登陆注册
5493900000027

第27章 POEMS(4)

DICK.Oh hence!O cruel word!which even dogs do hate:

But hence,even hence,I must needs go;such is my dogged fate.

POEM:SONG

To the tune of "Wilhelmus van Nassau,"&c.

Who hath his fancy pleased,With fruits of happy sight,Let here his eyes be raised On Nature's sweetest light;A light which doth dissever,And yet unite the eyes;A light which,dying,never Is cause the looker dies.

She never dies,but lasteth In life of lover's heart;He ever dies that wasteth In love his chiefest part.

Thus is her life still guarded,In never dying faith;Thus is his death rewarded,Since she lives in his death.

Look then and die,the pleasure Doth answer well the pain;Small loss of mortal treasure,Who may immortal gain.

Immortal be her graces,Immortal is her mind;They,fit for heavenly places,This heaven in it doth bind.

But eyes these beauties see not,Nor sense that grace descries;Yet eyes deprived be not From sight of her fair eyes:

Which,as of inward glory They are the outward seal,So may they live still sorry,Which die not in that weal.

But who hath fancies pleased,With fruits of happy sight,Let here his eyes be raised On Nature's sweetest light.

POEM:THE SMOKES OF MELANCHOLY

I.

Who hath e'er felt the change of love,And known those pangs that losers prove,May paint my face without seeing me,And write the state how my fancies be,The loathsome buds grown on Sorrow's tree.

But who by hearsay speaks,and hath not fully felt What kind of fires they be in which those spirits melt,Shall guess,and fail,what doth displease,Feeling my pulse,miss my disease.

II.

O no!O no!trial only shows The bitter juice of forsaken woes;Where former bliss,present evils do stain;Nay,former bliss adds to present pain,While remembrance doth both states contain.

Come,learners,then to me,the model of mishap,Ingulphed in despair,slid down from Fortune's lap;And,as you like my double lot,Tread in my steps,or follow not.

III.

For me,alas!I am full resolved Those bands,alas!shall not be dissolved;Nor break my word,though reward come late;Nor fail my faith in my failing fate;

Nor change in change,though change change my state:

But always own myself,with eagle-eyed Truth,to fly Up to the sun,although the sun my wings do fry;For if those flames burn my desire,Yet shall I die in Phoenix'fire.

POEM:ODE

When,to my deadly pleasure,When to my lively torment,Lady,mine eyes remained Joined,alas!to your beams.

With violence of heavenly Beauty,tied to virtue;Reason abashed retired;

Gladly my senses yielded.

Gladly my senses yielding,Thus to betray my heart's fort,Left me devoid of all life.

They to the beamy suns went,Where,by the death of all deaths,Find to what harm they hastened.

Like to the silly Sylvan,Burned by the light he best liked,When with a fire he first met.

Yet,yet,a life to their death,Lady you have reserved;Lady the life of all love.

For though my sense be from me,And I be dead,who want sense,Yet do we both live in you.

Turned anew,by your means,Unto the flower that aye turns,As you,alas!my sun bends.

Thus do I fall to rise thus;

Thus do I die to live thus;

Changed to a change,I change not.

Thus may I not be from you;

Thus be my senses on you;

Thus what I think is of you;

Thus what I seek is in you;

All what I am,it is you.

POEM:VERSES

To the tune of a Neapolitan song,which beginneth,"No,no,no,no."No,no,no,no,I cannot hate my foe,Although with cruel fire,First thrown on my desire,She sacks my rendered sprite;For so fair a flame embraces All the places,Where that heat of all heats springeth,That it bringeth To my dying heart some pleasure,Since his treasure Burneth bright in fairest light.No,no,no,no.

No,no,no,no,I cannot hate my foe,Although with cruel fire,First thrown on my desire,She sacks my rendered sprite;Since our lives be not immortal,But to mortal Fetters tied,do wait the hour Of death's power,They have no cause to be sorry Who with glory End the way,where all men stay.No,no,no,no.

No,no,no,no,I cannot hate my foe,Although with cruel fire,First thrown on my desire,She sacks my rendered sprite;No man doubts,whom beauty killeth,Fair death feeleth,And in whom fair death proceedeth,Glory breedeth:

So that I,in her beams dying,Glory trying,Though in pain,cannot complain.No,no,no,no.

POEM:SONG

To the tune of a Neapolitan Villanel.

All my sense thy sweetness gained;

Thy fair hair my heart enchained;

My poor reason thy words moved,So that thee,like heaven,I loved.

Fa,la,la,leridan,dan,dan,dan,deridan:

Dan,dan,dan,deridan,deridan,dei:

While to my mind the outside stood,For messenger of inward good.

Nor thy sweetness sour is deemed;

Thy hair not worth a hair esteemed;

Reason hath thy words removed,Finding that but words they proved.

Fa,la,la,leridan,dan,dan,dan,deridan,Dan,dan,dan,deridan,deridan,dei:

For no fair sign can credit win,If that the substance fail within.

No more in thy sweetness glory,For thy knitting hair be sorry;Use thy words but to bewail thee That no more thy beams avail thee;Dan,dan,Dan,dan,Lay not thy colours more to view,Without the picture be found true.

Woe to me,alas,she weepeth!

Fool!in me what folly creepeth?

Was I to blaspheme enraged,Where my soul I have engaged?

Dan,dan,Dan,dan,And wretched I must yield to this;The fault I blame her chasteness is.

Sweetness!sweetly pardon folly;

Tie me,hair,your captive wholly:

Words!O words of heavenly knowledge!

Know,my words their faults acknowledge;

Dan,dan,Dan,dan,And all my life I will confess,The less I love,I live the less.

POEM:TRANSLATION

From "La Diana de Monte-Mayor,"in Spanish:where Sireno,a shepherd,whose mistress Diana had utterly forsaken him,pulling out a little of her hair,wrapped about with green silk,to the hair he thus bewailed himself.

What changes here,O hair,I see,since I saw you!

How ill fits you this green to wear,For hope,the colour due!

Indeed,I well did hope,Though hope were mixed with fear,No other shepherd should have scope Once to approach this hair.

同类推荐
  • 明伦汇编家范典叔侄部

    明伦汇编家范典叔侄部

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 燕丹子

    燕丹子

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 墨子城守各篇简注

    墨子城守各篇简注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 杂藏经

    杂藏经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 雨山和尚语录

    雨山和尚语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 妖妃火辣辣:王爷放肆宠

    妖妃火辣辣:王爷放肆宠

    她倾尽全力,助他走上巅峰,换来的却是残酷的背叛。含恨重生,她发誓一定要擦亮眼,将所有背叛她的人全部都送进地狱!只是,这一路虐渣,一路报复的过程中,那个慵懒随性,邪魅狷狂的男人,为何总是用那一双不怀好意的眼睛盯着她?“寻儿,累了吧?这些渣渣,交给本王就好,你去边搬个板凳嗑个瓜子喝个茶。”
  • 天域神尊

    天域神尊

    顿悟七年,开启无上道魂,灭皇城,踏天才,为寻茫茫大道战远古六族,为红颜,一人一剑,傲战群雄。
  • 涴漫的狱中日记

    涴漫的狱中日记

    考古学家新近在东亚大陆上发见许多古代文件。那地方本来“人”迹稀少,毒蛇猛兽横行;现在还是莽莽苍苍,一片凄凉荒芜的秽土,白骨如山的堆积着,满地是毒虫的旧穴,可惜也塞满了泥沙,——这是洪水之后的遗迹。要想考察地下的化石及地面的废址,来研究此地古时的社会,真正不容易。至于那些文件——当然都是烂纸破簿,水痕宛漫,还有乱七八糟,泥污血染的“鸟兽之迹”,实在难以看清楚,加以上面所写的文字,又象埃及古字似的所谓象形字。——很要象拿破仑第一征埃及时那些学者的刻苦研究一番。果然,这些文件之中居然有几位东亚语族学家考究出一张破烂的文字。
  • 平滇始末

    平滇始末

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 缘卿吾乃你夫人

    缘卿吾乃你夫人

    简介:四界祥和时,总有一些不耐烦的某某,脱离界限,跨越轮回,一不小心便入了情城,幻沫如星月坠入情海,从末有过的无法控制,两世的被欺负的苦难,终于,第三世开始可以捣乱,但你是什么鬼……原本不以为意就好,如今你却满世界找我作甚?原本你只在乎一族兴亡,如今又为我只身犯险是何故?原本你高高在上,如今你在门前又哭给谁看?……
  • 重生末日之无限进化

    重生末日之无限进化

    寒冥重生回末日爆发之前,一代枭雄是如何从一个小人物,在冷血的末日世界,带领人类,走出末日之境,开启新的纪元。敬请关注《重生末日之无限进化》!
  • 太上问长生

    太上问长生

    (新书《开局成为土地爷》已经发布,欢迎阅读!建了个群,喜欢本书的朋友,可以加入一起交流探讨。企鹅群:1064387285) 道门术法,当为最强。主角李长生,修得道家无上术法,原可证道飞升成仙,却发下宏愿,甘愿受天道禁锢道法,滞留人间界千年。
  • 一本书读懂黄金投资理财学

    一本书读懂黄金投资理财学

    作为黄金投资者要怎样选择自己的投资策略呢?如何才能把握住黄金市场的机遇?如果正确投资黄金?怎样探寻更赚钱的黄金投资品种呢?这些问题都需要在投资前有一个大致的了解,《一本书读懂黄金投资理财学》从实际出发,全面介绍了黄金的渊源、投资及其技巧和策略,如实物黄金、纸黄金、黄金期货等黄金投资品种的投资策略,以及黄金价格走势分析和技巧分析等,以通俗易懂的语言为黄金投资初学者增加知识储备。
  • 洪荒圣尊

    洪荒圣尊

    一阵声音突然回荡在这个静谧的世界中......上一次醒来时,他以为自己死了,又一次醒来后,他以为自己穿越了,这一次他却看到……他是开天辟地诞生的“道体”,他更是想携美逍遥的凡人,但这该死的世道非要逼他走上至尊之路……
  • 帝君你新娘又跑了

    帝君你新娘又跑了

    “本王疼你,护你,宠你,帮你虐渣杀怪,为何你还要跑?”慕攸宁咬牙:“敢和死神抢老婆,你不要命了?”穿越重活一世,慕攸宁最大的愿望就是能安然的活到18岁,躲开想要娶她做新娘的死神。可万万没有想到,一次意外的失身,她竟招惹了一个比死神还要难缠的男人。“为了你,本王可杀神诛佛。小宁儿,你只能是我的。若敢再逃,定要你一辈子都下不了床。”慕攸宁欲哭无泪,她不就是坑了他吗,怎么还就甩不掉了?《已完结惊世情缘系列三部曲。》