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the complete poetical works-第157章

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The hills sweep upward from the shore;

  With villas scattered one by one

Upon their wooded spurs; and lower

  Bellaggio blazing in the sun。



And dimly seen; a tangled mass

  Of walls and woods; of light and shade;

Stands beckoning up the Stelvio Pass

  Varenna with its white cascade。



I ask myself; Is this a dream?

  Will it all vanish into air?

Is there a land of such supreme

  And perfect beauty anywhere?



Sweet vision!  Do not fade away;

  Linger until my heart shall take

Into itself the summer day;

  And all the beauty of the lake。



Linger until upon my brain

  Is stamped an image of the scene;

Then fade into the air again;

  And be as if thou hadst not been。







MONTE CASSINO



TERRA DI LAVORO



Beautiful valley! through whose verdant meads

  Unheard the Garigliano glides along;

The Liris; nurse of rushes and of reeds;

  The river taciturn of classic song。



The Land of Labor and the Land of Rest;

  Where mediaeval towns are white on all

The hillsides; and where every mountain's crest

  Is an Etrurian or a Roman wall。



There is Alagna; where Pope Boniface

   Was dragged with contumely from his throne;

Sciarra Colonna; was that day's disgrace

  The Pontiff's only; or in part thine own?



There is Ceprano; where a renegade

  Was each Apulian; as great Dante saith;

When Manfred by his men…at…arms betrayed

  Spurred on to Benevento and to death。



There is Aquinum; the old Volscian town;

  Where Juvenal was born; whose lurid light

Still hovers o'er his birthplace like the crown

  Of splendor seen o'er cities in the night。



Doubled the splendor is; that in its streets

  The Angelic Doctor as a school…boy played;

And dreamed perhaps the dreams; that he repeats

  In ponderous folios for scholastics made。



And there; uplifted; like a passing cloud

  That pauses on a mountain summit high;

Monte Cassino's convent rears its proud

  And venerable walls against the sky。



Well I remember how on foot I climbed

  The stony pathway leading to its gate;

Above; the convent bells for vespers chimed;

  Below; the darkening town grew desolate。



Well I remember the low arch and dark;

  The court…yard with its well; the terrace wide;

From which; far down; the valley like a park

  Veiled in the evening mists; was dim descried。



The day was dying; and with feeble hands

  Caressed the mountain…tops; the vales between

Darkened; the river in the meadowlands

  Sheathed itself as a sword; and was not seen。



The silence of the place was like a sleep;

  So full of rest it seemed; each passing tread

Was a reverberation from the deep

  Recesses of the ages that are dead。



For; more than thirteen centuries ago;

  Benedict fleeing from the gates of Rome;

A youth disgusted with its vice and woe;

  Sought in these mountain solitudes a home。



He founded here his Convent and his Rule

  Of prayer and work; and counted work as prayer;

The pen became a clarion; and his school

  Flamed like a beacon in the midnight air。



What though Boccaccio; in his reckless way;

  Mocking the lazy brotherhood; deplores

The illuminated manuscripts; that lay

  Torn and neglected on the dusty floors?



Boccaccio was a novelist; a child

  Of fancy and of fiction at the best!

This the urbane librarian said; and smiled

  Incredulous; as at some idle jest。



Upon such themes as these; with one young friar

  I sat conversing late into the night;

Till in its cavernous chimney the woodfire

  Had burnt its heart out like an anchorite。



And then translated; in my convent cell;

  Myself yet not myself; in dreams I lay;

And; as a monk who hears the matin bell;

  Started from sleep; already it was day。



From the high window I beheld the scene

  On which Saint Benedict so oft had gazed;

The mountains and the valley in the sheen

  Of the bright sun;and stood as one amazed。



Gray mists were rolling; rising; vanishing;

  The woodlands glistened with their jewelled crowns;

Far off the mellow bells began to ring

  For matins in the half…awakened towns。



The conflict of the Present and the Past;

  The ideal and the actual in our life;

As on a field of battle held me fast;

  Where this world and the next world were at strife。



For; as the valley from its sleep awoke;

  I saw the iron horses of the steam

Toss to the morning air their plumes of smoke;

  And woke; as one awaketh from a dream。







AMALFI



Sweet the memory is to me

Of a land beyond the sea;

Where the waves and mountains meet;

Where; amid her mulberry…trees

Sits Amalfi in the heat;

Bathing ever her white feet

In the tideless summer seas。



In the middle of the town;

From its fountains in the hills;

Tumbling through the narrow gorge;

The Canneto rushes down;

Turns the great wheels of the mills;

Lifts the hammers of the forge。



'T is a stairway; not a street;

That ascends the deep ravine;

Where the torrent leaps between

Rocky walls that almost meet。

Toiling up from stair to stair

Peasant girls their burdens bear;

Sunburnt daughters of the soil;

Stately figures tall and straight;

What inexorable fate

Dooms them to this life of toil?



Lord of vineyards and of lands;

Far above the convent stands。

On its terraced walk aloof

Leans a monk with folded hands;

Placid; satisfied; serene;

Looking down upon the scene

Over wall and red…tiled roof;

Wondering unto what good end

All this toil and traffic tend;

And why all men cannot be

Free from care and free from pain;

And the sordid love of gain;

And as indolent as he。



Where are now the freighted barks

From the marts of east and west?

Where the knights in iron sarks

Journeying to the Holy Land;

Glove of steel upon the hand;

Cross of crimson on the breast?

Where the pomp of camp and court?

Where the pilgrims with their prayers?

Where the merchants with their wares;

And their gallant brigantines

Sailing safely into port

Chased by corsair Algerines?



Vanished like a fleet of cloud;

Like a passing trumpet…blast;

Are those splendors of the past;

And the commerce and the crowd!

Fathoms deep beneath the seas

Lie the ancient wharves and quays;

Swallowed by the engulfing waves;

Silent streets and vacant halls;

Ruined roofs and towers and walls;

Hidden from all mortal eyes

Deep the sunken city lies:

Even cities have their graves!



This is an enchanted land!

Round the headlands far away

Sweeps the blue Salernian bay

With its sickle of white sand:

Further still and furthermost

On the dim discovered coast

Paestum with its ruins lies;

And its roses all in bloom

Seem to tinge the fatal skies

Of that lonely land of doom。



On his terrace; high in air;

Nothing doth the good monk care

For such worldly themes as these;

From the garden just below

Little puffs of perfume blow;

And a
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