THE THORN.

类别:文学名著 作者:威廉·华兹华斯塞缪尔·泰勒·柯尔 本章:THE THORN.

    I.

    t looks so old,

    In trut o say,

    could ever have been young,

    It looks so old and grey.

    Not wo-years child,

    It stands erect thorn;

    No leaves it s;

    It is a mass of knotted joints,

    A ching forlorn.

    It stands erect, and like a stone

    it is overgrown.

    II.

    Like rock or stone, it is oergrown

    ito top,

    And ufts of moss,

    A melancholy crop:

    Up from these mosses creep,

    And t round

    So close, youd say t t

    it intent,

    to drag it to the ground;

    And all had joined in one endeavour

    to bury thorn for ever.

    III.

    ains  ridge,

    tormy er gale

    Cuts like a scythe clouds

    It so vale;

    Not ?ve yards from tain-path,

    t espy;

    And to t, three yards beyond,

    You see a little muddy pond

    Of er, never dry;

    Ive measured it from side to side:

    tis t long, and t wide.

    IV.

    And close beside thorn,

    t,

    A beauteous heap, a hill of moss,

    Just  in .

    All lovely colours there you see,

    All colours t were ever seen,

    And mossy netoo is there,

    As if by hand of lady fair

    the work had woven been,

    And cups, the eye,

    So deep is their vermilion dye.

    V.

    A lovely tints are there!

    Of olive-green and scarlet bright,

    In spikes, in brancars,

    Green, red, and pearly we.

    th moss

    horn you see,

    So fress beauteous dyes,

    Is like an infants grave in size

    As like as like can be:

    But never, never any where,

    An infants grave was half so fair.

    VI.

    Nohorn,

    teous hill of moss,

    You must take care and cime

    tain wo cross.

    For oft ts, bethe heap

    ts like an infants grave in size,

    And t same pond of which I spoke,

    A  cloak,

    And to herself she cries,

    quot;Oh misery! oh misery!

    quot;O;

    VII.

    At all times of t

    tcher goes,

    And so every star,

    And every  blows;

    And ts

    s in the skies,

    And whe hill,

    Or frosty air is keen and still,

    And to herself she cries,

    quot;Oh misery! oh misery!

    quot;O;

    VIII.

    quot;Now w,

    quot;In rain, in tempest, and in snow,

    quot;to tain-top

    quot;Does this poor woman go?

    quot;And ws shorn

    quot;s in the sky,

    quot;Or whe hill,

    quot;Or frosty air is keen and still,

    quot;And wherefore does she cry?--

    quot;Oell me why

    quot;Does s t doleful cry?quot;

    IX.

    I cannot tell; I wish I could;

    For true reason no one knows,

    But if youd gladly vie,

    t to which she goes;

    ts like an infants grave,

    thorn, so old and grey,

    Pass by is seldom s--

    And if you see ,

    to t away!--

    I never heard of such as dare

    Approac where.

    X.

    quot;But ain-top

    quot;Can this unhappy woman go,

    quot;ever star is in the skies,

    quot;ever ;

    Nay rack your brain--tis all in vain,

    Ill tell you every thing I know;

    But to to the pond

    tle step beyond,

    I wis you would go:

    Per the place

    You sometale may trace.

    XI.

    Ill give you t help I can:

    Before you up tain go,

    Up to tain-top,

    Ill tell you all I know.

    tis noy years,

    Since sha Ray)

    Gave rue good will

    o Stephen hill;

    And she and gay,

    And sill

    of Stephen hill.

    XII.

    And the wedding-day,

    t must h;

    But Stepo another maid

    h;

    And o church

    Untep--

    Poor Mart woful day

    A cruel, cruel ?re, they say,

    Into :

    It dried her body like a cinder,

    And almost turnd o tinder.

    XIII.

    ter this,

    the summer-leaves were green,

    So tain-top would go,

    And ten seen.

    tis said, a child was in her womb,

    As noo any eye was plain;

    Sh child, and she was mad,

    Yet often she was sober sad

    From her exceeding pain.

    Oen times Id rather

    t  cruel father!

    XIV.

    Sad case for suco hold

    Communion irring child!

    Sad case, as you may think, for one

    ho had a brain so wild!

    Last Cmas his,

    Old Farmer Simpson did maintain,

    t in

    About its mot, and brought

    her senses back again:

    And  ime drew near,

    her looks were calm, her senses clear.

    XV.

    No more I know, I wish I did,

    And I ell it all to you;

    For his poor child

    t ever knew:

    And if a child was born or no,

    t could ever tell;

    And if twas born alive or dead,

    theres no one knows, as I have said,

    But some remember well,

    t Mart time

    ould up tain often climb.

    XVI.

    And all t er,

    tain-peak,

    the dark,

    to seek:

    For many a time and oft were heard

    Cries coming from tain-head,

    Some plainly living voices were,

    And others, Ive heard many swear,

    ere voices of the dead:

    I cannot teer they say,

    to do ha Ray.

    XVII.

    But t so thorn,

    to you,

    And ts in a scarlet cloak,

    I rue.

    For one day elescope,

    to vie,

    o try ?rst I came,

    Ere I has name,

    I climbed tains :

    A storm came on, and I could see

    No object han my knee.

    XVIII.

    t and rain, and storm and rain,

    No screen, no fence could I discover,

    And t was

    A en times over.

    I looked around, I t I saw

    A jutting crag, and oft I ran,

    , the driving rain,

    ter of to gain,

    And, as I am a man,

    Instead of jutting crag, I found

    A ed on the ground.

    XIX.

    I did not speak--I saw her face,

    was enough for me;

    I turned about and heard her cry,

    quot;O misery! O misery!quot;

    And ts, until the moon

    the clear blue sky will go,

    And wtle breezes make

    ters of to shake,

    As all try know,

    She shudders and you hear her cry,

    quot;Oh misery! oh misery!

    XX.

    quot;But s the pond?

    quot;And o her?

    quot;And  comes

    quot;ttle pond to stir?quot;

    I cannot tell; but some will say

    Sree,

    Some say s in the pond,

    tle step beyond,

    But all and each agree,

    ttle babe here,

    Beneat hill of moss so fair.

    XXI.

    Ive  moss is red

    it poor infants blood;

    But kill a ne thus!

    I do not think she could.

    Some say, if to the pond you go,

    And ?x on it a steady view,

    trace,

    A baby and a babys face,

    And t it looks at you;

    , tis plain

    t you again.

    XXII.

    And some  she

    So public justice brought;

    And for ttle infants bones

    it.

    But teous hill of moss

    Before to stir;

    And for full ?fty yards around,

    t she ground;

    But all do still aver

    ttle babe is buried there,

    Beneat hill of moss so fair.

    XXIII.

    I cannot tell his may be,

    But plain it is, thorn is bound

    itufts of moss, t strive

    to drag it to the ground.

    And time,

    ain high,

    By day, and in t night,

    ars s,

    t I have heard her cry,

    quot;Oh misery! oh misery!

    quot;O woe is me! o;


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