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the chinese nightingale and other poems-第2部分

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Fluttering; fluttering; ghostly and gray;

A vague; unravelling; final tune;

Like a long unwinding silk cocoon;

Sang as though for the soul of him

Who ironed away in that bower dim: 

 〃I have forgotten

 Your dragons great;

 Merry and mad and friendly and bold。

 Dim is your proud lost palace…gate。

 I vaguely know

 There were heroes of old;

 Troubles more than the heart could hold;

 There were wolves in the woods

 Yet lambs in the fold;

 Nests in the top of the almond tree。 。 。 。

 The evergreen tree 。 。 。 and the mulberry tree 。 。 。

 Life and hurry and joy forgotten;

 Years on years I but half…remember 。 。 。

 Man is a torch; then ashes soon;

 May and June; then dead December;

 Dead December; then again June。

 Who shall end my dream's confusion?

 Life is a loom; weaving illusion 。 。 。

 I remember; I remember

 There were ghostly veils and laces 。 。 。

 In the shadowy bowery places 。 。 。

 With lovers' ardent faces

 Bending to one another;

 Speaking each his part。

 They infinitely echo

 In the red cave of my heart。

 ‘Sweetheart; sweetheart; sweetheart。'

 They said to one another。

 They spoke; I think; of perils past。

 They spoke; I think; of peace at last。

 One thing I remember:

 Spring came on forever;

 Spring came on forever;〃

 Said the Chinese nightingale。













    Second Section

America Watching the War; August; 1914; to April; 1917













Where Is the Real Non…resistant?



(Matthew 5:38…48)







Who can surrender to Christ; dividing his best with the stranger;

Giving to each what he asks; braving the uttermost danger

All for the enemy; MAN?  Who can surrender till death

His words and his works; his house and his lands;

His eyes and his heart and his breath?



Who can surrender to Christ?  Many have yearned toward it daily。

Yet they surrender to passion; wildly or grimly or gaily;

Yet they surrender to pride; counting her precious and queenly;

Yet they surrender to knowledge; preening their feathers serenely。



Who can surrender to Christ?  Where is the man so transcendent;

So heated with love of his kind; so filled with the spirit resplendent

That all of the hours of his day his song is thrilling and tender;

And all of his thoughts to our white cause of peace

            Surrender; surrender; surrender?









Here's to the Mice!



(Written with the hope that the socialists might yet

dethrone Kaiser and Czar。)







Here's to the mice that scare the lions;

Creeping into their cages。

Here's to the fairy mice that bite

The elephants fat and wise:

Hidden in the hay…pile while the elephant thunder rages。

Here's to the scurrying; timid mice

Through whom the proud cause dies。



Here's to the seeming accident

When all is planned and working;

All the flywheels turning;

Not a vassal shirking。

Here's to the hidden tunneling thing

That brings the mountain's groans。

Here's to the midnight scamps that gnaw;

Gnawing away the thrones。









When Bryan Speaks







When Bryan speaks; the town's a hive。

From miles around; the autos drive。

The sparrow chirps。  The rooster crows。

The place is kicking and alive。



When Bryan speaks; the bunting glows。

The raw procession onward flows。

The small dogs bark。  The children laugh

A wind of springtime fancy blows。



When Bryan speaks; the wigwam shakes。

The corporation magnate quakes。

The pre…convention plot is smashed。

The valiant pleb full…armed awakes。



When Bryan speaks; the sky is ours;

The wheat; the forests; and the flowers。

And who is here to say us nay?

Fled are the ancient tyrant powers。



When Bryan speaks; then I rejoice。

His is the strange composite voice

Of many million singing souls

Who make world…brotherhood their choice。



                              Written in Washington; D。C。

                                          February; 1915。









To Jane Addams at the Hague



Two Poems; written on the Sinking of the Lusitania。

Appearing in the Chicago ‘Herald'; May 11; 1915。







   I。  Speak Now for Peace





Lady of Light; and our best woman; and queen;

Stand now for peace; (though anger breaks your heart);

Though naught but smoke and flame and drowning is seen。



Lady of Light; speak; though you speak alone;

Though your voice may seem as a dove's in this howling flood;

It is heard to…night by every senate and throne。



Though the widening battle of millions and millions of men

Threatens to…night to sweep the whole of the earth;

Back of the smoke is the promise of kindness again。







  II。  Tolstoi Is Plowing Yet





Tolstoi is plowing yet。  When the smoke…clouds break;

High in the sky shines a field as wide as the world。

There he toils for the Kingdom of Heaven's sake。



Ah; he is taller than clouds of the little earth。

Only the congress of planets is over him;

And the arching path where new sweet stars have birth。



Wearing his peasant dress; his head bent low;

Tolstoi; that angel of Peace; is plowing yet;

Forward; across the field; his horses go。









The Tale of the Tiger Tree



A Fantasy; dedicated to the little poet Alice Oliver Henderson; ten years old。



The Fantasy shows how tiger…hearts are the cause of war in all ages。

It shows how the mammoth forces may be either friends or enemies

of the struggle for peace。  It shows how the dream of peace

is unconquerable and eternal。







    I



Peace…of…the…Heart; my own for long;

Whose shining hair the May…winds fan;

Making it tangled as they can;

A mystery still; star…shining yet;

Through ancient ages known to me

And now once more reborn with me: 



This is the tale of the Tiger Tree

A hundred times the height of a man;

Lord of the race since the world began。



This is my city Springfield;

My home on the breast of the plain。

The state house towers to heaven;

By an arsenal gray as the rain 。 。 。

And suddenly all is mist;

And I walk in a world apart;

In the forest…age when I first knelt down

At your feet; O Peace…of…the…Heart。



This is the wonder of twilight:

Three times as high as the dome

Tiger…striped trees encircle the town;

Golden geysers of foam。

While giant white parrots sail past in their pride。

The roofs now are clouds and storms that they ride。

And there with the huntsmen of mound…builder days

Through jungle and meadow I stride。

And the Tiger Tree leaf is falling around

As it fell when the world began:

Like a monstrous tiger…skin; stretched on the ground;

Or the cloak of a medicine man。

A deep…crumpled gossamer web;

Fringed with the fangs of a snake。

The wind swirls it down from the leperous boughs。

It shimmers on clay…hill and lake;

With the gleam of great bubbles of blood;

Or coiled like a rainbow shell。 。 。 。

I feast on the stem of the Leaf as I march。

I am burning with Heaven and Hell。





    II



The gray king died in his hour。

Then we crowned you; the prophetess wise:

Peace…of…the…Heart we deeply adored

For the witchcraft hid in your eyes。

Gift from the sky; overmastering all;

You sent forth your magical parrots to call

The plot…hatching prince of the tigers;

To your throne by the red…clay wall。



Thus came that genius insane:

Spitting and slinking;

Sneering and vain;

He sprawled to your grassy throne; drunk on The Leaf;

The drug that was cunning and splendor and grief。

He had fled from the mammoth by day;

He had blasted the mammoth by night;

War was his drunkenness;

War was his dreaming;

War was his love and his play。

And he hissed at your heavenly glory

While his councillors snarled in delight;

Asking in irony:  〃What shall we learn

From this whisperer; fragile and white?〃



And had you not been an enchantress

They would not have loitered to mock

Nor spared your white parrots who walked by their paws

With bantering venturesome talk。



You made a white fire of The Leaf。

You sang while the tiger…chiefs hissed。

You chanted of 〃Peace to the wonderful world。〃

And they saw you in dazzling mist。

And their steps were no longer insane;

Kindness came down like the rain;

They dreamed that like fleet young ponies they feasted

On succulent grasses and grain。



     。    。    。    。    。



Then came the black…mammoth chief:

Long…haired and shaggy and great;

Proud and sagacious he marshalled his court:

(You had sent him your parrots of state。)

His trunk in rebellion upcurled;

A curse at the tiger he hurled。

Huge elephants trumpeted there by his side;

And mastodon…chiefs of the world。

But higher magic began。

For the turbulent vassals of man。

You harnessed their fever; you conquered their ire;

Their hearts turned to flowers through holy desire;

For their darling and star you were crowned;

And their raging demons were bound。

You rode on the back of the yellow…streaked king;

His loose neck was wreathed with a mistletoe ring。

Primordial elephants loomed by your side;

And our clay…painted children danced by your path;

Chanting the death of the kingdoms of wrath。

You wrought until night with us all。

The fierce brutes fawned at your call;

Then slipped to their lairs; song…chained。

And thus you sang sweetly; and reigned:

〃Immortal is the inner peace; free to beasts and men。

Beginning in the darkness; the mystery will conquer;

And now it comforts every heart that seeks for love again。

And now the mammoth bows the knee;

We hew down every Tiger Tree;

We send each tiger bound in love and glory to his den;

Bound in love 。 。 。 and wisdom 。 。 。 and glory; 。 。 。 to his den。〃





    III



〃Beware of the trumpeting swine;〃

Came the howl from the northward that night。

Twice…rebel tigers warning was still

If we held not beside them it boded us ill。

From the parrots translating the cry;

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