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the complete poetical works-第128章

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With that terror in the eye

That is only seen in those

Who amid their wants and woes

Hear the sound of doors that close;

And of feet that pass them by;

Grown familiar with disfavor;

Grown familiar with the savor

Of the bread by which men die!

But to…day; they knew not why;

Like the gate of Paradise

Seemed the convent sate to rise;

Like a sacrament divine

Seemed to them the bread and wine。

In his heart the Monk was praying;

Thinking of the homeless poor;

What they suffer and endure;

What we see not; what we see;

And the inward voice was saying:

〃Whatsoever thing thou doest

To the least of mine and lowest;

That thou doest unto me!〃



Unto me! but had the Vision

Come to him in beggar's clothing;

Come a mendicant imploring;

Would he then have knelt adoring;

Or have listened with derision;

And have turned away with loathing。



Thus his conscience put the question;

Full of troublesome suggestion;

As at length; with hurried pace;

Towards his cell he turned his face;

And beheld the convent bright

With a supernatural light;

Like a luminous cloud expanding

Over floor and wall and ceiling。



But he paused with awe…struck feeling

At the threshold of his door;

For the Vision still was standing

As he left it there before;

When the convent bell appalling;

From its belfry calling; calling;

Summoned him to feed the poor。

Through the long hour intervening

It had waited his return;

And he felt his bosom burn;

Comprehending all the meaning;

When the Blessed Vision said;

〃Hadst thou stayed; I must have fled!〃 







INTERLUDE。



All praised the Legend more or less;

Some liked the moral; some the verse;

Some thought it better; and some worse

Than other legends of the past;

Until; with ill…concealed distress

At all their cavilling; at last

The Theologian gravely said:

〃The Spanish proverb; then; is right;

Consult your friends on what you do;

And one will say that it is white;

And others say that it is red。〃

And 〃Amen!〃 quoth the Spanish Jew。



〃Six stories told!  We must have seven;

A cluster like the Pleiades;

And lo! it happens; as with these;

That one is missing from our heaven。

Where is the Landlord?  Bring him here;

Let the Lost Pleiad reappear。〃



Thus the Sicilian cried; and went

Forthwith to seek his missing star;

But did not find him in the bar;

A place that landlords most frequent;

Nor yet beside the kitchen fire;

Nor up the stairs; nor in the hall;

It was in vain to ask or call;

There were no tidings of the Squire。



So he came back with downcast head;

Exclaiming: 〃Well; our bashful host

Hath surely given up the ghost。

Another proverb says the dead

Can tell no tales; and that is true。

It follows; then; that one of you

Must tell a story in his stead。

You must;〃 he to the Student said;

〃Who know so many of the best;

And tell them better than the rest。〃

Straight by these flattering words beguiled;

The Student; happy as a child

When he is called a little man;

Assumed the double task imposed;

And without more ado unclosed

His smiling lips; and thus began。







THE STUDENT'S SECOND TALE



THE BARON OF ST。 CASTINE



Baron Castine of St。 Castine

Has left his chateau in the Pyrenees;

And sailed across the western seas。

When he went away from his fair demesne

The birds were building; the woods were green;

And now the winds of winter blow

Round the turrets of the old chateau;

The birds are silent and unseen;

The leaves lie dead in the ravine;

And the Pyrenees are white with snow。



His father; lonely; old; and gray;

Sits by the fireside day by day;

Thinking ever one thought of care;

Through the southern windows; narrow and tall;

The sun shines into the ancient hall;

And makes a glory round his hair。

The house…dog; stretched beneath his chair;

Groans in his sleep as if in pain

Then wakes; and yawns; and sleeps again;

So silent is it everywhere;

So silent you can hear the mouse

Run and rummage along the beams

Behind the wainscot of the wall;

And the old man rouses from his dreams;

And wanders restless through the house;

As if he heard strange voices call。



His footsteps echo along the floor

Of a distant passage; and pause awhile;

He is standing by an open door

Looking long; with a sad; sweet smile;

Into the room of his absent son。

There is the bed on which he lay;

There are the pictures bright and gay;

Horses and hounds and sun…lit seas;

There are his powder…flask and gun;

And his hunting…knives in shape of a fan;

The chair by the window where he sat;

With the clouded tiger…skin for a mat;

Looking out on the Pyrenees;

Looking out on Mount Marbore

And the Seven Valleys of Lavedan。

Ah me! he turns away and sighs;

There is a mist before his eyes。



At night whatever the weather be;

Wind or rain or starry heaven;

Just as the clock is striking seven;

Those who look from the windows see

The village Curate; with lantern and maid;

Come through the gateway from the park

And cross the courtyard damp and dark;

A ring of light in a ring of shade。



And now at the old man's side he stands;

His voice is cheery; his heart expands;

He gossips pleasantly; by the blaze

Of the fire of fagots; about old days;

And Cardinal Mazarin and the Fronde;

And the Cardinal's nieces fair and fond;

And what they did; and what they said;

When they heard his Eminence was dead。



And after a pause the old man says;

His mind still coming back again

To the one sad thought that haunts his brain;

〃Are there any tidings from over sea?

Ah; why has that wild boy gone from me?〃

And the Curate answers; looking down;

Harmless and docile as a lamb;

〃Young blood! young blood!  It must so be!〃

And draws from the pocket of his gown

A handkerchief like an oriflamb;

And wipes his spectacles; and they play

Their little game of lansquenet

In silence for an hour or so;

Till the clock at nine strikes loud and clear

From the village lying asleep below;

And across the courtyard; into the dark

Of the winding pathway in the park;

Curate and lantern disappear;

And darkness reigns in the old chateau。



The ship has come back from over sea;

She has been signalled from below;

And into the harbor of Bordeaux

She sails with her gallant company。

But among them is nowhere seen

The brave young Baron of St。 Castine;

He hath tarried behind; I ween;

In the beautiful land of Acadie!



And the father paces to and fro

Through the chambers of the old chateau;

Waiting; waiting to hear the hum

Of wheels on the road that runs below;

Of servants hurrying here and there;

The voice in the courtyard; the step on the stair;

Waiting for some one who doth not come!

But letters there are; which the old man reads

To the Curate; when he comes at night

Word by word; as an acolyte

Repeats his prayers and tells his beads;

Letters full of t
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