth to the eye.

       And great gold midges

       Cross the chasm

       At the bridges

       Above intertwined plasm.

      Winter In The Boulevard

       Table of Contents

      THE frost has settled down upon the trees

       And ruthlessly strangled off the fantasies

       Of leaves that have gone unnoticed, swept like old

       Romantic stories now no more to be told.

       The trees down the boulevard stand naked in

       thought,

       Their abundant summery wordage silenced, caught

       In the grim undertow; naked the trees confront

       Implacable winter's long, cross-questioning brunt.

       Has some hand balanced more leaves in the depths

       of the twigs?

       Some dim little efforts placed in the threads of the

       birch?—

       It is only the sparrows, like dead black leaves on

       the sprigs,

       Sitting huddled against the cerulean, one flesh with

       their perch.

       The clear, cold sky coldly bethinks itself.

       Like vivid thought the air spins bright, and all

       Trees, birds, and earth, arrested in the after-thought

       Awaiting the sentence out from the welkin brought.

      School On The Outskirts

       Table of Contents

      How different, in the middle of snows, the great

       school rises red!

       A red rock silent and shadowless, clung round

       with clusters of shouting lads,

       Some few dark-cleaving the doorway, souls that

       cling as the souls of the dead

       In stupor persist at the gates of life, obstinate

       dark monads.

       This new red rock in a waste of white rises against

       the day

       With shelter now, and with blandishment, since

       the winds have had their way

       And laid the desert horrific of silence and snow on

       the world of mankind,

       School now is the rock in this weary land the winter

       burns and makes blind.

      Sickness

       Table of Contents

      WAVING slowly before me, pushed into the dark,

       Unseen my hands explore the silence, drawing the

       bark

       Of my body slowly behind.

       Nothing to meet my fingers but the fleece of night

       Invisible blinding my face and my eyes! What if

       in their flight

       My hands should touch the door!

       What if I suddenly stumble, and push the door

       Open, and a great grey dawn swirls over my feet,

       before

       I can draw back!

       What if unwitting I set the door of eternity wide

       And am swept away in the horrible dawn, am gone

       down the tide

       Of eternal hereafter!

       Catch my hands, my darling, between your breasts.

       Take them away from their venture, before fate

       wrests

       The meaning out of them.

      Everlasting Flowers

       Table of Contents


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