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the complete poetical works-第97节

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For at the moment when she died

Her soul was with the glorified!〃

And from his pocket with all speed

He drew the priestly title…deed;

And prayed the Justice he would read。



The Justice read; amused; amazed;

And as he read his mirth increased;

At times his shaggy brows he raised;

Now wondering at the cobbler gazed;

Now archly at the angry Priest。

〃From all excesses; sins; and crimes

Thou hast committed in past times

Thee I absolve!  And furthermore;

Purified from all earthly taints;

To the communion of the Saints

And to the sacraments restore!

All stains of weakness; and all trace

Of shame and censure I efface;

Remit the pains thou shouldst endure;

And make thee innocent and pure;

So that in dying; unto thee

The gates of heaven shall open be!

Though long thou livest; yet this grace

Until the moment of thy death

Unchangeable continueth!〃



Then said he to the Priest: 〃I find

This document is duly signed

Brother John Tetzel; his own hand。

At all tribunals in the land

In evidence it may be used;

Therefore acquitted is the accused。〃

Then to the cobbler turned: 〃My friend;

Pray tell me; didst thou ever read

Reynard the Fox?〃〃O yes; indeed!〃

〃I thought so。  Don't forget the end。〃







INTERLUDE



〃What was the end?  I am ashamed

Not to remember Reynard's fate;

I have not read the book of late;

Was he not hanged?〃 the Poet said。

The Student gravely shook his head;

And answered: 〃You exaggerate。

There was a tournament proclaimed;

And Reynard fought with Isegrim

The Wolf; and having vanquished him;

Rose to high honor in the State;

And Keeper of the Seals was named!〃



At this the gay Sicilian laughed:

〃Fight fire with fire; and craft with craft;

Successful cunning seems to be

The moral of your tale;〃 said he。

〃Mine had a better; and the Jew's

Had none at all; that I could see;

His aim was only to amuse。〃



Meanwhile from out its ebon case

His violin the Minstrel drew;

And having tuned its strings anew;

Now held it close in his embrace;

And poising in his outstretched hand

The bow; like a magician's wand;

He paused; and said; with beaming face:

〃Last night my story was too long;

To…day I give you but a song;

An old tradition of the North;

But first; to put you in the mood;

I will a little while prelude;

And from this instrument draw forth

Something by way of overture。〃



He played; at first the tones were pure

And tender as a summer night;

The full moon climbing to her height;

The sob and ripple of the seas;

The flapping of an idle sail;

And then by sudden and sharp degrees

The multiplied; wild harmonies

Freshened and burst into a gale;

A tempest howling through the dark;

A crash as of some shipwrecked bark。

A loud and melancholy wail。



Such was the prelude to the tale

Told by the Minstrel; and at times

He paused amid its varying rhymes;

And at each pause again broke in

The music of his violin;

With tones of sweetness or of fear;

Movements of trouble or of calm;

Creating their own atmosphere;

As sitting in a church we hear

Between the verses of the psalm

The organ playing soft and clear;

Or thundering on the startled ear。







THE MUSICIAN'S TALE



THE BALLAD OF CARMILHAN



I



At Stralsund; by the Baltic Sea;

  Within the sandy bar;

At sunset of a summer's day;

Ready for sea; at anchor lay

  The good ship Valdemar。



The sunbeams danced upon the waves;

  And played along her side;

And through the cabin windows streamed

In ripples of golden light; that seemed

  The ripple of the tide。



There sat the captain with his friends;

  Old skippers brown and hale;

Who smoked and grumbled o'er their grog;

And talked of iceberg and of fog;

  Of calm and storm and gale。



And one was spinning a sailor's yarn

  About Klaboterman;

The Kobold of the sea; a spright

Invisible to mortal sight;

  Who o'er the rigging ran。



Sometimes he hammered in the hold;

  Sometimes upon the mast;

Sometimes abeam; sometimes abaft;

Or at the bows he sang and laughed;

  And made all tight and fast。



He helped the sailors at their work;

  And toiled with jovial din;

He helped them hoist and reef the sails;

He helped them stow the casks and bales;

  And heave the anchor in。



But woe unto the lazy louts;

  The idlers of the crew;

Them to torment was his delight;

And worry them by day and night;

  And pinch them black and blue。



And woe to him whose mortal eyes

  Klaboterman behold。

It is a certain sign of death!

The cabin…boy here held his breath;

  He felt his blood run cold。







II



The jolly skipper paused awhile;

  And then again began;

〃There is a Spectre Ship;〃 quoth he;

〃A ship of the Dead that sails the sea;

  And is called the Carmilhan。



〃A ghostly ship; with a ghostly crew;

  In tempests she appears;

And before the gale; or against the gale;

She sails without a rag of sail;

  Without a helmsman steers。



〃She haunts the Atlantic north and south;

  But mostly the mid…sea;

Where three great rocks rise bleak and bare

Like furnace…chimneys in the air;

  And are called the Chimneys Three。



〃And ill betide the luckless ship

  That meets the Carmilhan;

Over her decks the seas will leap;

She must go down into the deep;

  And perish mouse and man。〃



The captain of the Valdemar

  Laughed loud with merry heart。

〃I should like to see this ship;〃 said he;

〃I should like to find these Chimneys Three;

  That are marked down in the chart。



〃I have sailed right over the spot;〃 he said

  〃With a good stiff breeze behind;

When the sea was blue; and the sky was clear;

You can follow my course by these pinholes here;

  And never a rock could find。〃



And then he swore a dreadful oath;

  He swore by the Kingdoms Three;

That; should he meet the Carmilhan;

He would run her down; although he ran

  Right into Eternity!



All this; while passing to and fro;

 The cabin…boy had heard;

He lingered at the door to hear;

And drank in all with greedy ear;

  And pondered every word。



He was a simple country lad;

  But of a roving mind。

〃O; it must be like heaven;〃 thought he;

〃Those far…off foreign lands to see;

  And fortune seek and find!〃



But in the fo'castle; when he heard

  The mariners blaspheme;

He thought of home; he thought of God;

And his mother under the churchyard sod;

  And wished it were a dream。



One friend on board that ship had he;

  'T was the Klaboterman;

Who saw the Bible in his chest;

And made a sign upon his breast;

  All evil things to ban。







III



The cabin windows have grown blank

  As eyeballs of the dead;

No more the glancing sunbeams burn

On the gilt letters of the stern;

  But on the figure…head;



On Valdemar Victorious;

  Who looketh with disdain

To see his image in the tide

Dismembered float from side to side;

  And reunite again。



〃It is the wind;〃 those skippers said;

  〃That swings the vessel so;

It is the wind; it freshens fast;

'T is time to say farewell at last

  'T is time for us to go。〃



They shook the captain by the hand;

  〃Goodluck! goodluck!〃 they cried;

Each face was like the setting sun;

As; broad and red; they one by one

  Went o'er the vessel's side。



The sun went down; the full moon rose;

  Serene o'er field and flood;

And all the winding creeks and bays

And broad sea…meadows seemed ablaze;

  The sky was red as blood。



The southwest wind blew fresh and fair;

  As fair as wind could be;

Bound for Odessa; o'er the bar;

With all sail set; the Valdemar

  Went proudly out to sea。



The lovely moon climbs up the sky

  As one who walks in dreams;

A tower of marble in her light;

A wall of black; a wall of white;

  The stately vessel seems。



Low down upon the sandy coast

  The lights begin to burn;

And now; uplifted high in air;

They kindle with a fiercer glare;

  And now drop far astern。



The dawn appears; the land is gone;

  The sea is all around;

Then on each hand low hills of sand

Emerge and form another land;

  She steereth through the Sound。



Through Kattegat and Skager…rack

  She flitteth like a ghost;

By day and night; by night and day;

She bounds; she flies upon her way

  Along the English coast。



Cape Finisterre is drawing near;

  Cape Finisterre is past;

Into the open ocean stream

She floats; the vision of a dream

  Too beautiful to last。



Suns rise and set; and rise; and yet

  There is no land in sight;

The liquid planets overhead

Burn brighter now the moon is dead;

  And longer stays the night。







IV



And now along the horizon's edge

  Mountains of cloud uprose;

Black as with forests underneath;

Above their sharp and jagged teeth

  Were white as drifted sno

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