Puslapio vaizdai
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IV.

What have we done with meadow and lane?
Where are the flowers and the hawthorn-snow?
Acres of brick in the pitiless rain,—

These are our gardens for thorpe and stow!
Summer has left us long ago,

Gone to the lands where the turtles mate
And the crickets chirp in the wild-rose row.
Songs and singers are out of date.

V.

We sit and sing to a world in pain;
Our heartstrings quiver sadly and slow:
But, aye and anon, the murmurous strain
Swells up to a clangour of strife and throe,
And the folk that hearken, or friend or foe,
Are ware that the stress of the time is great

And say to themselves, as they come and go,
Songs and singers are out of date.

VI.

Winter holds us, body and brain:

Ice is over our being's flow;

Song is a flower that will droop and wane,
If it have no heaven towards which to grow.
Faith and beauty are dead, I trow
Nothing is left but fear and fate:

Men are weary of hope; and so
Songs and singers are out of date.

John Payne

A DOUBLE BALLAD OF AUGUST

(1884)

All Afric, winged with death and fire,
Pants in our pleasant English air.
Each blade of grass is tense as wire,
And all the wood's loose trembling hair
Stark in the broad and breathless glare
Of hours whose touch wastes herb and tree,
This bright sharp death shines everywhere;
Life yearns for solace toward the sea.

Earth seems a corpse upon the pyre;
The sun, a scourge for slaves to bear.
All power to fear, all keen desire,
Lies dead as dreams of days that were
Before the new-born world lay bare
In heaven's wide eye, whereunder we
Lie breathless till the season spare:
Life yearns for solace toward the sea.

Fierce hours, with ravening fangs that tire
On spirit and sense, divide and share
The throbs of thoughts that scarce respire,
The throes of dreams that scarce forbear
One mute immitigable prayer

For cold perpetual sleep to be

Shed snowlike on the sense of care.
Life yearns for solace toward the sea.

The dust of ways where men suspire
Seems even the dust of death's dim lair.
But though the feverish days be dire
The sea-wind rears and cheers its fair
Blithe broods of babes that here and there
Make the sands laugh and glow for glee
With gladder flowers than gardens wear.
Life yearns for solace toward the sea.

The music dies not off the lyre
That lets no soul alive despair.

Sleep strikes not dumb the breathless choir
Of waves whose note bids sorrow spare.
As glad they sound, as fast they fare,
As when fate's word first set them free
And gave them light and night to wear.
Life yearns for solace toward the sea.

For there, though night and day conspire.
Το compass round with toil and snare
And changeless whirl of change, whose gyre
Draws all things deathwards unaware,
The spirit of life they scourge and scare,
Wild waves that follow on waves that flee
Laugh, knowing that yet, though earth despair
Life yearns for solace toward the sea.

Algernon Charles Swinburne

DOUBLE BALLADE OF LIFE AND FATE

Fools may pine, and sots may swill,
Cynics gibe, and prophets rail,
Moralists may scourge and drill,
Preachers prose, and fainthearts quail.
Let them whine, or threat, or wail!
Till the touch of Circumstance
Down to darkness sink the scale,
Fate's a fiddler, Life's a dance.

What if skies be wan and chill?
What if winds be harsh and stale?
Presently the east will thrill,
And the sad and shrunken sail,
Bellying with a kindly gale,

Bear you sunwards, while your chance
Sends you back the hopeful hail:—
"Fate's a fiddler, Life's a dance."

Idle shot or coming bill,
Hapless love or broken bail,
Gulp it (never chew your pill!),
And, if Burgundy should fail,
Try the humbler pot of ale!
Over all is heaven's expanse.
Gold's to find among the shale.
Fate's a fiddler, Life's a dance.

Dull Sir Joskin sleeps his fill,
Good Sir Galahad seeks the Grail,
Proud Sir Pertinax flaunts his frill,
Hard Sir Æger dints his mail;
And the while by hill and dale
Tristram's braveries gleam and glance,
And his blithe horn tells its tale:-
"Fate's a fiddler, Life's a dance."

Araminta's grand and shrill,
Delia's passionate and frail,
Doris drives an earnest quill,
Athanasia takes the veil:
Wiser Phyllis o'er her pail,
At the heart of all romance
Reading, sings to Strephon's flail:-
"Fate's a fiddler, Life's a dance."

Every Jack must have his Jill,
(Even Johnson had his Thrale!):
Forward couples-with a will!
This, the world, is not a jail.
Hear the music, sprat and whale!

Hands across, retire, advance!

Though the doomsman's on your trail,

Fate's a fiddler, Life's a dance.

ENVOY

Boys and girls, at slug and snail
And their kindred look askance.
Pay your footing on the nail:
Fate's a fiddler, Life's a dance.

W. E. Henley

A DOUBLE BALLAD OF GOOD COUNSEL

(Villon)

Now take your fill of love and glee,
And after balls and banquets hie;
In the end ye'll get no good for fee,
But just heads broken by and by;

Light loves make beasts of men that sigh;
They changed the faith of Solomon,
And left not Samson lights to spy;
Good luck has he that deals with none!

Sweet Orpheus, lord of minstrelsy,

For this with flute and pipe came nigh
The danger of the dog's heads three
That ravening at hell's door doth lie;
Fain was Narcissus, fair and shy,
For love's love lightly lost and won,

In a deep well to drown and die;
Good luck has he that deals with none!

Sardana, flower of chivalry,

Who conquered Crete with horn and cry,
For this was fain a maid to be

And learn with girls the thread to ply;
King David, wise in prophecy,

Forgot the fear of God for one

Seen washing either shapely thigh;
Good luck has he that deals with none!

For this did Amnon, craftily

Feigning to eat of cakes of rye,
Deflower his sister fair to see,
Which was foul incest; and hereby
Was Herod moved, it is no lie,
To lop the head of Baptist John
For dance and jig and psaltery;
Good luck has he that deals with none!

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